Ed Crosby Baseball player

Edward Carlton Crosby (born May 26, 1949 in Long Beach, California) is a former infielder in Major League Baseball who played for the St. Louis Cardinals (1970, 1972–1973), Cincinnati Reds (1973) and Cleveland Indians (1974–1976). Crosby batted left-handed and threw right-handed.Crosby played college baseball at Long Beach City College and was drafted by the Cardinals in the second round of the January phase of the 1969 Major League Baseball Draft. He began his professional career with a rookie-league stint, as well as the Lewiston Broncs; he had a .295 batting average in 70 games for them. In 1970, Crosby played in 78 games for the Arkansas Travelers, where he had a .300 batting average. Partway through the season, he was promoted to the Cardinals' major league roster, where he played in 38 games primarily as a shortstop.After a year with the major league club, Crosby spent the 1971 season with the AAA Tulsa Oilers, hitting .287. His fielding ability had taken a turn for the worse at shortstop, and he tried moving to second base during the offseason. He was supported in this by Travelers manager Ken Boyer, who joined the Cardinals as first base coach. As a result, Crosby made the major league roster in 1972 and was considered one of the team's bright spots early on. He played in 101 games for the Cardinals that season, then played 22 in 1973. On July 27, he was traded along with Gene Dusan to the Cincinnati Reds for Ed Sprague, Sr. and later Roe Skidmore.Crosby spent the rest of 1973 with the Reds, then was selected by the Philadelphia Phillies in the 1973 rule 5 draft. Before playing a game for the Phillies, the Cardinals purchased his contract, and shortly afterward traded him to the Cleveland Indians with Luis Alvarado for Jack Heidemann. Crosby then played in 37 games for the Indians in 1974 and 61 in 1975. He finished his major league career with two games played in 1976 for the Indians, and spent most of the season with the Oilers. He spent three more years in the minor leagues before retiring.In a six-season career, Crosby posted a .220 batting average (149-for-677) with 67 runs and 44 RBI in 297 games played. His son, Bobby Crosby, had an eight-year major league career and was 2003 American League Rookie of the Year.

Personal facts

Birth dateMay 26, 1949
Birth place
Long Beach California

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Baseball player

Career startJuly 12, 1970
Career endMay 12, 1976
batting sideLeft
former teams
Cleveland Indians
St. Louis Cardinals
position
Third baseman
Shortstop
Second baseman
teams
Cincinnati Reds
Cleveland Indians
St. Louis Cardinals
throwing sideRight

Ed Crosby on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/C/Crosby_Ed.stm
  2. http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/Pcrose101.htm