James Tolbert Hearn
[Jumbo Jim] (April 11, 1921 – June 10, 1998) was an
American
right-handed
pitcher in Major League Baseball for 13 seasons
(1947-59).
Born in
Atlanta,
Georgia
, Hearn attended Georgia
Tech
and signed with the St. Louis Cardinals in . He spent
two years in the
minor leagues
and three in military service during
World
War II, before being called up in . After compiling a 21-17
record for the Cardinals over all or parts of four seasons, he was
placed on waivers and claimed by the
New York Giants on July 10, . He then
went on to lead the
National League
in
earned run average (2.49) and
win 11 of 14 decisions for manager
Leo
Durocher that season.
Hearn was a crucial member of the Giants' starting rotation,
winning 17 games and helping them overcome a 13½-game mid-August
deficit to the
Brooklyn Dodgers
to win the NL pennant.
He defeated the Dodgers 3-1 in Game 1 of the
NL pennant playoff, and pitched effectively in the 1951 World Series, defeating the eventual
champion New York Yankees 6-2 in
his only start, in Game 3 at the Polo Grounds
. He gave up only one
earned run in the Series, for a Fall Classic ERA
of 1.04.
Hearn pitched in New York for five more seasons, but compiled only
a 50-54 record through 1956. The following season he was traded to
the
Philadelphia Phillies,
where he had some success as a
relief
pitcher. During his last season ( ), Hearn was involved in a
bizarre episode. On May 10, he pitched 1⅓ innings against the
Pittsburgh Pirates and gave up
two runs before the game was suspended. He was given his
unconditional release 12 days later. The suspended game was resumed
in July, and Pittsburgh held on to win. Thus Hearn was charged with
a loss, weeks after his career had ended.
Another interesting footnote about Hearn is that he hit two
inside-the-park home runs, including one in a game on July 9, 1955
in which he also hit a traditional fence-clearing homer. Hearn's
feat is notable in that there have been only a total of eight
inside-the-park home runs hit by pitchers since 1954.
Overall, Hearn appeared in 396 games, winning 109, losing 89, with
an ERA of 3.81. He was an excellent
golfer and
opened a golf school after his baseball career ended.
He died at age 77 in
Boca Grande,
Florida
.
See also
External links