- Source: Carl Boles
- Ekstraversi dan introversi
- Frankenstein (film 1931)
- The Rolling Stones
- Perbudakan
- King of Jazz
- The Last Warning
- Daftar mantan pembalap NASCAR
- Daftar penemu planet minor
- NASCAR Seri Grand National musim 1960
- East Room
- Carl Boles
- John Boles (actor)
- Boles (surname)
- Black Mist Scandal (Japanese baseball)
- Deaths in April 2022
- Carl Craig
- Luis García (third baseman)
- 1962 National League tie-breaker series
- Center Point, Howard County, Arkansas
- 1962 San Francisco Giants season
Carl Theodore Boles (October 31, 1934 – April 8, 2022) was an American professional baseball player whose career included seven years in minor league baseball, six in Japan, and a 19-game trial in the Major Leagues for the 1962 San Francisco Giants. He threw and batted right-handed, stood 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m) tall and weighed 185 pounds (84 kg). He attended the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (then known as Arkansas AM&N).
Boles was 27 years old and hitting .337 with 18 home runs in the Double-A Texas League when the Giants recalled him in August 1962. His 19 games with the Giants included four starts as the club's left fielder, 12 pinch hitting assignments and three games as a pinch runner. In the 1962 National League tie-breaker series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Boles pinch-ran for Ed Bailey in the eighth inning of the second playoff game and scored the Giants' seventh and tying run in a game they eventually lost, 8–7. San Francisco, however, won the National League championship the next day. In his two months with the Giants, Boles collected nine hits, all singles, and batted .375. He did not appear in the 1962 World Series, in which the Giants were defeated by the New York Yankees, four games to three.
During Boles' six years in Japanese baseball, he showcased his power hitting, with seasons of 26, 28 and 31 home runs. He was an influential figure in uncovering the Black Mist Scandal matching-fixing scheme in professional baseball and in flat track motorcycle racing, which is a pair-mutuel betting sport in Japan. He retired in 1971.
References
External links
Career statistics from Baseball Reference, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet
Venezuelan Professional Baseball League statistics
Carl Boles at SABR (Baseball BioProject)