Today’s
blog post has a “not so missing” 1971 card for former catcher Bill
Plummer, who sadly had a guy named “Johnny Bench” in front of him while a
member of the Cincinnati Reds:
Needless to say, when the Reds already have a guy named “Bench” behind
the plate, you’re going to relegated to back-up duties, and that’s
exactly what Plummer was from the time he came up in 1968 for a
cup-of-coffee and 1977 before he signed with the Seattle Mariners for
his last season of 1978.
Plummer appeared in 10 games for the Reds during the 1971 season, going
0-for-19 at the plate while playing four games at catcher with another
two at third base.
Between 1972 and 1977 he’d average about 50 games a year along with 150
plate appearances, hitting the “Mendoza Line” while backing up the
future Hall-of-Fame Bench.
Nevertheless, the man got to be a part of the “Big Red Machine” teams
and even walking away with two championship rings in 1975 and 1976.
After that last season in the Big Leagues with the Seattle Mariners,
Plummer finished with a .188 batting average, collecting 168 hits in 892
at-bats over 367 games before moving into coaching, then one season as a
Major League manager, with the Seattle Mariners in 1992, where they
went 64 and 98, finishing last in the American League West.
Showing posts with label Bill Plummer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Plummer. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 27, 2019
Friday, January 4, 2019
NOT REALLY MISSING IN ACTION- 1972 BILL PLUMMER
Here’s
a “not so missing” 1972 card for former catcher Bill Plummer, who had
the misfortune of coming up with a team that already had a pretty good
catcher in front of him, the Cincinnati Reds:
Needless to say, when the Reds already have a guy named Johnny Bench behind the plate, you’re going to relegated to back-up duties, and that’s exactly what Plummer was from the time he came up in 1968 for a cup-of-coffee and 1977 before he signed with the Seattle Mariners for his last season of 1978.
Plummer appeared in 10 games for the Reds during the 1971 season, going 0-for-19 at the plate while playing four games at catcher with another two at third base.
Between 1972 and 1977 he’d average about 50 games a year along with 150 plate appearances, hitting the “Mendoza Line” while backing up the future Hall-of-Fame Bench.
Nevertheless, the man got to be a part of the “Big Red Machine” teams and even walking away with two championship rings in 1975 and 1976.
After that last season in the Big Leagues with the Seattle Mariners, Plummer finished with a .188 batting average, collecting 168 hits in 892 at-bats over 367 games before moving into coaching, then one season as a Major League manager, with the Seattle Mariners in 1992, where they went 64 and 98, finishing last in the American League West.
Needless to say, when the Reds already have a guy named Johnny Bench behind the plate, you’re going to relegated to back-up duties, and that’s exactly what Plummer was from the time he came up in 1968 for a cup-of-coffee and 1977 before he signed with the Seattle Mariners for his last season of 1978.
Plummer appeared in 10 games for the Reds during the 1971 season, going 0-for-19 at the plate while playing four games at catcher with another two at third base.
Between 1972 and 1977 he’d average about 50 games a year along with 150 plate appearances, hitting the “Mendoza Line” while backing up the future Hall-of-Fame Bench.
Nevertheless, the man got to be a part of the “Big Red Machine” teams and even walking away with two championship rings in 1975 and 1976.
After that last season in the Big Leagues with the Seattle Mariners, Plummer finished with a .188 batting average, collecting 168 hits in 892 at-bats over 367 games before moving into coaching, then one season as a Major League manager, with the Seattle Mariners in 1992, where they went 64 and 98, finishing last in the American League West.
Labels:
1972,
Bill Plummer,
Not Really,
Reds
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Everything baseball: cards, events, history and more.
Everything baseball: cards, events, history and more.