Showing posts with label Lou Marone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lou Marone. Show all posts

Monday, July 29, 2019

NOT REALLY MISSING IN ACTION- 1971 LOU MARONE

Today we have on the blog a “not so missing” 1971 card for former Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Lou marone, who threw the last of his MLB innings during the 1970 season:


Marone appeared in only one game for the Pirates in 1970, pitching 2.1 innings and giving up a run, good for an earned run average of 3.86.
In 1969 he had a very nice debut, posting an ERA of 2.55 over 35.1 innings and 29 appearances, going 1-1 with 25 strikeouts against 13 walks.
He’d go on to pitch two more seasons in the Pirates Minor League system through 1972, but never make it back to a Major League mound again, finishing up with 30 appearances and that 1-1 record from 1969, with a very nice 2.63 ERA.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

"WE HARDLY KNEW YA"- A CUP OF COFFEE AND A BASEBALL CARD #1

I was rummaging through cards the other day and was really focusing on players I had no clue about. As I was flipping through the last series in the 1970 set I came across a Lou Marone card (#703).
Now, me being an Italian, I always take a second look at a player with a name that's something out of my own neighborhood, so I checked his career out on Baseball-Reference.com and found exactly what I was looking for: one of those players who got a heck of a lot more life out of his baseball card than his own career.
By the time his 1970 card came around, Marone's career was pretty much already done. He appeared in only one game for the Pirates that year, going 2.1 innings and giving up a homer. And that was it. Not just for the year, but for his career.
In 1969 he posted some pretty solid stats, appearing in 29 games out of the 'pen and sporting a split 1-1 record with a nifty 2.55 E.R.A. in 35.1 innings. He also had 25 K's while only giving up 24 hits. Not too bad at all.
I couldn't find much else on his career, other than he finally hung them up in 1972 after some Minor League action in the Pirates organization.
I've always had a soft-spot for guys that appeared on cards, only to be out of the game by the time their little claim to fame on cardboard was out there for kids to gawk at when they ripped open packs come Spring the following year.
Here's to you Lou. Hope you found better success outside the game later on!
Card #703 in the 1970 Topps set.

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