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Vic Davalillo, the first Venezuelan to win a Gold Glove, is dead

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Vic Davalillo, a two-time World Series champion who played 16 seasons in the major leagues and became the first Venezuelan-born player to win a Gold Glove, died Wednesday in Caracas, Venezuela. He was 84 or 87; sources differ on his age.

His daughter Helga Davalillo said he died after emergency surgery for an intestinal obstruction and renal insufficiency.

Baseball Reference lists Davalillo’s date of birth as July 30, 1939, but Davalillo considered July 31 to be his birthday, and his biographer, Asdrúbal Fuenmayor, wrote that Davalillo was born in 1936. The 1969 Sporting News Baseball Register also said he was born in 1936.

Davalillo signed with the Cincinnati Reds organization in 1958 at the age of 18, starting as a left-handed pitcher in minor league ball. But he eventually became more appreciated for his bat and increasingly used in the outfield. His contract was sold to the Cleveland Indians organization in 1961 and the following year he won the Triple-A International League batting title with a .346 average.

He made his Major League debut on Opening Day in 1963 against the Minnesota Twins in Minnesota, as the Indians’ leadoff hitter against Camilo Pascual.

Davalillo got his first hit the next day off future Hall of Famer Jim Kaat and went on to hit .292 with seven home runs and 36 runs batted in. His rookie season was interrupted on June 12, when a pitch from Detroit Tigers’ Hank Aguirre hit his forearm and broke it. The injury kept him out until August 10.

Davalillo won a Gold Glove award as an outfielder in 1964.

He was an All-Star in 1965, when he hit .301 with five home runs, 40 RBIs and 26 stolen bases and finished third in the American League batting race behind Tony Oliva of the Twins and Carl Yastrzemski of the Boston Red Sox.

He was traded to the California Angels in June 1968, part of a big league career that took him to the St. Louis Cardinals (1969-70), the Pittsburgh Pirates (1971-73), the Oakland Athletics (1973-74) and the Los Angeles Dodgers (1977-80).

Davalillo hit a three-run homer in his first at bat for the Cardinals on June 1, 1969. That season, he made his only two major league pitching appearances, on June 30 and July 3, failing in any of the four strike out batters. confronted.

Davalillo finished with a .279 average, 36 home runs, 329 RBIs and 125 stolen bases to win World Series titles with the 1971 Pirates, when they defeated the Baltimore Orioles in seven games; and the 1973 Athletics, when they defeated the New York Mets in seven. He had a .323 average in 22 postseason games, including 4 for 20 in the World Series.

In Venezuelan Winter League ball, Davalillo won seven titles over 30 seasons, from 1957-58 to 1986-87. He became the league’s first .400 hitter over a full season, in 1961-62, according to the Society for American Baseball Research, and won four batting championships in Venezuela.

He had a career average of .325 in the Venezuelan league with a record 1,505 hits.

Víctor José Davalillo Romero’s birthplace is usually listed as Cabimas, a western city on the shore of Lake Maracaibo. But Fuenmayor wrote in his biography, published in 2006, that Davalillo told him he was born further east, in Churuguara, shortly before the family moved to Cabimas. An older brother, Pompeyo, played briefly for the Washington Senators in 1953.

The baseball field in Cabimas was named after Davalillo in 1987 and the Venezuelan Winter League’s Most Valuable Player Award was named in his honor.

Davalillo’s 1961 marriage to Luisa Ramona Barrera ended in divorce in 1969, according to SABR. He married Zoraida Caraballo later that year. Information about survivors besides his daughter was not immediately available.

Davalillos’ former Venezuelan team Leones de Caracas said it would wear a patch with its name and number 2 on the sleeves of its shirt for the rest of the winter season.

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