Nicholson was born in St. Louis, Missouri, where he graduated from Southwest High School. He was signed as an amateur by the Orioles to a bonus contract, reportedly worth $105,000,[1] on January 26, 1958.
Baseball career
Nicholson threw and batted right-handed, and was listed as 6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m) tall and 215 pounds (98 kg). In 1959, his second season in the Baltimore farm system, Nicholson batted .298 for their Aberdeen Pheasants affiliate (managed by Earl Weaver) with 35 home runs, tied for the lead in the Class CNorthern League.
The following year saw Nicholson promoted all the way to Triple-A, and his MLB debut on May 24, 1960 at age 20. Facing the White Sox at Comiskey Park, he went hitless with one walk in four plate appearances.[2] He remained on the Baltimore roster all season and hit five home runs, but struck out 55 times in 133 trips to the plate.
He spent 1961 back in the minor leagues, mainly in the Double-ASouthern Association, before being given a full-year audition with the 1962Orioles. He played in 97 games, starting 80 of them in the outfield, but he batted only .173 with nine homers and 76 strikeouts in 202 plate appearances. On May 5, 1962, Nicholson was the last Orioles' batter of a no-hitter pitched by Bo Belinsky of the Los Angeles Angels, popping out to third base.
In January 1963, Baltimore traded Nicholson, future Baseball Hall of FamepitcherHoyt Wilhelm, and infieldersRon Hansen and Pete Ward to the Chicago White Sox for Hall of Fame shortstopLuis Aparicio and outfielderAl Smith.[3] Nicholson had his best season in the majors in 1963, producing 103 hits with a career-high 22 home runs, but he struck out 175 times, setting a new MLB record. Strikeouts would prove to be Nicholson's Achilles heel during his big-league career; in 1964, his second consecutive season as the White Sox' regular left-fielder, he fanned 126 times, fifth in the American League. Over his career, he struck out 573 times in 1,662 plate appearances, once every 3.4 times he came to the plate.
On May 6, 1964, during the first game of a doubleheader at Comiskey Park, Nicholson hit a home run off Moe Drabowsky of the Kansas City Athletics that either bounced off the left-field roof or entirely cleared it. The ball was found across the street. Howie Roberts, the White Sox' traveling secretary, told the Associated Press: "If it had landed on the roof, it would have a visible bruise on it. It cleared the roof." The home run was officially measured at 573 feet (175 m). Nicholson homered three times in that doubleheader,[4] although he would hit just 13 home runs during the entire 1964 season.