Gus Triandos
From BR Bullpen
Augustus Triandos
- Bats Right, Throws Right
- Height 6' 3", Weight 215 lb.
- School Saint Mary's College of California
- Debut August 3, 1953
- Final Game August 15, 1965
- Born July 30, 1930 in San Francisco, CA USA
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[edit] Biographical Information
Gus Triandos was signed by the New York Yankees in 1948. Working his way up through the farm system, he missed nearly all of the 1951 season and all of the 1952 season while in the military. Triandos reached the majors in 1953, but because of the presence of future Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra, he still spent most of 1953-1954 in the minors.
As a result, Triandos was included in a trade with the Baltimore Orioles with catcher Hal Smith, outfielder Gene Woodling, shortstop Willy Miranda, infielders Don Leppert and Kal Segrist, and pitchers Harry Byrd, Jim McDonald, and Bill Miller for pitchers Bob Turley, Don Larsen, and Mike Blyzka, catcher Darrell Johnson, first baseman Dick Kryhoski, outfielder Jim Fridley, and minor league player Ted del Guercio. It was the largest trade in major league history.
Triandos instantly became a success in 1955, batting .277/.333/.399 with 12 HR's and 65 RBI. He had a career year in 1958 where he batted .245/.327/.456 with 30 HR's and 79 RBI, finishing sixth in the American League in home runs. During his time in Baltimore, Triandos was elected to three All Star teams (1957-1959). He regularly mowed down base stealers and retired with a very high 45 percent caught-stealing (CS) ratio.
In late 1962, Triandos was traded along with outfielder Whitey Herzog to the Detroit Tigers for catcher Dick Brown. Triandos had a good offensive year for a catcher his only year with Detroit, posting a 99 OPS+ and batting .239/.315/.407 with 14 HR's and 41 RBI. Triandos again was traded, though, this time to the Philadelphia Phillies with future Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Bunning for pitcher Jack Hamilton and outfielder Don Demeter. Triandos, who was near the end of his career, had a fine year for the 1964 Phillies with a 115 OPS+ and slugging .426, but his offensive game collapsed suddenly in 1965 when he began the year at .171/.253/.195 for the Phillies before being purchased by the Houston Astros, where he played in only 24 games then was released that November.
Triandos was known as the unfortunate catcher who had to catch knuckleball pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm, resulting in his appearance at 8th on the modern passed ball list at 138. Also, Triandos was known for his slow speed where he only stole one base in his entire major league career, going 1 for 1 in stolen base attempts.
[edit] Notable Achievements
- 3-time AL All-Star (1957-1959)
- 20-Home Run Seasons: 3 (1956, 1958 & 1959)
- 30-Home Run Seasons: 1 (1958)
[edit] Further Reading
- Ted Patterson "The Baltimore Orioles: Four Decades of Magic from 33rd Street to Camden Yards"

