He was not on the list.
Dean Chance, a two-time All-Star who won baseball's Cy Young
Award as a 23-year-old right-hander for the Angels in 1964, died Sunday at his
home in Wooster, Ohio, the Angels confirmed. He was 74.
The cause of his death was not disclosed.
The 6-foot-3, 200-pound Chance, who was traded from the
Washington Senators to the Angels in December of 1960, played only two seasons
in the minor leagues before making his big-league debut with the Angels on
Sept. 11, 1961.
With a distinctive windup in which he would turn his back
fully away from the hitter before spinning and unleashing his pitch, Chance
spent six years with the Angels, compiling a 74-66 record and 2.93 earned-run
average.
He was dominant in 1964, going 20-9 with a 1.65 ERA,
striking out 207 in 2781/3 innings, leading the American League with 11
shutouts and 15 complete games and winning baseball's top pitching honor.
He was the youngest pitcher ever to win the Cy Young — at
the time, there was only one winner in all of baseball, not one for each
league, as there is today — a distinction he held until 20-year-old New York
Mets right-hander Dwight Gooden won the National League Cy Young in 1985.
When he received the award, groups in his hometown vied to
sponsor a testimonial dinner. Chance said he'd go along with it only if the
proceeds went to his alma mater, Northwestern High School.
"They got the money from that to start their football
program," he told the Wooster News-Record last year. "I think we
charged $6.25 a person, which was a lot of money back then."
Chance and Bartolo Colon, who won the 2005 AL Cy Young, are
the only Angels pitchers to win the award.
Born June 1, 1941, in Wooster, Ohio, Wilmer Dean Chance was
a standout high school athlete, with only one loss in his 53 games. He had 17
no-hitters to his credit, eight of them in one season.
As an Angel, Chance was also known for his off-the-field
exploits — he and fellow Angels pitcher Bo Belinsky were regulars at Hollywood
night spots and socialized with entertainers such as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin
and Marilyn Monroe. That, along with a subpar 1966 season in which he went
12-17 with a 3.08 ERA, led to the Angels trading Chance to the Twins.
Chance went 20-14 with a 2.73 ERA and an AL-leading 18
complete games in 1967, his first of three seasons in Minnesota, and he closed
his career by pitching for the Cleveland Indians, New York Mets and Detroit
Tigers in 1970-71. He had a 128-115 career record and 2.92 ERA in 10 years.
In retirement, Chance acted as a midway barker and operated
games of skill at carnivals and fairs during the 1970s and '80s.
He employed 250 people and ran about 40 games at the Ohio
State Fair.
"In baseball lingo, that's my World Series," he
told The Times in 1985. "I lose about 20 pounds in 17 days."
He later founded the International Boxing Assn. and managed
several fighters during the 1990s.
Chance returned to Anaheim in September to be inducted into
the team's Hall of Fame along with outfielder Tim Salmon and pitcher Mike Witt.
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