Age : 49 Joined : 05 Oct 2007 Posts : 21896 Location : Eastern Ohio, near Wheeling WV Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Maggs, Curtis, Inge, Gala, Matt, Clete, Marcus (really all of em!)
Subject: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Wed Oct 24, 2007 3:52 pm
Willie Horton 1963-1977
Willie Wattison Horton (born October 18, 1942 in Arno, Virginia) is a former left fielder and designated hitter in Major League Baseball who played for six American League teams, primarily the Detroit Tigers. He hit 20 or more home runs seven times, and his 325 career home runs ranked sixth among AL right-handed hitters when he retired. He enjoyed his best season in 1968 with the world champion Tigers, finishing second in the AL with 36 homers, a .543 slugging average and 278 total bases. In the later years of his career, he was twice named the AL's top designated hitter.
Horton is the youngest of twenty-one children of James Horton and his wife Lillian (Wattison) Horton. After winning a city championship with Detroit Northwestern High School in 1959, he signed with the Tigers in 1961, and made his debut with the team on September 10, 1963; he had a pinch-hit home run off Robin Roberts in his second at bat. He saw limited play in his first two years before a 1965 rookie campaign in which he was second in the AL with 104 runs batted in and third with 29 home runs. He was named to the All-Star team, and placed eighth in the MVP balloting. Becoming known for his tremendous strength as well as for his fluctuating weight, he again collected 100 RBI in the 1966 season. During the 1967 Detroit 12th Street riot, he tried vainly to restore peace. He stood in his Tiger uniform on a car in the middle of the crowd, pleading for calm. However, despite his impassioned pleas, he could not calm the angry mob.
While not considered a particularly good fielder, Horton's hitting more than made up for it. He posted double-digit home run totals in 12 regular seasons from 1965-76, and hit two home runs in a game on 30 occasions. He had a career-high 36 HRs in 1968, a pitcher's year in which Detroit won the World Series; he finished second in the AL to Frank Howard in homers, slugging and total bases. In a year in which the league batting average was .230 and Carl Yastrzemski won the batting title with a .301 mark, Horton's .285 average was good for fourth in the AL, and he finished fourth in the MVP voting. He also batted .304 in the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals. In order to combine Horton's offensive power with a good defense, managerMayo Smith moved regular center fielderMickey Stanley to shortstop as a replacement for Ray Oyler, who was benched. He kept Al Kaline, a multiple Gold Glove Award winner, in right field and put Jim Northrup in center field; the two had platooned in right field for much of the year. When the Tigers were safely ahead, Oyler would replace Stanley at shortstop, batting in Horton's lineup spot; Stanley returned to center field, and Kaline or Northrup would move over to replace Horton in left field. In Game 2, Horton had a solo home run to give the Tigers an early 1-0 lead, and they won 8-1. He also made a pivotal defensive play in the fifth inning of Game 5. With the Cardinals leading the Series 3 games to 1 and the game 3-2, Lou Brockdoubled with one out, and tried to score on Julián Javier's single; but he chose not to slide, and Horton's throw to catcher Bill Freehan beat him on a close, controversial play. Detroit scored three runs in the seventh inning to win 5-3, and went on to win Games 6 and 7 as well; Horton had two runs and two RBI in the 13-1 blowout in Game 6, and two hits and a run in the final 4-1 victory.
Horton was a four-time member of the AL All-Star team (1965, 1968, 1970 and 1973). He hit three home runs against the Milwaukee Brewers on June 9, 1970. On April 14, 1974, he hit a popup which struck and killed a pigeon at Fenway Park. He was named the AL's Outstanding Designated Hitter in 1975 after hitting 25 home runs with 92 RBI. In the 1977 midseason he was traded to the Texas Rangers, and he again hit three home runs on May 15 against the Kansas City Royals at Royals Stadium. He spent 1978 playing for the Cleveland Indians, Oakland Athletics and Toronto Blue Jays, before finally settling with the Seattle Mariners from 1979-80.
In 1979 with the Mariners he was again named the AL's Outstanding Designated Hitter after hitting .279 with 29 HRs and a career-high 106 RBI, and he received the Comeback Player of the Year award as well. On June 5 against the Tigers he hit what seemed to be his 300th career home run, but it struck a speaker hanging from the roof of the Kingdome and bounced onto the field for a single; he would collect #300 the next day against Jack Morris. His Mariners record of 106 RBI was broken by Alvin Davis in 1984, his marks of 180 hits and 296 total bases were broken by Phil Bradley in 1985, and his record of 29 homers was broken by Gorman Thomas in 1985. His record of 646 at bats was broken by Alex Rodriguez in 1998; Horton remains one of only four Mariners to have played the full 162 games in a season. He played his final major league game on October 5, 1980. In an 18-season career, Horton posted a .273 batting average and .457 slugging average with 1993 hits, 284 doubles, 1163 RBI, 873 runs and 20 stolen bases in 2028 games. His 325 home runs in the AL placed him behind only Harmon Killebrew (573), Jimmie Foxx (524), teammate Al Kaline (399), Rocky Colavito (371) and Joe DiMaggio (361) among right-handed hitters.
Horton played two more years in the Pacific Coast League and another season in Mexican baseball. Among his baseball superstitions was his use of the same batting helmet throughout his career; he repainted it when he changed teams. After retiring, he coached for the New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox. On July 15, 2000 Horton became just the sixth former player given the ultimate honor by the Detroit Tigers; a statue of Horton was placed in Comerica Park and his number 23 was retired, joining a select group that includes former Tigers players Ty Cobb (who didn't wear a number), Charlie Gehringer (number 2), Hank Greenberg (number 5), Al Kaline (number 6), and Hal Newhouser (number 16). It is ironic that the statue of Horton, the first black ballplayer so honored by the Tigers, stands next to the statue of Ty Cobb, a noted racist. When asked about this, Horton responded that he once tried to heal the City of Detroit through its riots, so maybe, it was his job to help heal the Tiger legend as well.
Willie Horton's number 23 was retired by the Detroit Tigers in 2000
Since 2003, Horton has served as a Special Assistant to Tigers President/CEO/General Manager Dave Dombrowski. Former Tigers teammate Al Kaline also holds this position, and the two threw out the first pitch of the 2006 World Series at Comerica Park.
------------------------------------ Detroit News - Thursday, October 18, 2007 - Michigan today will celebrate Willie Horton Day, honoring the former Tigers star. Horton, a seven-time All-Star, is being recognized for his humanitarian efforts in the city and the state. Today is his 65th birthday. --------------------------------------- The following From http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/portfoli/twenty-five.html WILLIE HORTON
Willie Horton grew up in Detroit's Jeffries Projects near Tiger Stadium where he would play professional baseball for fifteen seasons. A short, squat, but immensely strong right-handed slugger, Horton was the Detroit Tigers' left fielder from 1965 to 1974. One of the American League's most dangerous long-ball threats—he hit two home runs per game thirty different times—Horton pounded 262 home runs in a Tiger uniform. In the 1968 World Series, Horton showed a surprisingly strong throwing arm when he nailed St. Louis Cardinal Lou Brock at home plate on a key play in Game Five. The play helped the Tigers win the seven-game series in dramatic fashion. Today, Willie Horton and his family live in Detroit.
Last edited by on Sun Nov 04, 2007 1:33 pm; edited 1 time in total
GoGetEmTigers DTF1 MODERATOR Detroit Tiger
Age : 49 Joined : 05 Oct 2007 Posts : 21896 Location : Eastern Ohio, near Wheeling WV Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Maggs, Curtis, Inge, Gala, Matt, Clete, Marcus (really all of em!)
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Wed Oct 24, 2007 5:46 pm
I watched him on TV and when he hit a home run my mom would go "There goes Willie Wooooo Woooo" and our dog used to get excited and do a doggie dance
tigersaint Detroit Tiger
Age : 47 Joined : 05 Oct 2007 Posts : 8969 Location : Other, but I LIKE it here!! Favorite Current Tiger(s) : All of 'em, except the BAD ones!!
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Wed Oct 24, 2007 7:09 pm
Willie the Wonder.
One of my boyhood heroes!!
Go Get 'em, TIGERS!!
gs78 Detroit Tiger
Joined : 06 Oct 2007 Posts : 22414 Location : Trashy Park Michigan Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Dontrelle Willis, Brandon Inge, Maggs, Verlander, Granderson, Pudge and Todd Jones
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Sat Nov 03, 2007 7:29 pm
Bump! HORTON ROCKS!
GoGetEmTigers DTF1 MODERATOR Detroit Tiger
Age : 49 Joined : 05 Oct 2007 Posts : 21896 Location : Eastern Ohio, near Wheeling WV Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Maggs, Curtis, Inge, Gala, Matt, Clete, Marcus (really all of em!)
Subject: Horton signs for Katrina victims Sat Nov 03, 2007 8:35 pm
The following article shows the good heart Willie Horton has. God Bless you, Willie! REMEMBER This article is from 2005
December 1, 2005 Traverse City Record-Eagle
Horton signs for Katrina victims Ex-Tigers slugger will be in TC on Saturday
By JEFF PEEK Record-Eagle staff writer
Willie Horton will be autographing copies of his book in Traverse City on Saturday.
TRAVERSE CITY - To the St. Louis Cardinals and their fans, he was a villain.
To American League pitchers, he was trouble.
To Detroit Tigers fanatics, he is - and always will be - a hero.
Willie Horton, who became a baseball legend on the sandlots of Detroit long before he starred for the Tigers, will be in Traverse City on Saturday to promote his autobiography, "The People's Champion," and sign autographs to benefit two families who were victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Cost is $3 per signature, with proceeds going to those families.
"I've been so blessed in my life, and when you're blessed then you need to bless other people," said the 63-year-old Horton, who will greet fans from noon until 2 p.m. at the Grand Traverse County Civic Center. "I adopted a couple of Katrina families and I'm helping support them until they can get back on their feet.
"We're all God's children," he said. "We need to help each other."
Horton certainly has done his part to help both the Detroit Tigers organization and the people of Detroit.
During the Detroit riots of 1967, Horton left Tiger Stadium - against the advice of police and still wearing his uniform - and marched into the heart of the upheaval to urge people to return to their homes.
"Maybe I was meant to bring people together," Horton said. "Black and white doesn't matter. When you bring people together and they become friends, that color barrier falls away.
"God put me in a position to be a bridge," he said. "And I'm thankful that He did."
Horton, the youngest of 21 children, was born in Arno, Va., on Oct. 18, 1942. Horton's family moved to Detroit when he was "9 or 10 years old," and it was in Motown where he made a name for himself.
Raised in the projects, Horton was a dynamite ballplayer, but he lived in an era when white players played on white teams, and black players played on black teams.
Horton helped change that.
"We integrated Federated League baseball," Horton said. "I had a friend who was white, and we wanted to play on the same team.
"Coach (Ron) Thompson kept us together. He understood that we're all people. I owe him a lot."
Horton's youth career is the stuff of legend. While at Northwestern High School, he displayed tremendous power even as a teenager, slugging a home run off the facing of the third deck at Tiger Stadium during a high school championship game.
It seemed only natural that the 5-foot-11 outfielder would become a Detroit Tiger.
Horton, who was a rookie in 1963, quickly learned during his first spring training that his legendary baseball status made little difference in the deep south.
When he tried to flag down a taxi cab in Lakeland, Fla., no one would stop and give him a ride. Horton thought the veterans were playing a joke on him.
But that wasn't the case.
"They wouldn't pick me up because I was black," Horton said. "So I walked eight miles to the ballpark.
"I couldn't understand it," he said. "I couldn't understand why there were white theaters and black theaters. Things like that made me stronger.
"I thought about that at (civil rights pioneer) Rosa Parks' funeral (in October)."
Ironically, Lakeland eventually became a second home to Horton, who still spends spring training there every year as the Tigers' special assistant to the president of baseball operations.
"I'm proud of Lakeland, just like I am Detroit," Horton said. "A lot has changed."
Horton played in only 40 games at the major league level in 1963 and '64, but he had a breakout season in 1965 with 29 home runs, 104 RBIs and an All-Star berth - an amazing accomplishment considering the tragedy that occurred only months before the season started.
On New Year's Day of 1965, both of Horton's parents were killed in an auto accident while driving through a snow storm.
Horton was devastated.
"I had to reach deep in my inner strength to move forward," he said.
But in the midst of Horton's grief a special bond was formed. Jim Campbell, the Tigers' general manager (and later president), wrote Horton a check for $20,000 to cover the burial expenses and whatever else the Horton family needed. More importantly, Campbell took Horton under his wing.
"He became more like a parent to me after that," Horton said. "He taught me to appreciate that it takes a lot more than ballplayers to make a team.
"It takes a lot of people to get that ballpark ready. From the ushers to the grounds crew, everybody is important."
After the Tigers fell just short of winning the American League title in 1967, Horton and his teammates reached the pinnacle of the baseball world in 1968, known throughout the state as "The Year of the Tiger."
Led by the pitching of Denny McLain, Mickey Lolich and Earl Wilson, Detroit cruised to the A.L. title and spot in the World Series against defending champion St. Louis.
The Cardinals jumped out to a 3-1 series lead and seemed poised to finish off the Tigers in Game 5. But the series momentum - and to some degree, Horton's life - changed on one play.
With St. Louis leading 3-2 in the top of the fifth inning, Horton fired a bullet to catcher Bill Freehan, who tagged out Lou Brock at the plate and kept Detroit within a run.
Two innings later, Al Kaline's bases-loaded single lifted the Tigers to victory, and they went on to win the Series in seven games.
Horton's place in the hearts of Tiger fans was sealed.
Horton said it "broke my heart" when then-Tigers manager Ralph Houk had him traded to Texas for pitcher Steve Foucault on April 12, 1977. Horton, playing mostly as a designated hitter at that point in his career, bounced around from the Rangers to Cleveland to Oakland to Toronto to Seattle before retiring after the 1980 season.
Horton had one last hurrah, slugging 29 homers and batting in 106 runs for the Mariners in 1979.
The four-time All-Star finished his career with a .273 batting average, 1,993 hits, 325 home runs and 1,163 RBIs.
His friends and admirers, on the other hand, are countless.
"I've been so fortunate. Everywhere I go in this state, I'm recognized," Horton said. "The fans mean so much to me. I feel like I've been a part of people's families for years.
"I have a family reunion every time I go out of my home."
For additional information about Horton's appearance in Traverse City, call Jeff Mugerian at (231) 218-2325
GoGetEmTigers DTF1 MODERATOR Detroit Tiger
Age : 49 Joined : 05 Oct 2007 Posts : 21896 Location : Eastern Ohio, near Wheeling WV Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Maggs, Curtis, Inge, Gala, Matt, Clete, Marcus (really all of em!)
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Sat Nov 03, 2007 8:45 pm
I'm glad Willie is currently part of the Tiger organization!
gs78 Detroit Tiger
Joined : 06 Oct 2007 Posts : 22414 Location : Trashy Park Michigan Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Dontrelle Willis, Brandon Inge, Maggs, Verlander, Granderson, Pudge and Todd Jones
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Sat Nov 03, 2007 8:48 pm
Me, too
tigersaint Detroit Tiger
Age : 47 Joined : 05 Oct 2007 Posts : 8969 Location : Other, but I LIKE it here!! Favorite Current Tiger(s) : All of 'em, except the BAD ones!!
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Sun Nov 04, 2007 11:11 am
Willie Horton will alwayss be a TIGER favorite in the city of Detroit!!
THANK YOU!!
TrammMan New York Yankee
Age : 31 Joined : 15 Feb 2008 Posts : 70 Location : Toledo Ohio Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Granderson- NON TIGER Carlos Pena
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:41 am
not sure where to post this.
for fans around the toledo area- willie horton will be at the grand opening at menards in oregon on april 1st 6pm-8pm. and autos are free.
austin _________________
GoGetEmTigers DTF1 MODERATOR Detroit Tiger
Age : 49 Joined : 05 Oct 2007 Posts : 21896 Location : Eastern Ohio, near Wheeling WV Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Maggs, Curtis, Inge, Gala, Matt, Clete, Marcus (really all of em!)
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:56 am
Neat. Wish I lived closer, I would go!
TrammMan New York Yankee
Age : 31 Joined : 15 Feb 2008 Posts : 70 Location : Toledo Ohio Favorite Current Tiger(s) : Granderson- NON TIGER Carlos Pena
Subject: Re: Willie Horton - Detroit Tigers (1963-1977) Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:58 am
if anybody wants an auto, let me know. im gonna see if my kids and i can get a pic, but i only collect certain autos, and if i get one, someone cand have it.