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词条 Mack Jones
释义

  1. Major league career

  2. Minor leagues

  3. Personal life

  4. In popular culture

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Infobox baseball biography
|name=Mack Jones
|image=
|position=Outfielder
|bats=Left
|throws=Right
|birth_date={{Birth date|1938|11|6}}
|birth_place=Atlanta, Georgia
|death_date={{death date and age|2004|6|8|1938|11|6}}
|death_place=Atlanta, Georgia
|debutleague = MLB
|debutdate=July 13
|debutyear=1961
|debutteam=Milwaukee Braves
|finalleague = MLB
|finaldate=July 1
|finalyear=1971
|finalteam=Montreal Expos
|statleague = MLB
|stat1label=Batting average
|stat1value=.252
|stat2label=Home runs
|stat2value=133
|stat3label=Runs batted in
|stat3value=415
|teams=
  • Milwaukee / Atlanta Braves ({{Baseball year|1961}}–{{Baseball year|1967}})
  • Cincinnati Reds ({{Baseball year|1968}})
  • Montreal Expos ({{Baseball year|1969}}–{{Baseball year|1971}})

}}Mack F. Jones (November 6, 1938 – June 8, 2004), nicknamed "Mack The Knife",[1] was a Major League Baseball left fielder who played for the Milwaukee and Atlanta Braves (1961–1967), Cincinnati Reds (1968), and Montreal Expos (1969–1971). He batted left-handed, threw right-handed and was listed as {{convert|6|ft|1|in}} tall and {{convert|180|lb}}.[2]

Major league career

A native of Atlanta, Jones was a graduate of Henry McNeal Turner High School. After playing baseball for an Atlanta semi-pro team,[3] Jones was signed by the Milwaukee Braves as an amateur agent in 1958. In his major-league debut, on July 13, 1961, Jones tied a "modern" (post-1900) National League record by collecting four hits (three singles and a double) in his first game, a 6-4 Braves road win over the St. Louis Cardinals and future Baseball Hall of Famer Bob Gibson. Leading off the game, Jones' first career hit was a single off Gibson. An inning later he notched his first career run batted in with a double off Gibson that scored Joe Torre.[4]

Jones' most productive season came in 1965, when he batted .262 with 31 home runs and 75 runs batted in. Jones teamed up that year with Hank Aaron, Eddie Mathews, Joe Torre, Felipe Alou, and Gene Oliver, as the Braves set a National League record with six 20-home run hitters in one season. When the Braves moved to Jones' native Atlanta in 1966, he hit 23 homers despite a shoulder injury. In 1967, he was traded to Cincinnati.

In the 1968 MLB expansion draft, Jones was the second player selected by the Montreal Expos (the fourth pick overall), behind Manny Mota.

On April 8, 1969 at Shea Stadium in Flushing, New York, playing the Mets, history was made. Jones, along with Don Hahn and Rusty Staub, took the outfield in the bottom of the first inning for the first-day Expos. The trio made up the Expos' first outfield in Montreal franchise history with Jones in left field for the Expos.

Six days later, on April 14, 1969, Jones hit a three-run home run and two-run triple in the Expos' first home victory as a franchise, an 8-7 win over the St. Louis Cardinals at Jarry Park. The home run came with Staub and Don Bosch on base and was the very first to be hit in a Major League regular season game in Canada. Jones finished that season with a career-high .270 batting average, 22 homers and 79 runs batted in. So popular was Jones in Montreal that the left-field bleachers in Jarry Park were nicknamed "Jonesville." [5]

In an 11-year career, Jones was a .252 hitter with 778 hits, 133 home runs, 415 RBI, 485 runs, 132 doubles, 31 triples, and 65 stolen bases in 1,002 games.

Minor leagues

In 1964, the Braves loaned Jones to the Detroit Tigers' Triple-A affiliate, the Syracuse Chiefs of the International League. Jones responded with one of the best seasons ever by a Syracuse player, when batting .317 with 15 doubles, 18 triples, 39 home runs and 102 runs batted in. He holds modern-day single-season Syracuse records for runs (111), total bases (337), RBIs, triples and home runs, all set in 1964. Jones was part of a Syracuse outfield that season that included future Tiger stars Willie Horton and Jim Northrup.

Jones was inducted into the Syracuse Baseball Wall of Fame in 2000, and into the International League Hall of Fame in 2013.[6]

Personal life

Mack Jones died in Atlanta of complications from stomach cancer at age 65. He was survived by his wife Esther Levon Buggs Hill Jones, daughter Gayle Jones, son Rontae Jones, three grandchildren and stepson Antonio Hill.[3]

In popular culture

Jones is portrayed by actor Phillip Jarrett in the French-Canadian baseball film A No-Hit No-Run Summer.

References

1. ^{{cite news|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCI/is_2_64/ai_n12415299|title=Deaths of former major league players, managers, club executives, scouts, umpires and writers: from January 25, 2004 through January 21, 2005|accessdate=2007-06-24|date=March–April 2005|publisher=Baseball Digest}}
2. ^{{cite news|url=https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/a02975da|last=Skelton|first=David E.|title=Mack Jones|work=Society for American Baseball Research|accessdate=2019-02-03}}
3. ^http://www.thedeadballera.com/Obits/Obits_J/Jones.Mack.Obit.html
4. ^https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/SLN/SLN196107130.shtml
5. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.cbc.ca/sports/indepth/expos/top10.html#1|title=Top 10 Expos Moments|accessdate=2007-10-24|date=September 29, 2004 | work=CBC News}}
6. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.milb.com/documents/2013/01/29/41228564/1/Class_of_2013_Bio_Page.pdf |title=International League Hall of Fame Class of 2013 |accessdate=June 10, 2013}}

External links

  • [https://www.baseball-reference.com/j/jonesma01.shtml Baseball Reference (statistics and analysis)]
  • Retrosheet (box score and play-by-play of the April 14, 1969 game)
  • {{Find a Grave|8902086}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jones, Mack}}

17 : 1938 births|2004 deaths|African-American baseball players|Atlanta Braves players|Baseball players from Georgia (U.S. state)|Cedar Rapids Braves players|Cincinnati Reds players|Deaths from cancer in Georgia (U.S. state)|Deaths from stomach cancer|Louisville Colonels (minor league) players|Major League Baseball left fielders|Milwaukee Braves players|Montreal Expos players|Salinas Packers players|Sportspeople from Atlanta|Syracuse Chiefs players|Toronto Maple Leafs (International League) players

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