Rocky Nelson

Name: Glenn Richard NelsonRocky Nelson

Nickname: Rocky

Induction: November 19, 1987

Born (date, year, place): November 18, 1924 in Portsmouth, Ohio

Died (date, year, place): October 31, 2006 in Portsmouth, Ohio

Primary Position: First Base

Bats: Left

Throws: Left

Years Played: 1942, 1946 to 1962

Teams Played: St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates, Chicago White Sox, Brooklyn Dodgers, Cleveland Indians

 

Signed by the St. Louis Cardinals, Rocky Nelson reported to club’s Class D affiliate in Johnson City in 1942. After just 53 games in the minors, the slick-fielding first baseman served three years in the U.S. army, before returning to the Cardinals system in 1946.

 

Though he enjoyed several stints in the majors, Nelson is best known as an International League superstar. Employing an unorthodox batting stance, Nelson became the only player to capture the International League MVP award three times – with the Montreal Royals in 1953 and 1955 and with the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1958. He also won two triple crowns: in 1955, he hit .364 with 37 homers and 130 RBIs, and in 1958, he topped the circuit with a .326 batting average, 43 home runs and 120 RBIs.

 

Despite terrorizing International League pitching, Nelson was never a regular in the big leagues. His most successful season was with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1960, when he platooned with Dick Stuart at first base. After hitting .300 in the regular season, Nelson smacked a two-run homer in the first inning of Game 7 of the World Series against the Yankees. His home run would help set the stage for Bill Mazeroski’s storied ninth-inning walk-off homer.

Career Major League Statistics

G AB R H D T HR RBI TB BB SO SB OBP SLG AVG
620 1394 186 347 61 14 31 173 529 130 94 7 .317 .379 .249

To view season by season statistics click HERE.

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