Gary Lynn Nolan (born May 27, 1948 in Herlong, California) is a former Major League Baseball right-handed starting pitcher who played with the Cincinnati Reds (1967–73, 1975–77) and California Angels (1977). He was inducted into the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame in 1983.
Early life
His family moved to Oroville, California when he was young and he graduated in 1966 from Oroville High School. In February 1965 at age 17 he married high school sweetheart Carole Widener. They eventually had four children, Gary Jr., Tim, Mark and Kathy.
He was drafted by the Reds in the first round of the 1966 Major League Baseball Draft.[1]
Major League career
Nolan's first Major League game was at the young age of 18. A hard thrower, Nolan had a promising debut on April 15, 1967 when he struck out the side in the first inning en route to a 7–3 victory over the Houston Astros. On June 7, he struck out Baseball Hall of Famer Willie Mays four times in one game.[2] He finished with a 14–8 record in that rookie season, was fourth in the National League in ERA (2.58) and in strikeouts (206), and was third in the Rookie of the Year voting behind Tom Seaver of the Mets, and Dick Hughes of the Cardinals.
In 1970 Nolan went 18–7 with 181 strikeouts and a 3.26 ERA, helping the Reds to win the NL pennant and establishing himself as one of the league's great young starting pitchers. Nolan pitched a remarkable nine innings of shutout ball to earn a victory in the 10-inning Game One of that year's National League Championship Series against Pittsburgh. But he took the loss in Game One of the World Series against the eventual champion Baltimore Orioles.
After a disappointing 12–15 record in 1971, he posted 13 victories before the 1972 All-Star Game. Selected for the NL team, Nolan was suffering from neck and shoulder pains, and he was forced to withdraw from the game. After rehabbing his injuries on the disabled list, he returned to the lineup and finished the season with a 15–5 record and 1.99 ERA, leading the league in winning percentage (.750) and was second to Steve Carlton in ERA. In the World Series against Oakland that year, he lost Game One (six innings, three runs) and was pulled from the game early in Game Six (41⁄3 innings, one earned run).
Arm problems forced Nolan to miss most of 1973, and he missed the entire 1974 season. He returned in 1975 in good form, going 15–9 with a 3.16 ERA. In the World Series against Boston, he pitched just six innings in two starts. In 1976, he duplicated his 15–9 record and finally got his first World Series victory against the Yankees in the last game of a four-game sweep. New arm and shoulder problems bothered him in 1977, and he opted to retire.
In 1975, he earned the Hutch Award, given annually to an active Major League player who "best exemplifies the fighting spirit and competitive desire of Fred Hutchinson by persevering through adversity." It is presented by the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
In 10-season career, Nolan compiled a 110–70 record with 1,039 strikeouts, a 3.08 ERA, 45 complete games, 14 shutouts, and 1,674 innings pitched in 250 games (247 starts). In eleven post season games he was 2–2 with a 3.34 ERA covering 59.1 innings.
After baseball
After retiring from baseball, he worked for 25 years in Las Vegas, first as a blackjack dealer at the Golden Nugget and then as an executive host for guests of hotels/casinos including the Mirage Casino and the Gold Country Casino. In 1999, a baseball park in Oroville was renamed the Gary Nolan Sports Complex. He was elected to the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame in 1983.[2][3]
He moved back to Oroville in 2003, where he is involved with several charitable and civic organizations and works with high school pitchers. In 2011 he was inducted into the Oroville Union High School District Hall of Fame.[1]
See also
External links
References
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- 1965: Bernie Carbo
- 1966: Gary Nolan
- 1967: Wayne Simpson
- 1968: Tim Grant
- 1969: Don Gullett
- 1970: Gary Polczynski
- 1971: Mike Miley
- 1972: Larry Paine
- 1973: Charles Kessler
- 1974: Steve Reed
- 1975: Tony Moretto
- 1976: Mark King
- 1977: Tad Venger
- 1978: Nick Esasky
- 1979: Dan Lamar, Mike Sullivan
- 1980: Ron Robinson
- 1981: None
- 1982: Scott Jones, Bill Hawley, Robert Jones
- 1983: Kurt Stillwell
- 1984: Pat Pacillo
- 1985: Barry Larkin
- 1986: Scott Scudder
- 1987: Jack Armstrong
- 1988: None
- 1989: Scott Bryant
- 1990: Dan Wilson
- 1991: Pokey Reese
- 1992: Chad Mottola
- 1993: Pat Watkins
- 1994: C. J. Nitkowski
- 1995: None
- 1996: John Oliver, Matt McClendon
- 1997: Brandon Larson
- 1998: Austin Kearns
- 1999: Ty Howington
- 2000: David Espinosa, Dustin Moseley
- 2001: Jeremy Sowers
- 2002: Chris Gruler, Mark Schramek
- 2003: Ryan Wagner
- 2004: Homer Bailey
- 2005: Jay Bruce
- 2006: Drew Stubbs
- 2007: Devin Mesoraco, Todd Frazier, Kyle Lotzkar
- 2008: Yonder Alonso
- 2009: Mike Leake, Brad Boxberger
- 2010: Yasmani Grandal
- 2011: Robert Stephenson
- 2012: Nick Travieso, Jesse Winker, Jeff Gelalich
- 2013: Phillip Ervin
- 2014: Nick Howard, Alex Blandino
- 2015: Tyler Stephenson
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- 1958 Paul Derringer, Ernie Lombardi, Frank McCormick, Johnny Vander Meer, Bucky Walters
- 1959 Ival Goodman, Eppa Rixey
- 1960 Ewell Blackwell, Edd Roush
- 1961 Lonny Frey, Billy Werber
- 1962 Hughie Critz, Bubbles Hargrave, Ted Kluszewski
- 1963 Rube Bressler, Harry Craft, Heinie Groh, Noodles Hahn
- 1964 Gus Bell, Pete Donohue
- 1965 Fred Hutchinson, Larry Kopf, Red Lucas, Wally Post, Johnny Temple
- 1966 Jake Daubert, Mike McCormick, Billy Myers
- 1967 Adolfo "Dolf" Luque, Bill McKechnie
- 1968 Sam Crawford, Joe Nuxhall
- 1969 Warren Giles
- 1970 Jim O'Toole
- 1971 Roy McMillan
- 1972 Gordy Coleman
- 1973 Jim Maloney
- 1974 Bob Purkey
- 1975 Smoky Burgess
- 1976 Brooks Lawrence
- 1977 Vada Pinson
- 1978 Frank Robinson
- 1979 Tommy Helms
- 1980 Clay Carroll
- 1981 Leo Cárdenas
- 1982 Wayne Granger
- 1983 Gary Nolan
- 1984 Jack Billingham
- 1986 Johnny Bench
- 1987 Joe Morgan
- 1988 Jerry Lynch
- 1998 Tony Pérez, Cy Seymour
- 2000 Sparky Anderson, Dave Concepción
- 2001 Bob Ewing, Mario Soto
- 2002 Don Gullett, Bid McPhee
- 2003 George Foster, Dummy Hoy
- 2004 Ken Griffey, Sr., Bob Howsam, Will White
- 2005 Eric Davis, José Rijo, George Wright, Harry Wright
- 2006 Tom Browning, Lee May, Tom Seaver
- 2008 César Gerónimo, August Herrmann, Joey Jay, Barry Larkin
- 2010 Pedro Borbón, Chris Sabo, Tony Mullane
- 2012 Sean Casey, Dan Driessen, John Reilly
- 2014 Ken Griffey Jr., Dave Parker, Ron Oester, Jake Beckley
- 2016 Pete Rose
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