Rick James (baseball)
      
Richard Lee James (born October 11, 1947) is an American former professional baseball player. A 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m), 205 lb (93 kg) right-handed pitcher, James was the Chicago Cubs' first #1 draft pick in the inaugural Major League Baseball Draft of June 1965. Selected after his graduation from Coffee High School, Florence, Alabama, James had a six-season (1965–1970) professional career, but his Major League stay was only three games and 4⅔ innings pitched — a proverbial "cup of coffee" — at the tail end of the 1967 season.
James was the sixth player selected in the first round of the first MLB Draft, following #1 overall choice Rick Monday (taken by the Kansas City Athletics), #3 overall Joe Coleman (Washington Senators), and just ahead of #7 pick Ray Fosse (Cleveland Indians); Baseball Hall of Fame catcher Johnny Bench was taken in the second round, 36th overall, by the Cincinnati Reds.[1]
James was called up by the Cubs after a successful 1967 season split between the Double-A and Triple-A levels of minor league baseball. His first two appearances came in relief against the eventual 1967 world champion St. Louis Cardinals and the National League runners-up, the San Francisco Giants.  James held them scoreless over 1⅔ innings.[2] But in his third game, this time as a starting pitcher against the Reds on the closing day of the season at Crosley Field, James lasted only three innings and was roughed up for seven earned runs and nine hits, including a home run (by Vada Pinson) and three doubles, and he was charged with the loss in a 10–3 Cincinnati triumph.[3]
In 1968, James returned to the minors and pitched through the 1970 season before leaving baseball at age 23.
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 1965: James 1966: Burk 1967: Hughes 1968: Rickey 1969: Metzger 1970: Hiser 1971: Wehmeier 1972: Vernoy 1973: Tabb 1974: Thompson 1975: Rosinski 1976: Segelke 1977: Martz 1978: Hayes 1979: Perlman 1980: Schulze 1981: Carter, Lovelace 1982: Dunston, Woods, Boderick 1983: Davidson 1984: Hall 1985: Palmeiro, Masters 1986: May 1987: Harkey 1988: Griffin 1989: Cunningham 1990: Dickson 1991: Glanville 1992: Wallace 1993: Kieschnick, Ratliff, Orie 1994: Peterson 1995: Wood 1996: Noel 1997: Garland 1998: Patterson 1999: Christensen 2000: Montañez 2001: Prior 2002: Brownlie, Hagerty, Blasko, Clanton 2003: Harvey 2004: None 2005: Pawelek 2006: Colvin 2007: Vitters, Donaldson 2008: Cashner, Flaherty 2009: Jackson 2010: Simpson 2011: Báez 2012: Almora, Johnson, Blackburn 2013: Bryant 2014: Schwarber 2015: Happ
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