Jim Hughes Baseball player

James Robert Hughes (March 21, 1923 – August 13, 2001) was an American professional baseball player. He was a right-handed pitcher over parts of six seasons (1952–1957) with the Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Cubs and Chicago White Sox. For his career, he compiled a 15–13 record in 172 appearances, all but one as a relief pitcher, with an 3.83 earned run average and 165 strikeouts. Hughes was a member of four National League pennant-winning Dodgers teams (1952, 1953, 1955 & 1956), though he participated in only the 1953 World SeriesJim's older brother William P. Hughes, Jr., was stabbed to death during game five of the 1953 World Series (Yankees beat the Dodgers 11-7). He was watching the game on television at his home in Chicago and in a state of drunkenness got in a fight with his wife, Genevieve, who fatally stabbed him with a kitchen knife. Genevieve originally said that she was at the kitchen sink peeling potatoes with a knife when her husband came up behind her and kissed her. This startled her and she accidentally stabbed him. She later told police that they were having an argument.Hughes was born and later died in Chicago, Illinois at the age of 78.

Personal facts

Jim Hughes
Birth dateMarch 21, 1923
Birth place
Chicago , Illinois
Date of deathAugust 12, 2001
Place of death
Chicago , Illinois

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Baseball player

Career startSeptember 13, 1952
Career endAugust 27, 1957
batting sideRight
former teams
Chicago White Sox
Los Angeles Dodgers
position
Pitcher
teams
Chicago Cubs
Chicago White Sox
Los Angeles Dodgers
throwing sideRight

Jim Hughes on Wikipedia