
(December 14, 1945 – February 26, 2011)
Baseball Career
Born in Los Angeles, California, Goossen was the fourth member of a family of eight brothers and two sisters. He was a standout football and basketball player at Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks, California, where he graduated in 1964.[2]
On May 31, 1968, while playing for the Mets, Goossen broke up a possible perfect game by St. Louis Cardinals' pitcher Larry Jaster after hitting a single with two outs in the bottom of the eighth inning.[4] In his time with the Mets, Goossen bounced between the majors (99 games in 4 years) and the minors (with all but 40 minor league games at AAA Jacksonville) and on 5 February, 1969, New York traded him along with cash to the Seattle Pilots for a player to be named later (on 14 July the Pilots sent outfielder/first baseman Jim Gosger to the Mets to close the deal). Although Goossen again missed out on the possibility of getting a World Series ring, this time with the Miracle Mets, he got to see his only extended amount of playing time in his career when he was called up to Seattle on 25 July platooning as the right-handed bat opposite lefty Don Mincher at firstbase. Goossen would post career numbers in average (.309), home runs (10), runs batted in (24), at bats (139), and games played (52), while catching and playing at first base and left field.[1][5] Although in Seattle for only two months, Goossen would be there long enough to became one of the lasting characters in Jim Bouton’s iconic diary, Ball Four.
After starting the 1970 season as the now Milwaukee Brewers' first baseman, Goossen's production would tail off badly from 1969 and he'd be sent to AAA Portland after hitting only .255 with one homerun over the first 21 games. On 14 July, the Washington Senators purchased Goossen from the Brewers and he would spend the rest of the season in Washington playing for Hall of Famer Ted Williams, but would hit an empty .222 with no homers and 1 RBI and only 3 extra base hits in what would be his final taste of the major leagues. On 3 November, 1970, Goossen was sent by Washington to the Philadelphia Phillies left fielder Gene Martin, and relief pitcher Jeff Terpko for a player to be named later and Curt Flood, whose lawsuit for free agency was pending against Major League Baseball (on 10 April, the Phillies would send Jeff Terpko back to the Senators as the player to be named to complete the trade).[1] Goosen would spend the 1971 season playing for the AAA teams of three organizations, the Phillies, Chicago Cubs, and California Angels, before calling it a career following the end of the season at the age of 25.
Retirement
After his baseball retirement, Goossen worked as a private investigator at his father's firm, a job he had started during his baseball off-seasons. Later he helped his brother, Dan Goossen who owned Ten Goose Professional Boxing along with his brothers, as a boxing trainer. Notable boxers that he worked with included Rick Lindland, an amateur boxer-turned-actor and 1980's middleweight champion Michael Nunn.[6]While at the gym in 1988, his brother Joe asked him to meet with actor Gene Hackman, who was doing research for the film Split Decisions. Soon after the two became friends and the actor hired Goossen to work as his stand-in. Hackman then had written into his contract that Goossen would serve as his stand-in for every film he did. He would eventually appear in 15 of Hackman’s movies between 1989 and 2003, including Unforgiven, The Firm, Get Shorty and Wyatt Earp.[2][7]
Goossen was scheduled to be inducted into the Notre Dame High School Hall of Fame on February 26, 2011, but when he did not arrive for a photo session, a family member went to his nearby home in Sherman Oaks and found him dead at the age of 65. The cause of death was not determined.[2]
To see more of who died in 2010 click here
No comments:
Post a Comment