Bill Mazeroski, the Hall of Fame second baseman who won eight Gold Glove awards for his steady work in the field and the hearts of countless Pittsburgh Pirates fans for his historic walk-off home run in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series, has died at the age of 89.
Pirates owner Bob Nutting said ''Maz was one of a kind, a true Pirates legend. ... His name will always be tied to the biggest home run in baseball history and the 1960 World Series championship, but I will remember him most for the person he was: humble, gracious and proud to be a Pirate.''
Mazeroski died Friday, the Pirates said. No cause of death was given.
‘Defensive wizard'
Elected to the Hall by the Veterans Committee in 2001, he was, by some measures, no superstar. Mazeroski had the lowest batting average, on-base percentage and stolen base total of any second baseman in Cooperstown. He hit just .260 lifetime, with 138 homers and 27 stolen bases in 17 years, and had an on-base percentage of .299. He never batted .300, never approached 100 runs batted or 100 runs scored and only once finished in the top 10 for Most Valuable Player.
His best qualities were both tangible and beyond the box score. His Hall of Fame plaque praises him as a ''defensive wizard'' with ''hard-nosed hustle'' and a ''quiet work ethic.'' A 10-time All-Star, he turned a major league record 1,706 double plays, earning the nickname ''No Hands'' for how quickly he fielded grounders and relayed them. He led the National League nine times in assists for second basemen and has been cited by statistician Bill James as the game's greatest defensive player at his position — by far.
''I think defense belongs in the Hall of Fame,'' Mazeroski said, defensively, during his Hall of Fame induction speech. ''Defense deserves as much credit as pitching and I'm proud to be going in as a defensive player.''
A home run for the ages