Chuck Carr (baseball)

This article is about the former Major League outfielder. For the Civil Air Patrol National Commander, see Chuck Carr (Civil Air Patrol).
Chuck Carr
Center fielder
Born: (1967-08-10) August 10, 1967
San Bernardino, California
Batted: Switch Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 28, 1990, for the New York Mets
Last MLB appearance
September 27, 1997, for the Houston Astros
MLB statistics
Batting average .254
Home runs 13
Runs batted in 123
Stolen bases 144
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Charles Lee Glenn Carr, Jr. (born August 10, 1967) is a former Major League outfielder for the New York Mets (1990–91), St. Louis Cardinals (1992), Florida Marlins (1993–95), Milwaukee Brewers (1996–97) and Houston Astros (1997).

Carr topped the National League with 58 stolen bases in 1993. He later helped the Astros win the 1997 National League Central Division.

In an eight-season career, he played in 507 games, had 1,713 at-bats, 254 runs, 435 hits, 81 doubles, seven triples, 13 home runs, 123 RBI, 144 stolen bases, 149 walks, a .254 batting average, .316 on-base percentage, .332 slugging percentage, 569 total bases, 30 sacrifice hits, 10 sacrifice flies and four Intentional walks.

Carr is perhaps remembered most for his hasty departure from the Brewers in 1997. After popping out to third base on a two balls, no strike count, after being signalled to take the next pitch, Carr was questioned by manager Phil Garner. Carr reportedly replied to Garner by saying in the third person: "That ain't Chuckie's game. Chuckie hacks on 2-0." He was released from the club shortly thereafter.[1][2]

See also

Sources

  1. Tom Haudricourt (1997-09-02). "Carr Enjoying Ride in Houston". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved 5 July 2011.
  2. Box score of the infamous "Chuckie hacks" game

External links


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