Andy Carey Baseball player

Andrew Arthur Carey (October 18, 1931 – December 15, 2011) was born in Oakland, California and was a major league third baseman for the New York Yankees (1952–1960), and three other major league teams from 1960 to 1962. Carey also balked at a trade which would have sent him from the Chicago White Sox to the Philadelphia Phillies in 1962. He batted and threw right-handed.Carey ended his career on September 30, 1962 with the Los Angeles Dodgers. In an 11-year career, he had a .260 batting average, with 64 home runs, and 350 RBIs. He had 741 career hits. Carey led the league in triples in 1955 with 11. He finished his career with 38 triples. While playing for the Yankees in the 1956 World Series, Carey twice helped preserve the only perfect World Series game, pitched by Don Larsen against the Dodgers on Oct 8, 1956. In the second inning, the Dodgers’ Jackie Robinson smacked a shot between third and short that Carey knocked down, allowing Yankees shortstop Gil McDougald to pick up the ball and nip Robinson at first. In the eighth, he robbed Gil Hodges by snaring a low line drive that seemed headed for left field.Carey died on December 15, 2011 of Lewy body dementia.

Personal facts

Birth dateOctober 18, 1931
Date of deathDecember 15, 2011
Place of death
Costa Mesa California

Search

Baseball player

Career startMay 02, 1952
Career endSeptember 30, 1962
batting sideRight
former teams
Los Angeles Dodgers
New York Yankees
position
Third baseman
teams
Chicago White Sox
Los Angeles Dodgers
History of the Oakland Athletics
New York Yankees
throwing sideRight

Andy Carey on Wikipedia