American baseball player (1949-2012)
Baseball player
Jim Kremmel Pitcher Born: (1949-02-28 ) February 28, 1949Belleville, Illinois , U.S.Died: October 12, 2012(2012-10-12) (aged 63)Spokane, Washington , U.S.July 4, 1973 , for the Texas Rangers September 25, 1974 , for the Chicago Cubs Win–loss record 0–4 Earned run average 6.08 Strikeouts 28 Stats at Baseball Reference
James Louis Kremmel (February 28, 1949 – October 12, 2012) was an American left-handed pitcher who spent two seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) with the Texas Rangers (1973 ) and Chicago Cubs (1974 ).
Born in Belleville, Illinois , on February 28, 1949, Kremmel was raised in nearby Columbia . He graduated from Columbia High School .[ 1]
He attended the University of New Mexico , where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in Finance and Economics in 1971.[ 2] A four-year letterman on the Lobos baseball team, he threw the only documented nine-inning no-hitter in school history in a 1–0 win over Arizona in Tucson on April 17, 1970. He had matched the school record for most strikeouts in a single game with 18 against Eastern New Mexico University less than three weeks earlier on March 30, 1970. His 356 career strikeouts are still a school record. Named the All-Western Athletic Conference pitcher in 1969 and 1970,[ 3] he ended his college career with a 22–14 record.[ 4]
He was originally picked by the Cleveland Indians in the seventh round (146th overall) of the 1970 MLB draft ,[ 5] but chose not to sign. Selected ninth overall by the Washington Senators in the secondary phase of the January Free Agent Amateur Draft in 1971,[ 6] he signed with the ballclub four months later on May 24.[ 4] He is tied with Duane Ward (1982) for the third-highest draft pick of players hailing from New Mexico, behind shortstop Alex Bregman , who was selected with the second pick in the first round of the 2015 MLB draft ,[ 7] and third baseman D. J. Peterson was selected in the first round of the 2013 Major League Baseball draft .
He was traded by the Rangers to the St. Louis Cardinals for Don Durham on July 16, 1973.[ 8] Kremmel was dealt twice after the conclusion of the 1973 season . He first went to the Chicago White Sox for Dennis O'Toole on October 26. He was then sent to the crosstown Cubs on December 18 to complete a transaction from a week earlier on December 11 in which Ron Santo was dealt to the White Sox for Steve Swisher , Steve Stone and Ken Frailing .[ 9]
Kremmel died at age 63 in Spokane, Washington , on October 12, 2012.[ 10]
References
^ James Louis Kremmel (obituary) Archived October 28, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Heritage Funeral Home & Crematory (Spokane, WA)
^ "Resume – Jim Kremmel, MA, MBA, LMHC (official website)" . Archived from the original on July 5, 2012. Retrieved October 29, 2012 .
^ "University of New Mexico Lobos Baseball 2012 History and Records Book" (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on June 20, 2015. Retrieved October 30, 2012 .
^ a b "Senators sign college pitcher" [permanent dead link ] , Associated Press, Tuesday, May 25, 1971
^ 1970 Major League Baseball draft, Rounds 1–10 Pro Sports Transactions
^ "Jim Kremmel Stats - Baseball-Reference.com" . Baseball-Reference.com .
^ Kevin Hendricks (June 7, 2015). "Bregman can make NM history" . Albuquerque Journal .
^ Eisenbath, Mike. The Cardinals Encyclopedia , page 569. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1999
^ "White Sox Finish Trade for Santo," United Press International (UPI), Tuesday, December 18, 1973. Retrieved October 30, 2020
^ Price, Jim. "Former Indians pitcher Kremmel dies" , The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA), Monday, October 22, 2012
External links