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Lloyd Moseby

American baseball player (born 1959)


American baseball player (born 1959)

FieldValue
nameLloyd Moseby
imageA mighty swing (3863822298).jpg
captionMoseby at bat during a game in September 1985
positionCenter fielder
batsLeft
throwsRight
birth_date
birth_placePortland, Arkansas, U.S.
debutleagueMLB
debutdateMay 24
debutyear1980
debutteamToronto Blue Jays
debut2leagueNPB
debut2dateApril 21
debut2year1992
debut2teamYomiuri Giants
finalleagueMLB
finaldateOctober 6
finalyear1991
finalteamDetroit Tigers
final2leagueNPB
final2dateAugust 28
final2year1993
final2teamYomiuri Giants
statleagueMLB
stat1labelBatting average
stat1value.257
stat2labelHome runs
stat2value169
stat3labelRuns batted in
stat3value737
stat2leagueNPB
stat21labelBatting average
stat21value.289
stat22labelHome runs
stat22value29
stat23labelRuns batted in
stat23value84
hofcolor#EC1C40
hoflinkCanadian Baseball Hall of Fame
hoftypeCanadian
hofdate2018
  • Toronto Blue Jays (–)
  • Detroit Tigers (–)
  • Yomiuri Giants (–)
  • All-Star (1986)
  • Silver Slugger Award (1983) Lloyd Anthony Moseby (born November 5, 1959) is an American former Major League Baseball player. A center fielder, and good all-around athlete, Moseby's nickname, "Shaker", was said to stem from his ability to get away from or "shake" players who attempted to defend him on the basketball court.

Career

Born in Portland, Arkansas, Moseby graduated from Oakland High School in Oakland, California. Moseby's primary sport in high school was basketball and he did not take baseball seriously until his sophomore year. Moseby had committed to play college basketball for St. Mary's, one of 75 schools to offer him a basketball scholarship, if he had not decided to sign with the Blue Jays.

Drafted 2nd overall by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 1978 amateur draft, Moseby made his major league debut on May 24, 1980. Despite some growing pains early in his career, Moseby developed into a well-polished batter, fielder, and base-runner, driving in nearly 100 runs in three seasons (1984, 1986, and 1987) and regularly stealing 30-plus bases. Moseby finished in the top 25 for the American League Most Valuable Player Award twice—1983 and 1984.

In the mid-1980s, he was part of the powerful "Killer B's" outfield trio for the Jays, playing center field between George Bell and Jesse Barfield. On April 19, 1983, he hit a walk-off two-run home run against Dan Spillner to give the Blue Jays a 9-7 victory over the Cleveland Indians. On August 16, 1987, Moseby took part in an unusual baserunning play. While on first base, he made an attempt to steal second base that saw the catcher throw the ball into centerfield. Moseby, now at second seeing the ball in the hands of the centerfielder, essentially made a run back to "steal" first base. Strangely enough, the center fielder, in trying to throw the ball back to the first baseman in an attempt to perhaps pick off Moseby, threw the ball wide and hard that resulted in Moseby racing to second base on the error. After the 1989 season, Moseby signed with the Detroit Tigers. Moseby saw limited action with the Tigers for two seasons and then traveled to Japan, where he played with the Yomiuri Giants in 1992 and 1993.

Over his career, Moseby had 869 runs, 169 home runs, 737 runs batted in, and 280 stolen bases with a career batting average of .257. He led the American League in triples in 1984 and was an All-Star in 1986. As of 2018, Moseby ranks in the top 10 for Toronto Blue Jays career leaders in WAR, games played, at-bats, runs, hits, doubles, triples, home runs, RBI, walks, stolen bases (franchise leader), and extra-base hits.

Moseby served as the Blue Jays' first base coach in 1998 and 1999.

In 2018, Moseby was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame. , Moseby was living on Queens Quay in Toronto.

References

References

  1. Brosnan, Jim. (September 1984). "Lloyd Moseby: Red-Hot Blue Jay". [[Boys' Life]].
  2. "Lloyd Moseby Stats".
  3. (April 20, 1983). "Toronto 9, Cleveland 7". [[The Deseret News]].
  4. (October 17, 2017). "Lloyd Moseby double steal: Try not to cringe".
  5. (June 18, 2018). "Lloyd Moseby goes from California kid to Canadian Baseball Hall of Famer". [[Toronto Star]].
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