Wes Stock

Player

Birthday April 10, 1934

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Longview, Washington, U.S.

Age 89 years old

Nationality United States

#46038 Most Popular

1934

Wesley Gay Stock (born April 10, 1934) is an American former Major League Baseball pitcher, pitching coach and television commentator.

1954

He played college baseball for the Cougars from 1954 to 1955.

1956

He signed with the Orioles in 1956, and spent 1957–1958 performing military service.

1959

He appeared in 321 games pitched (all but three in relief) between 1959 and 1967 with the Baltimore Orioles and Kansas City Athletics.

Stock threw and batted right-handed; he was listed as 6 ft tall and 190 lb.

Stock attended Shelton High School then Washington State University (then College) where he was initiated into Phi Kappa Tau fraternity.

His initial trial with Baltimore, in April 1959, came after only one season of minor league baseball, in the Class C Northern League.

Over all or parts of nine MLB seasons, Stock won 27 of 40 decisions (a winning percentage of .675), with 365 strikeouts and 22 saves in 517 1⁄3 innings pitched.

He allowed 434 hits and 215 bases on balls.

Although a weak hitter in his major league career, posting only a .051 batting average (3-for-59), he was better than average defensively.

He recorded a .980 fielding percentage with only three errors in 148 total chances, which was 25 points higher than the league average during his career.

1967

After his final appearance on the mound, Stock became a pitching coach for the Athletics in both Kansas City (from July 13, 1967, through the end of that season) and Oakland (1973–1976; 1984–1986), Milwaukee Brewers (1970–1972), and Seattle Mariners (1977–1981).

1975

He was a coach on the 1975 American League All-Star team and on the 1973–1974 World Series champion A's. In his two years as the minor league pitching coordinator for the New York Mets (1968–1969), working under his former teammate, Whitey Herzog, he helped develop mound talent that would contribute to the Mets' 1969 world championship.

1982

In addition to coaching, Stock was one of the Mariners' television broadcasters in 1982 and 1983.