Leron Lee | |||
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Outfielder | |||
Born: Bakersfield, California |
March 4, 1948 |||
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Professional debut | |||
MLB: September 5, 1969, for the St. Louis Cardinals | |||
NPB: April 2, 1977, for the Lotte Orions | |||
Last appearance | |||
MLB: October 3, 1976, for the Los Angeles Dodgers | |||
NPB: October 20, 1987, for the Lotte Orions | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Batting average | .250 | ||
Hits | 404 | ||
Home runs | 31 | ||
Runs batted in | 152 | ||
NPB statistics | |||
Batting average | .320 | ||
Hits | 1579 | ||
Home runs | 283 | ||
Runs batted in | 912 | ||
Teams | |||
Career highlights and awards | |||
NPB
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NPB
Leron Lee (born March 4, 1948 in Bakersfield, California) is a former left fielder in Major League Baseball who played 8 seasons with the St. Louis Cardinals, Los Angeles Dodgers, Cleveland Indians and San Diego Padres. He was the inspiration for the 1992 film Mr. Baseball, as Leron was the first Major League player to move to Japan at the height of his career and to wed a Japanese woman.
Lee, the oldest of six children, graduated from Grant High School in Sacramento with 36 football scholarship offers from major four-year universities. Instead, he began his professional career at 18 as the number one draft pick of the St. Louis Cardinals in September 1969 after an excellent season at Tulsa where he batted .303. His first major league hit was off Jerry Robertson of the Montreal Expos. In 1970 he had ten multi-hit games, including two games with three hits, a tie breaking home run against the Dodgers and his first major league home run off future Hall of Famer Ferguson Jenkins.
In June 1971, after three seasons with the Cardinals, Leron was traded to the San Diego Padres where he had nineteen multi-hit games, including one memorable game against Cincinnati where he had three hits, including two doubles. A home run off Cito Gaston led to a 1972 2-1 win against Pittsburgh, the same year Leron batted .300 with an amazing thirty four multi- hit games, including six three-hit games.
On July 4, 1972, Lee broke up a no-hit bid by Tom Seaver of the New York Mets. Lee singled with one out in the ninth inning.
Once again, after three seasons with the Padres, Leron was purchased by the Cleveland Indians where he had thirteen multi-hit games. In a game against the Royals he hit a home run then a grand slam to drive in all five runs for a 5-2 victory.