Illustrative portrait of San Diego Padres Hall of Famer Randy Jones in uniform on a baseball field, with mourning elements, for news article on his passing at age 75.
Illustrative portrait of San Diego Padres Hall of Famer Randy Jones in uniform on a baseball field, with mourning elements, for news article on his passing at age 75.
AI 生成的图像

Randy Jones, Padres Hall of Famer, dies at 75

AI 生成的图像

San Diego Padres Hall of Famer and 1976 National League Cy Young Award winner Randy Jones has died at the age of 75. The team announced his passing on Wednesday, mourning the loss of a franchise cornerstone and beloved ambassador.

Randy Jones, a left-handed pitcher who became the first true superstar for the San Diego Padres, passed away on Tuesday, the team confirmed. Jones was inducted into the Padres Hall of Fame in its inaugural 1999 class and had his No. 35 retired in 1997.

The Padres issued a statement expressing deep sorrow: "With deep sorrow and heavy hearts, the Padres mourn the passing of our beloved left-hander, Randy Jones. Randy was a cornerstone of our franchise for over five decades, highlighted by becoming the first Padres pitcher to win the Cy Young Award... RJ will be greatly missed." The team extended sympathies to his wife Marie and family.

Born January 12, 1950, in Fullerton, California, Jones was selected in the fifth round of the 1972 MLB Draft out of Chapman College. He debuted in 1973, throwing 139 2/3 innings with a 3.16 ERA as a rookie. Over his 10-year career from 1973-82, Jones compiled a 100-123 record and 3.42 ERA, including two seasons with the New York Mets after being traded following 1980.

His peak came in 1975-76, posting a 42-26 record with a 2.50 ERA, 11 shutouts, and 43 complete games for teams that finished below .500. In 1975, he led the NL with a 2.24 ERA and 285 innings, finishing second in Cy Young voting to Tom Seaver. He earned an All-Star save that year. In 1976, Jones went 22-3 with a 2.74 ERA, leading MLB in wins (22), starts (40), innings (315 1/3), and complete games (25). He won the Cy Young and started the All-Star Game, reaching 16-3 by the break and gracing Sports Illustrated's cover as a "Threat to win 30."

Jones' sinker, topping 80 mph, and low strikeout totals (93 in 1976) defined his style, with a 3.9% walk rate and a tie for Christy Mathewson's NL record of 68 consecutive scoreless innings without a walk. His starts drew huge crowds: 27,400 average attendance for his 21 home games in 1976, compared to 15,769 otherwise.

Teammate Merv Rettenmund said, "When he was on, I've never seen a better pitcher." Former broadcaster Bob Chandler called it "David against Goliath." An injury in 1976 led to surgery and declined performance. Post-career, Jones served as a Padres ambassador, mentored pitchers like Barry Zito, ran businesses, and battled throat cancer, declared cancer-free in 2018. In 2018, he reflected: "It was a magical relationship that we had when I was pitching... I still look forward to seeing a lot of those folks."

Jones leads the Padres in innings pitched (1,766), starts (253), complete games (71), and shutouts (18), with 92 wins second to Eric Show's 100.

人们在说什么

X users, including sports broadcasters, journalists, and fans, are expressing sorrow over Randy Jones' passing, praising his 1976 Cy Young Award and role as a Padres pioneer. Tributes focus on his durability, community impact, and fond memories from his career. Reactions are uniformly positive and reflective, with no skeptical views evident.

相关文章

Illustration of Randy Johnson at his No. 51 jersey retirement ceremony with the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park.
AI 生成的图像

Mariners to retire Randy Johnson's No. 51 on May 2, 2026

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

The Seattle Mariners announced they will retire Randy Johnson's No. 51 jersey during a pregame ceremony on May 2, 2026, at T-Mobile Park. The event coincides with a game against the Kansas City Royals, marking the fifth retired number in franchise history. Johnson, a Hall of Famer known as 'The Big Unit,' spent a decade with the Mariners from 1989 to 1998.

Carlos Beltrán 和 Andruw Jones 当选 2026 届国家棒球名人堂成员,与当代棒球时代委员会选出的 Jeff Kent 共同入选。Beltrán 在第四年投票中获得 84.2% 支持率,而 Jones 在第九次尝试中获得 78.4%,此前首年仅 7.3%。三人将于 7 月 26 日在纽约库珀斯敦入堂。

由 AI 报道

世界大赛冠军兼全明星投手David Robertson于周五宣布退役,结束跨越八支球队的17年大联盟生涯。这位40岁右投手录得179次救援成功,2.93防卫率,并入选10支季后赛球队。

Los Angeles Dodgers legend Clayton Kershaw has retired at age 37 after helping his team win the 2025 World Series. The three-time Cy Young Award winner plans to step away from the game to focus on family. Reports indicate he is unlikely to pursue a media role immediately.

由 AI 报道

圣迭戈教士队后援投手梅森·米勒已连续投出25又2/3局无失分,这是目前美国职棒大联盟中最长的现役连续无失分纪录。他距离追平该队队史纪录仅差八局。在这段强势表现期间,面对他的打者皆难以有所发挥。

Following ballots from Jason Foster and Mike Petriello, more MLB.com writers—including Anthony DiComo, Bryan Hoch, and Jason Beck—have explained their 2026 BBWAA Hall of Fame selections. Their rationales emphasize peak performance, postseason impact, durability, and debates over PED issues and off-field incidents amid holdovers like Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones, and newcomers led by Cole Hamels.

由 AI 报道

传奇的多伦多蓝鸟队播报员巴克·马丁内斯于周五宣布退休,结束了在该组织超过四十年的事业。这位77岁的老将曾为球队担任球员、经理和播报员,在2025年世界大赛中进行了最后一场播报。马丁内斯对粉丝和同事在其职业生涯中的支持表示感谢。

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝