1966 Jim Nash, RHSP, A's 12-1 2.06 1.050 Career bests in W%, ERA, HR9 & H9. Near career bests in WHIP & SO/9. 2nd in AL ROY voting. Career journeyman put it all together for a couple of seasons for the up and coming A's before getting derailed by arm trouble. 3L. No BP singles vs. lefties and no HR chances on entire card. No ATG card.
Ran across this bit of trivia about Jim Nash today ...
Rose amassed at least 10 at-bats against 363 different pitchers. Astoundingly, he collected a hit against 362 of them.
There was just one exception.
“I did what, now?” said Jim Nash, reached by phone at his home in Atlanta’s far northwest suburbs.
It’s a stretch to suggest that Pete Rose’s nemesis was a 6-foot-5, 220-pound right-hander unironically nicknamed Jumbo Jim who broke into the majors as a sensation with the Kansas City A’s in 1966 before a torn rotator cuff robbed him of his fastball. Rose and Nash didn’t face each other enough times to form anything resembling a rivalry. They did not do battle with a pennant on the line. There were other pitchers Rose faced more often — Koufax, Randy Jones, Al Downing — who held him under a .200 average.
The fact that Rose had at least 10 at-bats against 363 different pitchers and got a hit against all but one says more about Rose than it says about Jumbo Jim.
It was only 10 at-bats. But Nash retired Rose all 10 times. It’s a claim to fame nonetheless. It’s a bit of bar trivia that even Nash didn’t know.