J.R. Richard

JR Richard
Birthdate 3/7/1950
Death Date 8/4/2021
Debut Year 1971
Year of Induction
Teams Astros
Position Pitcher

J.R. Richard broke Tom Seaver’s NL single-season record for most strikeouts by a right-handed pitcher in ’78, then extended it to 313 Ks in ’79.

Leave a comment

In the collection:

J.R. Richard had one of the greatest pitching debuts in the history of the game

J.R. Richard had one of the greatest pitching debuts in the history of the game

Standing 6’8″ tall with 222 pounds on his frame, the Astros’ J.R. Richard was a dominating physical presence. With a triple-digit fastball and a sharp slider, Richard was also one of baseball’s best strikeout pitchers. The second overall pick in the 1969 draft, Richard had on
J.R. Richard became a member of the Mudcat Grant's Black Aces in 1976

J.R. Richard became a member of the Mudcat Grant's Black Aces in 1976

When Jim “Mudcat” Grant won a league-leading 21 games in 1965, he became the American League’s first African-American 20-game winner. Later he published his autobiography under the title, The Black Aces: Baseball’s Only African-American Twenty-Game Winners. The term, “B
James Rodney Richard won at least 18 games each season from 1976 through 1979

James Rodney Richard won at least 18 games each season from 1976 through 1979

In ’76 J.R. was 9-9 at the All Star Break. Then things fell into place. He soon became one of the most fearsome pitchers in the game. By season’s end he was the Houston franchise’s second 20-game winner. Writers voted him the MVP of the Astros. Richard finished the nation’s bicentennial year

3 responses to “J.R. Richard”

  1. Stephen howe says:

    Tremendous pitcher his career was tragically cut short rest in peace

  2. Larry Bialorucki says:

    Great competitor!
    His post baseball life is such a sad story. He deserved better.

  3. John Summins says:

    The press was unmerciful towards him when he stopped pitching , was labeled a maligned. A lot of the media had egg on their face when he had the stroke

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

"Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball…"

~Jacques Barzun, 1954