Jim Hannan | |||
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Pitcher | |||
Born: Jersey City, New Jersey |
January 7, 1940 |||
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MLB debut | |||
April 17, 1962, for the Washington Senators | |||
Last MLB appearance | |||
September 10, 1971, for the Milwaukee Brewers | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Win–loss record | 41–48 | ||
Earned run average | 3.88 | ||
Strikeouts | 438 | ||
Innings pitched | 822 | ||
Teams | |||
James John Hannan (January 7, 1940 in Jersey City, New Jersey) is an American retired professional baseball player who pitched in Major League Baseball from 1962–71 for the Washington Senators, Detroit Tigers and Milwaukee Brewers. The right-hander stood 6 feet 3 inches (1.91 m) tall and weighed 205 pounds (93 kg).
Hannan attended the University of Notre Dame and signed with the Boston Red Sox in time for the 1961 minor league season. After posting a 17–7 win-loss record and leading the Class D New York–Penn League in strikeouts, he was selected by Washington in the first-year player draft. His MLB service, which lasted all or part of ten years, began the following season. In his best campaign, 1968 for Washington, Hannan posted a 10–6 (3.01) record in 25 games pitched for a last-place team that lost 96 games.
After the 1970 campaign, he was included in a multi-player trade with the Detroit Tigers in which he, fellow right-hander Joe Coleman, shortstop Ed Brinkman and third baseman Aurelio Rodríguez were sent to Detroit for former 30-game-winner Denny McLain and three other players. Coleman, Brinkman and Rodríguez were three of the Senators' top players; they became mainstays in Detroit and helped lead the Tigers to the 1971 American League East Division championship. McLain was acquired as an attendance-booster for the struggling Senators. He had gone a combined 55–13 for the Tigers in 1968–69 but spent the beginning of 1970 under suspension for gambling allegations. Upon returning, he could not approach his old form, and with the 1971 Senators, he lost 22 games and the team went 63–96 and abandoned Washington for Dallas–Fort Worth.