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Jimmie Reese

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Batting average
  
.278

Role
  
Baseball player

Name
  
Jimmie Reese

Runs batted in
  
70

Home runs
  
8


Jimmie Reese Significant Number Factoid Friday Today The Number Is

Died
  
July 12, 1994, Santa Ana, California, United States

Jimmie Reese (October 1, 1901 – July 13, 1994) was a professional baseball player. He played second base, third base, and then coached in Major League Baseball.

Contents

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Early life

Jimmie Reese Wayback Machine Bob Lemon39s 3966 Seattle Angels

Reese was born James Herman Solomon to a Jewish family in New York City and was brought up in Los Angeles. In order to avoid the brunt of prejudice against Jewish baseball players, he adopted the name of Jimmie Reese, which he used throughout his baseball career.

Playing career

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Much of his career was spent in the Pacific Coast League, beginning as a batboy with the Los Angeles Angels from 1919 (at least one source claims 1917) to 1923.

Oakland Oaks

Jimmie Reese 1927 Zeenut 1927 Jimmy Reese 108 Baseball Card Value Price Guide

In 1924 he signed a contract to play second base with the Oakland Oaks.

Jimmie Reese Jimmie Reese Jewish Baseball Museum

The Oaks won the PCL pennant in 1927, with Reese batting .295 in 191 games. He had a league-leading fielding percentage of .984 that year.

New York Yankees

Jimmie Reese Jimmie Reese Jewish Baseball Museum

In September 1927 he was traded by Oakland to the New York Yankees with Lyn Lary and $100,000 ($1,378,736 today).

Jimmie Reese jimmy reese Pinstripe Birthdays

He was called up to the American League in 1930. Reese played for the Yankees in 1930 and 1931, and was most noted for being the roommate of Babe Ruth (or, as Reese explained, he "roomed with Ruth's suitcase").

In 1930 he batted .346 in 188 at bats, striking out only 8 times. Only Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth hit for higher averages on the team. He was the primary back-up at second base (48 games) behind Tony Lazzeri (77 games).

St. Paul Saints

In November 1931 he was sent by the Yankees to the St. Paul Saints (American Association), to complete an earlier deal made in June 1931 for Johnny Murphy, Jack Saltzgaver, cash, and 2 players to be named.

St. Louis Cardinals

Reese played the 1932 season with the St. Louis Cardinals, who had selected him off of waivers in June.

Los Angeles Angels (PCL)

The Los Angeles Angels (PCL) purchased Reese's contract from the Cardinals in February 1933. He missed most of the season due to injuries and illness, but hit .330 in 104 games. The following year he batted .311 with 12 triples, and had a fielding percentage of .972 (the best among second basemen that season). He continued to play for the Angels in 1935 and 1936.

San Diego Padres

In 1937 he was traded to the San Diego Padres (PCL), where he hit .314. The Padres won the Governor's Cup that year. He retired as a player after the 1938 season.

After his playing career

Reese served in the Army from November 1942 to July 1943 with the 12th Armored Division at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, where he managed the baseball team.

After the war, he worked as a scout for the Boston Braves for two years, and coached in San Diego from 1948 until 1960, when he was appointed manager. But he preferred to coach, so he resigned partway through the 1961 season. "I'm best suited as a liaison man, as a coach", he said. "I just am not suited to give a guy hell."

From 1963 until 1970 he coached at Hawaii, Seattle, and Portland, Oregon; then he scouted for the Montreal Expos.

He threw out the ceremonial first pitch at the 1989 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, played at Anaheim Stadium.

Reese never married, had no children, and was mostly estranged from his extended family. In 1972, at age 71, he asked the Angels for a job, and was hired as conditioning coach, whose job was to get the players into shape. Reese's main specialty, however, was hitting fungos in practice, using a fungo bat he made himself. Numerous Angels players remarked on his seemingly uncanny ability to place fungos where he wanted. He even occasionally "pitched" batting practice with his fungo bat, standing at the pitcher's rubber and consistently hitting line drives over the middle of the plate. He was regularly called "the nicest man in baseball", and had a friendship with Nolan Ryan when he was with the team; Ryan would name one of his sons Reese in his honor. He was listed as an Angels coach for 22 years, until his death on July 13, 1994, in Santa Ana, California. He died peacefully of aspiration pneumonia and respiratory failure.

His uniform #50 was retired by the club in his memory. At his death, Reese was believed to be the oldest person ever to regularly wear a uniform in an official capacity in the history of organized professional baseball in North America. His record was surpassed in 2016 by Red Schoendienst, who currently serves as a special assistant coach for the St. Louis Cardinals at age 94 and wears a Cardinals uniform in that role. Ted Radcliffe and Buck O'Neil made appearances in professional games at older ages, but those were one-off ceremonial events.

He was inducted into the Pacific Coast League Hall of Fame in 2003.

In the film Jack Reacher, Tom Cruise in the title role uses the name Jimmie Reese when trying to conceal his identity from a suspiciously, sexually overt local girl, Sandy (Alexia Fast). Later on, he confirms that whenever he uses an alias, he always uses the name of someone who played second base for the Yankees, such as Jimmie Reese.

References

Jimmie Reese Wikipedia