Jim Morris

Player

Birthday January 19, 1964

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Brownwood, Texas, U.S.

Age 60 years old

Nationality United States

#13505 Most Popular

1964

James Samuel Morris Jr. (born January 19, 1964) is an American former professional baseball pitcher who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for two seasons with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

Although brief, Morris' career is noted for making his MLB debut at the age of 35 and after undergoing several arm surgeries.

1979

He attended Brownwood High School, but as Brownwood did not yet have a baseball program, he played football for the Lions from 1979–82 and won the state championship as a wingback, punter and kicker with Gordon Wood as a head coach.

Morris attended Angelo State University in San Angelo, Texas, Paris Junior College in Paris, Texas, and Ranger College in Ranger, Texas.

1982

Morris was originally selected 466th overall in the January 1982 amateur baseball draft by the New York Yankees but did not sign.

1983

He was selected out of Ranger College fourth overall in the 1983 amateur draft (January Secondary) by the Milwaukee Brewers and signed with the organization.

1986

Morris suffered several arm injuries in the minor leagues, missing all of the 1986 season.

1987

After four pitching appearances in 1987, he was released, never having progressed past the single-A minor leagues.

1988

After sitting out all of 1988, Morris signed with the Chicago White Sox organization for 1989.

Arm injuries and ineffectiveness limited him to pitching in just two games and he was again unable to rise past the single-A leagues before being released.

Unable to make anything of his career, Morris retired and moved to Big Lake, Texas with his wife Lorri, his 9-year-old son, and his five- and one-year-old daughters, where he became a physical science teacher and baseball coach at Reagan County High School.

At this point, Morris had retired with a minor league record of 17 wins, 22 losses, and a 5.13 earned run average (ERA) in 270 innings pitched.

Morris remained a teacher for Reagan County High School for the next decade.

1999

While coaching baseball for the Reagan County Owls in the spring of 1999, Morris made a promise to his team that he would try out for MLB if his team won the District Championship, something the team had never accomplished before.

His team won the title and Morris kept his end of the bargain by attending a Tampa Bay Devil Rays tryout.

The scout was not interested in Morris, but gave him a tryout solely to let Morris keep his promise to his players.

Surprisingly, Morris discovered that in spite of his age, and having several surgeries on his arm, he was able to throw 12 consecutive 98-mph fastballs.

After much debate with his family, Morris signed a professional contract with the Devil Rays organization at the age of 35.

He started out with the AA Orlando Rays and moved up quickly to a spot with the AAA Durham Bulls.

Thanks to solid pitching performances with Durham, Tampa Bay gave him a chance to pitch with the Rays when rosters expanded in September.

On September 18, 1999, against Royce Clayton of the Texas Rangers, the 35-year-old Morris made his debut, striking Clayton out on four pitches.

He made four more appearances later that year.

2000

Morris made 16 major league appearances in 2000, during which his arm problems recurred.

His final appearance came on May 9, 2000, at Yankee Stadium (home of the very team that had first drafted him 17 years earlier).

Morris was signed in December 2000 to a minor-league contract by the Los Angeles Dodgers, but was released during spring training.

At the end of his major league career he was 0–0 with an ERA of 4.80 and 13 strikeouts.

Morris has released an autobiography, The Oldest Rookie.

He often appears as a motivational speaker.

2002

His story was dramatized in the 2002 film The Rookie.

Morris was born in Brownwood, Texas, but spent most of his childhood moving to different cities, as his father was in the United States Navy.

Throughout his childhood, Morris lived in New Haven, Connecticut, Great Lakes, Illinois, and Jacksonville, Florida.

He began playing baseball at the age of three.

His father, Jim Sr., became a recruiter for the Navy.

His father and mother, Olline Hale, settled in Brownwood, Texas.

A feature film made by Disney called The Rookie was released in 2002 about Morris's climb to playing in MLB.

2010

He entered a tie game in the bottom of the 10th inning with the bases loaded, and issued a game-ending RBI walk to his first batter, Paul O'Neill, after which the Rays shut him down for the season (the club ultimately released Morris in November).

He was not the losing pitcher in the game as the runner who scored on the walk had been put on base by the previous pitcher Rick White, who was tagged with the loss.

Morris never recorded any wins or losses in any of his major league appearances.

2020

Morris released his second book, Dream Makers, in 2020.

It deals with his life in the twenty years since his retirement from Major League Baseball.