
Position: Outfielder
Bats: Left • Throws: Left
Height, Weight: 6'-3", 215 lbs.
Born: May 28, 1957 in Pontiac, MI
High School: Waterford-Kettering HS (Waterford, MI) • College: Michigan State Univ. (East Lansing, MI)
Altho Gibson played only one season of baseball at Michigan State, the converted football player didn’t need much time to make an impact that is still felt today. The Spartan baseball program’s Offensive Player of the Year award is named after their 1978 first-team All-American. Gibson hit .390 & slugged .766 in 48 games. His 16 homers and 52 RBIs set single-season school records.
Before he left MSU, Gibson crushed the longest home run ever hit at Kobs Field in East Lansing (550 feet). That power potential had the Detroit Tigers salivating as they prepared for the June 1978 draft.
Three days before the draft, Gibson was invited to Tiger Stadium for a round of batting practice. He was given about 10 mins. to show what he could do. Jim Hawkins of the Detroit Free Press reported that Gibson “put on quite a show…and belted ball after ball into the stands”.
On draft day, the Tigers got their man with the 12th pick in the 1st round. After 143 games of minor league seasoning under the watchful eye of skipper Jim Leyland, Gibson was called up to the Tigers in September 1979.
He’d gotten his first taste of
big-league life months earlier in spring training. On his first day in camp in
Lakeland FL, Gibson took Dave Rozema, his future brother-in-law, deep during
BP. All three of his hits in exhibition games were home runs!
“Rip-Roarin’ Rookie” (1979-80)
Gibson wasn’t so lucky
the first time he faced a major league pitcher when it counted. On Sept. 8,
1979 against the Yankees, he pinch-hit with 2 outs and a man on in the bottom
of the ninth. The Tigers trailed 5-4, and Gibson represented the potential
winning run. New York closer Goose Gossage, a future Hall of Famer, cast an
intimidating figure on the mound. He struck out the fearless, but overmatched
rookie on 3 pitches to end the game. It was the kind of learning experience
that one files away in the back of the mind for future reference (ie., 1984
WS).
In his ninth game, at Baltimore’s Memorial Stadium on September 25, 1979, Kirk Gibson led off the top of the 4th against righthander Steve Stone. The hungry Tiger got a pitch he liked and devoured it! The 400-foot home run to rightfield, the first of Gibson’s career, tied the game at 1-1. Detroit went on to win, 3-2.
Tigers manager Sparky Anderson predicted that Gibson “will be the most exciting player in baseball in 1982”.
It wouldn’t be the last time that Sparky raved about his young charge’s future, but Gibson didn’t seem as impressed. He told a United Press International reporter...
“It was just
a home run. I didn’t think about it. It does mean something, but it’s not like
I said I was going to hit my first home run. I just try my best to help the
team.”
The following spring brought a new opportunity, but it also brought higher expectations. Centerfielder Ron LeFlore had been traded away, and Anderson made plans to replace him by platooning the lefthanded-hitting Gibson and the righthanded-hitting Dave Stegman. Sports Illustrated, sensing a star in the making, put Gibson (described as a “Rip-Roarin’ Rookie”) on the cover of its March 24, 1980 issue...
In the Sports Illustrated article, Sparky Anderson shared a vision for his prized pupil that included 450 at-bats and 15 home runs against righthanded pitchers. Sparky got a whole lot more than that!
Thanks for looking!
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