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Gary Bell Autograph Authentication | Gary Bell Mail-In & Digital Autograph Authentication | Gary Bell Autograph Examples and Reference Guide

Gary Bell Autograph Authentication Services | Specializing in Gary Bell Autograph Authentication | Gary Bell Autograph, Autographs, Autographed, Signed, Authenticated, Authentic, Authenticity, Rackrs Authentication

Biography

Wilbur Gary Bell (born November 17, 1936 in San Antonio, Texas), nicknamed "Ding Dong", is an American former Major League Baseball pitcher. He pitched from 1958-1967 for four different teams in his career, but is noted primarily for his time with the Cleveland Indians. During a 12-year career, Bell compiled 121 wins, 1,378 strikeouts, and an 3.68 earned run average. In his early years, Bell was a starter, going 49-47 in his first four years in the Majors. Soon, he was made into a reliever helping the Indians by picking up over 10 saves in 1962 and 1966. Bell picked up a 2.95 ERA in the 1963 season in 58 appearances (51 out of the bullpen). He went 8-5 that year, a solid year with an Indians team that finished under .500 (79-83). Bell was a fastball pitcher early in his career and then developed a good slider and curveball. Bell always claimed to hate relieving, calling it a thankless job, mainly because it took in less money and less notable reward. However, he was a good reliever. He led the American League with nine relief wins in '62. After being a lifetime Indian for so many years, he was traded to the Red Sox on June 4, 1967 for Tony Horton and Don Demeter. In his final year with the Indians, he had gone back to being a starter and went 14-15 with a 3.22 ERA in 37 starts. He became a part of the Red Sox 1967 World Series hopes, but they lost to the St. Louis Cardinals. Bell pitched in three games, starting one. After two fairly solid seasons with Boston, he became a draftee of the expansion Pilots in 1969. After going 2-6 with them, he went to the White Sox, and was released at the end of the 1969 season. As author Jim Bouton's roommate, he was prominently mentioned in Ball Four. Bouton told of a now-famous pitchers' meeting in which Bell suggested that for every batter in the opposing team's lineup that the pitcher "smoke 'em inside" i.e. throw them inside fastballs. Bouton also mentioned Bell's aforementioned nickname. Bell is a current resident of San Antonio, Texas. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Bell

Stats

Added
6/1/2010
Type
Player
Sport
Baseball
Position
Pitcher

Teams

Team Start End
Boston Red Sox 1967 1968
Chicago White Sox 1969
Cleveland Indians 1958 1967
Seattle Pilots 1969

Contributor

All Star Trades
Joined
9/11/2008

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Gary Bell Verified Autographs - Reference Guide