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In five ] (1960-64), Terry posted a record of 2-3, 31 strikeouts and a 2.93 ERA. Both wins came in the ] (of which he was named MVP) against the ], including a 1-0 shutout in Game 7 over Giant ace ]. That game—and thus the Series—ended with Yankee second baseman ] catching ]'s line drive with ] on second and ] on third; had the ball been hit a foot or so to either side, Richardson could not have caught it and San Francisco would have scored two runs and won the Series. In five ] (1960-64), Terry posted a record of 2-3, 31 strikeouts and a 2.93 ERA. Both wins came in the ] (of which he was named MVP) against the ], including a 1-0 shutout in Game 7 over Giant ace ]. That game—and thus the Series—ended with Yankee second baseman ] catching ]'s line drive with ] on second and ] on third; had the ball been hit a foot or so to either side, Richardson could not have caught it and San Francisco would have scored two runs and won the Series.


==Highlights== ]==Highlights==
* All-Star (1962) * All-Star (1962)
* ] (1962) * ] (1962)

Revision as of 21:58, 23 February 2007

Ralph Willard Terry (born on January 9, 1936 in Big Cabin, Oklahoma) is a former right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the New York Yankees (1956-57, 1959-64), Kansas City Athletics (1957-59, 1966), Cleveland Indians (1965) and New York Mets (1966-67). Terry is best remembered for giving up the home run to Bill Mazeroski that won the Pittsburgh Pirates the 1960 World Series.

In his 12 seasons as a player, Terry posted a career record of 107-99, with 1000 strikeouts, a 3.27 earned run average, 257 games started, 75 games finished, 20 shutouts, 11 saves, and 446 bases on balls in 1849 innings pitched.

In five World Series (1960-64), Terry posted a record of 2-3, 31 strikeouts and a 2.93 ERA. Both wins came in the 1962 World Series (of which he was named MVP) against the San Francisco Giants, including a 1-0 shutout in Game 7 over Giant ace Jack Sanford. That game—and thus the Series—ended with Yankee second baseman Bobby Richardson catching Willie McCovey's line drive with Willie Mays on second and Matty Alou on third; had the ball been hit a foot or so to either side, Richardson could not have caught it and San Francisco would have scored two runs and won the Series.

File:RterryKCa s.jpg==Highlights==

  • All-Star (1962)
  • World Series MVP Award (1962)
  • Led AL in wins and innings pitched (1962)
  • Led AL in batters faced (1962)
  • Led AL in complete games (1963)
  • Holds New York Yankees record for most Home Runs Allowed in a season (40 in 1962).

External links

Preceded byWhitey Ford World Series MVP
1962
Succeeded bySandy Koufax
Preceded byWhitey Ford Babe Ruth Award
1962
Succeeded bySandy Koufax
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