Ed Charles
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edwin Douglas Charles (born on April 29, 1933 in Daytona Beach, Florida is a former third baseman in Major League Baseball.
A right-handed hitter, Charles played for the Kansas City Athletics (1962-67) and New York Mets (1967-69).
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[edit] Minor league career
Charles was originally drafted by the Boston Braves in 1952. He spent eight seasons in the Braves’ farm system in the still-segregated Deep South, during which he wrote poetry concerning baseball and racism. Due to the presence of Eddie Mathews at third base, the Braves finally traded Charles to the Athletics prior to the 1962 season.
[edit] Kansas City Athletics
In his rookie season of 1962, Charles batted .288 with 17 home runs, 74 runs batted in and 20 stolen bases; the batting average, home runs and stolen bases would all be career highs. He was also named to the Topps All-Star Rookie Roster. Charles would retain his steady play for the Athletics over the next four seasons; in 1963 he batted .267 with 15 home runs and a career-best 79 RBIs, and while his batting average fell to .241 in 1964 he still managed 16 home runs and 63 RBIs. Prior to the 1965 season, Athletics owner Charlie Finley moved the fences back in Municipal Stadium, and though Charles batted .269 that year and .286 in 1966, his combined home run total was 17—the same number he had hit in his rookie season.
[edit] The Miracle Mets
On May 10, 1967, the Athletics traded Charles to the Mets. He would be the oldest regular his new team. In 1969, he shared third base duties with rookie Wayne Garrett as a member of the team that unexpectedly won the World Series, after finishing dead last in five of its first seven seasons and 9th in a 10-team National League in the other two. That year, the Mets had trailed the Chicago Cubs by as many as 10 games in the National League East (both leagues had split into two divisions after expanding from 10 teams to 12) on August 13. On September 24, they clinched the division with a 6-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals, with Charles homering off Steve Carlton (his final Major League home run) and Donn Clendenon homering twice and Gary Gentry pitching a four-hitter for the victory.
Charles played in four of the five games in the World Series, in which the Mets defeated the heavily favorited Baltimore Orioles. After losing the first game, the Mets won the next four; Charles scored the winning run in Game Two on Al Weis’ eighth-inning single. Charles was on the field for the final out of the Series; one famous photo of the Mets' celebration after the final out is of him dancing a “jig” as winning pitcher Jerry Koosman leaped into the arms of catcher Jerry Grote.
After the Series, Charles, whose nickname, “The Glider,” came from his third base play and graceful baserunning, announced his retirement. In his career he batted .263 with 86 home runs and 421 RBIs in 1005 games played.