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Jim Beauchamp : ウィキペディア英語版
Jim Beauchamp

James Edward Beauchamp (BEE-chum) (August 21, 1939 – December 25, 2007) was a Major League Baseball first baseman and outfielder who played from to for the St. Louis Cardinals, Houston Colt .45s/Astros, Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves, Cincinnati Reds, and New York Mets. He attended Grove High School in Grove, Oklahoma〔Matt Gleason, ("You're out at the old ball game" ), ''Tulsa World'', May 17, 2010.〕 and Oklahoma State University before being signed by the Cardinals in . He was the father of former minor league baseball player Kash Beauchamp. He was 6'2' and weighed 205 pounds. He is a direct descendant of John Beauchamp of the Plymouth Company and pronounced his name as /ˈbiː-tʃʌm/ (BE-chum).
==Professional career==
A power hitting minor leaguer, Beauchamp had perhaps the best year of his professional career in for the Double-A Tulsa Oilers, batting .337 with 31 home runs and 105 RBI. He also collected 35 doubles and 10 triples while scoring 95 runs. Beauchamp won the 1963 Texas League MVP Award, and a sign showing him in his batting stance stood outside Tulsa's Oiler Park until the stadium was demolished in 1980.〔 He earned a short call up to the majors in 1963, making his major league debut on September 22 at the age of 24, going hitless in three major league at-bats.
Beauchamp was traded to the Houston Colt .45s in February with Chuck Taylor for outfielder Carl Warwick. Beauchamp again dominated in the minors in 1964, belting 34 home runs and collecting 83 RBI with a .285 batting average. In 23 Major League games that year, he collected nine hits in 55 at-bats for a .164 batting average.
He started the season with the Houston Astros, playing in 24 games before being traded to the Milwaukee Braves with Ken Johnson for Lee Maye. He played in four games with the Braves that year. Overall, he hit .179 in 56 at-bats.
Beauchamp hit .319 with 25 home runs and 77 RBI in 115 games for the Richmond Braves in . He did not appear in the Majors that season. He spent most of the season in the minors as well, hitting 25 home runs and driving in 63 runs for Richmond. His averaged dropped to .233. He appeared in four games in the Majors for the Braves that year, collecting no hits in three at-bats.
In October 1967, Beauchamp was traded with Mack Jones and Jay Ritchie to the Reds for Deron Johnson.
He started the season in the minors, hitting 13 home runs and driving in 47 RBI for the Indianapolis Indians. He spent 31 games in the Majors that year, hitting .263 in 57 at-bats.
Beauchamp hit .250 in 60 at-bats for the Reds in , driving in eight RBI. After the season, he was traded back to Houston for Pat House and Dooley Womack. He hit .192 in 31 games for the Astros that year, and was traded to the Cardinals - another one of his former teams. He was sent with Leon McFadden to the Cardinals for George Culver. He hit .259 in 44 games for the Cardinals, and overall he hit .238 on the season.
He spent all of with the Cardinals, hitting .235 in 77 games. After the season, he was traded by the Cardinals with Chip Coulter, Harry Parker, and Chuck Taylor to the Mets for Art Shamsky, Jim Bibby, Rich Folkers, and Charlie Hudson.〔(Cards, Mets make trade )〕
He played his final two seasons with the Mets, hitting .242 in 58 games for them in and .279 in 50 games in . He played his final game on September 20, 1973, almost exactly 10 years after his big league debut. Beauchamp appeared in four games in the 1973 World Series for the Mets, going hitless in four at-bats. He was released by the Mets in March of .
Overall, Beauchamp played in 393 Major League games, collecting 153 hits in 661 at-bats for a .231 batting average. He hit 18 doubles, four triples and 14 home runs while driving in 90 RBI. He walked 54 times and struck out 150 times. He had a .979 fielding percentage.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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