He was named to the 1966 and 1967 American League All-Star Teams. Etchebarren finished 17th in voting for the 1966 American League Most Valuable Player Award for playing in 121 games, having 412 at bats, 49 runs, 91 hits, 14 doubles, 6 triples, 11 home runs, 50 runs batted in, 38 walks, a .221 batting average, a .293 on-base percentage, a .364 slugging percentage, 150 total bases, 3 sacrifice flies, and 12 intentional walks.
After Etchebarren lost his starting catcher position to Dave Duncan due to injuries during the first week of the 1975 season, his contract was sold by the Orioles to the California Angels at the trade deadline on June 15. He had threatened to retire if he was not sent to his native state of California.[3]
In 15 seasons he played in 948 games and had 2,618 at-bats, 245 runs, 615 hits, 101 doubles, 17 triples, 49 home runs, 309 runs batted in, 13 stolen bases, 246 walks, a .235 batting average, a .306 on-base percentage, a .343 slugging percentage, 897 total bases, 20 sacrifice hits, 19 sacrifice flies and 41 intentional walks. Defensively, he recorded a .987 fielding percentage.
It has been said that Etchebarren's most important contribution to the Orioles was in 1966, during a swimming pool party the players held on an off day in August. Frank Robinson, who would go on to win the triple crown and American LeagueMost Valuable Player award n 1966, was drowning in the deep end of the pool. Unknown to the others, Robinson could not swim. Etchebarren and teammate Davey Johnson spotted Robinson struggling and dove into the pool and pulled Robinson to safety.[4][5]
Managerial career
Etchebarren became the Milwaukee Brewers’ minor league catching instructor in 1982.[1] He was the Orioles bench coach from 1996 to 1997 under manager Davey Johnson.[1] In 2000 Etchebarren was manager of the Bowie Baysox of the Eastern League, in 2001 and 2002 Rochester Red Wings of the International League. He served as manager of the Aberdeen IronBirds of the New York–Penn League for three seasons until his dismissal from that position on October 22, 2007. He was the manager of the York Revolution of the Atlantic League and led the team to a pair of league championships in 2010 and 2011.[1] He retired from baseball following the 2012 season. The York Revolution announced his death on October 5, 2019, He was 76.[1]