- Source: Jay Nilsson
Jay Nilsson (born 1 November 1987 in Redcliffe, Queensland) is a former minor league baseball player for the Gulf Coast Indians. He is the son of Bob Nilsson, a top Australian league reliever of the 1990s. Jay's uncle David Nilsson was the first Australian All-Star in the major leagues. His other uncles Gary Nilsson and Ron Nilsson also played in Australia; Gary spent one year in the minor leagues.
Career
Jay signed with the Cleveland Indians in January 2006. In the 2006 Claxton Shield competition, he was 6 for 13 with two doubles for the Queensland Rams to win Rookie of the Year honours. He debuted well in the US that summer, hitting .276/.371/.474 for the GCL Indians. He was 6 for 20 with a walk and a double in the 2007 Claxton Shield. With the 2007 GCL Indians, Nilsson did not fare as well, batting .229/.340/.373 with 27 strikeouts in 26 games and was released in late 2007.
While playing for the Redcliffe Padres baseball club as the Major A catcher and he was selected to represent Queensland again for the Claxton Shield 2008 squad
In the Greater Brisbane League 2009–10, Jay lead the league in average, batting .443 helping Redcliffe finish 3rd overall.
In 2011, Jay changed clubs in the Greater Brisbane League to the Pine Hills Lightning, where his father currently manages. Nilsson was called up to the Brisbane Bandits after Xavier Paul experienced visa problems and debuted against the Canberra Cavalry on 4 November 2011.
Jay is currently taking time out from professional baseball to focus on his growing his own business and young family.
References
External links
Career statistics from Baseball Reference (Minors)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar karakter Cars
- Harvard University Press
- Piala Dunia FIFA 1998
- Kereta api
- Perang Vietnam
- Mamalia
- John Lennon
- Penghargaan Piala Dunia FIFA
- Pemangsaan
- Daftar film bertema perompakan
- Jay Nilsson
- Bob Nilsson
- Mitch Nilsson
- Gary Nilsson
- Redcliffe Padres
- Duit on Mon Dei
- Sandman (album)
- J. Alexander (model)
- Carl Linnaeus
- Mutationism