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Tommie Agee

Tommie Lee Agee (August 9, 1942 – January 22, 2001) was an American professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as a center fielder from 1962 through 1973, most notably as a member of the New York Mets team that became known as the Miracle Mets when, they rose from being perennial losers to defeat the favored Baltimore Orioles in the 1969 World Series for one of the most improbable upsets in World Series history.[1] Agee performed two impressive defensive plays in center field to help preserve a Mets victory in the third game of the series.

Tommie Agee
Agee with the New York Mets c. 1970
Center fielder
Born: (1942-08-09)August 9, 1942
Magnolia, Alabama, U.S.
Died: January 22, 2001(2001-01-22) (aged 58)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 14, 1962, for the Cleveland Indians
Last MLB appearance
September 30, 1973, for the St. Louis Cardinals
MLB statistics
Batting average.255
Home runs130
Runs batted in433
Teams
Career highlights and awards

A two-time Major League All-Star player, Agee was also a two-time Gold Glove Award winner and, was named the AL Rookie of the Year in 1966 as a member of the Chicago White Sox. He also played for the Cleveland Indians, Houston Astros and the St. Louis Cardinals. In 2002, Agee was posthumously inducted into the New York Mets Hall of Fame.[2]

Early life edit

Agee was born in Magnolia, Alabama, and played baseball and football at Mobile County Training School with future New York Mets teammate Cleon Jones. After one season at Grambling State University (1961), Agee signed with the Cleveland Indians for a $60,000 bonus.

Career edit

Cleveland Indians edit

After two seasons in the Indians' farm system with the AAA Portland Beavers, Agee received a September call-up to Cleveland in 1962. With the Indians already behind 11-1 to the Minnesota Twins, Agee made his major league debut on September 14 at Metropolitan Stadium pinch-hitting for pitcher Bill Dailey in the ninth inning.[3] He received September call-ups to the majors the following two seasons as well, playing a total of 31 games with the Indians in which he batted .170 with one home run and five runs batted in. Following the 1964 season, he was dealt to the Chicago White Sox with Tommy John as part of a three team blockbuster trade between the Indians, White Sox and Kansas City Athletics that returned All-Star Rocky Colavito to the Indians.[4]

Chicago White Sox edit

Agee batted just .226 with the Pacific Coast League's Indianapolis Indians, and .158 in ten games with the White Sox in 1965. After earning the starting center fielder job in spring training 1966, he hit a two-run home run in the season opener,[5] and was batting .264 with nine home runs and 38 RBIs to be named the White Sox's sole representative at the 1966 Major League Baseball All-Star Game.[6] He ended the season with a .273 batting average, 22 home runs, 86 RBIs and 44 stolen bases, becoming the first player in Major League Baseball history with more than 20 home runs and 40 stolen bases in their rookie season.[7] He was followed by Mitchell Page (1977), Mike Trout (2012) and Corbin Carroll (2023) as the only four rookies to accomplish the feat.[7] His performance earned him the American League Rookie of the Year award, while his defense in center field earned him a Gold Glove. Although he was technically in his 5th major league season, MLB's classification of a rookie is determined by plate appearances and time on a major league roster. Agee's September call-ups had been so brief and his playing time so scarce that he was still eligible for the award.

Agee was batting .247 with ten home runs and 35 RBIs to earn his second consecutive All-Star selection in 1967. His production fell off considerably in the second half of the season (he hit only four home runs after the All-Star break), and ended the season batting .234 with 52 RBIs. Though they finished the season in fourth place, Chicago finished only three games back of the first place Boston Red Sox, and battled Boston, the Detroit Tigers and Minnesota Twins until the final week of the season. On a team loaded with pitching and short on offense (no regular batted over .241), the team's lack of offense possibly cost the White Sox the American League pennant.

To alleviate this problem, the White Sox imported perennial .300 hitter Tommy Davis, along with pitcher Jack Fisher and two minor leaguers, from the New York Mets for Agee and Al Weis.

New York Mets edit

 
The spot where Agee's home run landed at Shea Stadium. The marker was removed during the demolition of Shea Stadium and was sold to a private collector, who has it on display in his backyard.[citation needed]

Agee was hit in the head by Bob Gibson on the very first pitch thrown to a Mets batter in spring training 1968. At the beginning of the regular season, he went 0-for-10 in a 24-inning affair with the Houston Astros[8] that saw his batting average go from .313 to .192. It led to an 0-for-34 slump that brought his average down to .102. For the season, he batted .217 with five home runs and 17 RBIs.[9]

1969 season edit

Agee got his first career multi-home run game in the third game of the 1969 season,[10] against the Montreal Expos, one of which went halfway up in section 48 of the left field upper deck at Shea Stadium, a feat that was never matched. Expos right fielder Mack Jones said the ball was still rising when it came into contact with the stands. To commemorate the home run, there was a painted sign in that section of the stadium with Agee's name and uniform number and the date. He also had his first four-hit game on May 2 (four for four with a walk and a home run).[11]

By May 21, Agee was batting over .300, and the Mets won their third game in a row for a .500 winning percentage 36 games into the season for the first time in franchise history. This was followed by a five-game losing streak that saw the Mets fall into fourth place in the newly aligned National League East.

The Mets then went on an 11-game winning streak that included a two-home run, four-hit performance by Agee against the San Francisco Giants in the final game of the streak.[12] By this point, the Mets were in second place, seven games back of the Chicago Cubs.

The Mets were two and a-half games back on September 8 when the Cubs came to Shea to open a crucial two game series with the Mets. Cubs starter Bill Hands knocked down the first batter he faced, Agee, who had been moved into the lead-off spot in the line-up, in the bottom half of the first inning. Jerry Koosman hit the next Cubs batter he faced, Ron Santo, in the hand, breaking it. Agee himself retaliated by hitting a two-run home run in the third, and scored the winning run of the game on a Wayne Garrett single in the sixth inning.[13]

The Mets swept the Expos in a double header on September 10. Coupled with a Cubs loss, the Mets moved into first place for the first time ever during the 1969 season. The Mets would not relinquish their lead from this point. On September 24, the New York Mets clinched the NL East as Donn Clendenon hit two home runs in a 6-0 Mets win over Steve Carlton and the St. Louis Cardinals (who struck out a record 19 Mets nine days earlier in a losing effort). For the season, Agee batted .271 while leading his team with 26 home runs, 97 runs scored and 76 RBIs. Along with Cy Young Award winner Tom Seaver and Cleon Jones, he was one of three Mets to finish in the top ten in NL MVP Award balloting, being also named the Sporting News NL Comeback Player of the Year.

1969 World Series edit

Agee batted .357 with two home runs and four RBIs in the Mets' three-game sweep of the Atlanta Braves in the 1969 National League Championship Series. The Mets were heavy underdogs heading into the World Series against the Baltimore Orioles. In Game 3 (the first World Series home game in Mets history), with the series tied 1–1, Agee had what Sports Illustrated called the greatest single performance by a center fielder in World Series history.[14] In the first inning, Agee hit a leadoff home run off Jim Palmer for what would eventually be the game-winning hit and RBI, as the Mets shut out the Orioles, 5–0. In the same game, Agee also made two catches that potentially saved five runs.[15] The first catch came in the fourth inning with Gary Gentry pitching and two outs and runners on first and third. Agee, playing the left-handed hitting Elrod Hendricks to pull, made a backhanded catch near the base of the wall in left centerfield. The second catch came in the seventh inning with Nolan Ryan relieving Gentry; the bases were loaded with two outs, and Agee made a headfirst dive in right centerfield on a ball hit by Paul Blair.[16][17]

1970–72 edit

Agee began the 1970 season by going on a 20-game hitting streak from April 16 to May 9. He enjoyed one of the finest games of his career on June 12, when he went four for five with two home runs and four runs scored, and he would go on to be named NL Player of the Month for June with a .364 batting average, 11 home runs, and 30 RBI.[18] He also hit for the cycle on July 6.[19] Agee displayed his spectacular and daring base running in the 10th inning in the NY Mets 2-1 win over the LA Dodgers when he stole second, took third on a wild pitch and surprised every one when he stole home for the victory![20] For the season, Agee batted .286, and established a Mets season record for hits with 182, runs with 107, and stolen bases with 31. He also won his second Gold Glove award, making him the first African-American to win a Gold Glove in both leagues.

Chronic knee injuries hampered Agee in 1971 and 1972, though he still batted .285 and tied for the Mets lead with 14 home runs in 1971. In 1972, he finished second on the Mets with 47 RBIs despite batting only .227.

Later career edit

Agee was traded from the Mets to the Houston Astros for Rich Chiles and Buddy Harris at the Winter Meetings on November 27, 1972.[21] He faced the Mets for the first time in his career on April 24, and went two for three with a walk and a run scored in the Astros' 4-2 victory.[22] He was batting .235 with eight home runs and 15 RBIs when the Astros dealt him to the St. Louis Cardinals on August 18, who were in a battle with the Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates in the NL East.

He was dealt from the Cardinals to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Pete Richert at the Winter Meetings on December 5, 1973.[23] He was released during spring training. Though he never made a regular season appearance with the Dodgers, his final baseball card was #630T in the 1974 Topps Traded series, which depicted him as a Dodger.

Career statistics edit

Games PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB SO HBP AVG OBP SLG FLD%
1130 4324 3912 558 999 170 27 130 433 167 342 918 34 .255 .320 .412 .975

Retirement edit

After retirement, he operated the Outfielder's Lounge near Shea Stadium. Agee was also known as the most active former Met, taking part in many charitable events and children's baseball clinics around both the New York area and Mobile. He appeared as himself in a 1999 episode of Everybody Loves Raymond along with several other members of the 1969 Mets.[24]

Tommie visited Shea Stadium often and appeared at old timers games and card shows. He was later inducted into the Mobile Sports Hall of Fame and the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame.

Personal life edit

Agee met his wife Maxcine at a nightclub and restaurant he ran.[25] The couple had a daughter, Jnelle.[26]

Agee suffered a heart attack while leaving a Midtown Manhattan office building on January 22, 2001, and died later that day at Bellevue Hospital Center, aged 58.[26] He was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery in Mobile, Alabama.[27]

Legacy edit

Agee was posthumously inducted into the New York Mets Hall of Fame in 2002.

Agee was also posthumously inducted into the New York State Baseball Hall of Fame in 2022.

A middle school was built on the property of Agee's former nightclub in East Elmhurst, Queens. It opened in 2022 and was called the Tommie L. Agee Educational Campus in his honor.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "1969: The Amazin' Mets". thisgreatgame.com. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  2. ^ "New York Mets Hall of Fame at MLB.com". mlb.com. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  3. ^ "Minnesota Twins 11, Cleveland Indians 1". Baseball-Reference.com. 1962-09-14.
  4. ^ "Tommie Agee Stats | Baseball-Reference.com". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 2017-09-11.
  5. ^ "Chicago White Sox 3, California Angels 2". Baseball-Reference.com. 1966-04-12.
  6. ^ "1966 All-Star Game". Baseball-Reference.com. 1966-07-12.
  7. ^ a b "Carroll continues ROY chase as 4th rookie of 20/40 club". mlb.com. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  8. ^ "Houston Astros 1, New York Mets 0". Baseball-Reference.com. 1968-04-15.
  9. ^ "Tommie Agee". Ultimate Mets Database. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  10. ^ "New York Mets 4, Montreal Expos 2". Baseball-Reference.com. 1969-04-10.
  11. ^ "Chicago Cubs 6, New York Mets 4". Baseball-Reference.com. 1969-05-02.
  12. ^ "New York Mets 9, San Francisco Giants 4". Baseball-Reference.com. 1969-06-10.
  13. ^ "New York Mets 3, Chicago Cubs 2". Baseball-Reference.com. 1969-09-08.
  14. ^ "Agee steals the show in four-hit shutout by Gentry & Ryan". 1969-10-14.
  15. ^ "1969 World Series, Game 3". mlb.com. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  16. ^ "Tommie Agee: 1969 World Series, Game 3". ESPN. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
  17. ^ "New York Mets 5, Baltimore Orioles 0". Retrosheet. October 14, 1969.
  18. ^ "New York Mets 6, Atlanta Braves 1". Baseball-Reference.com. 1970-06-12.
  19. ^ "New York Mets 10, St. Louis Cardinals 3". Baseball-Reference.com. 1970-07-06.
  20. ^ "Tommy Agee Steals Home in the 10th Inning".
  21. ^ Durso, Joseph. "Mets Send Agee to the Astros for Pair; Yanks Trade Four to Get Graig Nettles," The New York Times, Tuesday, November 28, 1972. Retrieved October 24, 2020
  22. ^ "Houston Astros 4, New York Mets 2". Baseball-Reference.com. 1973-04-24.
  23. ^ Koppett, Leonard. "Dodgers Also Acquire Agee From Cards," The New York Times, Thursday, December 6, 1973. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  24. ^ "Big Shots". Everybody Loves Raymond. 1999-03-01.
  25. ^ a b Mayor, Queens officials celebrate opening of new East Elmhurst school named after late 1969 Mets star Tommie Agee
  26. ^ a b Goldstein, Richard (2001-01-23). "Tommie Agee, of Miracle Mets, Dies at 58". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-05-25.
  27. ^ Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More than 14000 Famous Persons, Scott Wilson

External links edit

  • Career statistics and player information from MLB, or ESPN, or Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Baseball Almanac, or Retrosheet
  • Tommie Agee at Find a Grave
  • Tommie Agee at the SABR Baseball Biography Project
  • Silverman, Rob (January 29, 2015). "Tell Them Tommie Agee Was Here". MetsMerizedOnline.com.
  • "1969 WS Gm3: Agee homers and makes two great catches". MLB.com. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22 – via YouTube.
Awards and achievements
Preceded by American League Rookie of the Year
1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by NL Comeback Player of the Year
1969
Succeeded by
Preceded by Major League Player of the Month
June, 1970
Succeeded by
Preceded by Hitting for the cycle
July 6, 1970
Succeeded by

tommie, agee, american, football, player, american, football, tommie, agee, august, 1942, january, 2001, american, professional, baseball, player, played, major, league, baseball, center, fielder, from, 1962, through, 1973, most, notably, member, york, mets, t. For the American football player see Tommie Agee American football Tommie Lee Agee August 9 1942 January 22 2001 was an American professional baseball player He played in Major League Baseball as a center fielder from 1962 through 1973 most notably as a member of the New York Mets team that became known as the Miracle Mets when they rose from being perennial losers to defeat the favored Baltimore Orioles in the 1969 World Series for one of the most improbable upsets in World Series history 1 Agee performed two impressive defensive plays in center field to help preserve a Mets victory in the third game of the series Tommie AgeeAgee with the New York Mets c 1970Center fielderBorn 1942 08 09 August 9 1942Magnolia Alabama U S Died January 22 2001 2001 01 22 aged 58 New York City New York U S Batted RightThrew RightMLB debutSeptember 14 1962 for the Cleveland IndiansLast MLB appearanceSeptember 30 1973 for the St Louis CardinalsMLB statisticsBatting average 255Home runs130Runs batted in433TeamsCleveland Indians 1962 1964 Chicago White Sox 1965 1967 New York Mets 1968 1972 Houston Astros 1973 St Louis Cardinals 1973 Career highlights and awards2 All Star 1966 1967 World Series champion 1969 2 Gold Glove Award 1966 1970 AL Rookie of the Year 1966 New York Mets Hall of FameA two time Major League All Star player Agee was also a two time Gold Glove Award winner and was named the AL Rookie of the Year in 1966 as a member of the Chicago White Sox He also played for the Cleveland Indians Houston Astros and the St Louis Cardinals In 2002 Agee was posthumously inducted into the New York Mets Hall of Fame 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Cleveland Indians 2 2 Chicago White Sox 2 3 New York Mets 2 3 1 1969 season 2 3 2 1969 World Series 2 3 3 1970 72 2 4 Later career 2 5 Career statistics 3 Retirement 4 Personal life 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editAgee was born in Magnolia Alabama and played baseball and football at Mobile County Training School with future New York Mets teammate Cleon Jones After one season at Grambling State University 1961 Agee signed with the Cleveland Indians for a 60 000 bonus Career editCleveland Indians edit After two seasons in the Indians farm system with the AAA Portland Beavers Agee received a September call up to Cleveland in 1962 With the Indians already behind 11 1 to the Minnesota Twins Agee made his major league debut on September 14 at Metropolitan Stadium pinch hitting for pitcher Bill Dailey in the ninth inning 3 He received September call ups to the majors the following two seasons as well playing a total of 31 games with the Indians in which he batted 170 with one home run and five runs batted in Following the 1964 season he was dealt to the Chicago White Sox with Tommy John as part of a three team blockbuster trade between the Indians White Sox and Kansas City Athletics that returned All Star Rocky Colavito to the Indians 4 Chicago White Sox edit Agee batted just 226 with the Pacific Coast League s Indianapolis Indians and 158 in ten games with the White Sox in 1965 After earning the starting center fielder job in spring training 1966 he hit a two run home run in the season opener 5 and was batting 264 with nine home runs and 38 RBIs to be named the White Sox s sole representative at the 1966 Major League Baseball All Star Game 6 He ended the season with a 273 batting average 22 home runs 86 RBIs and 44 stolen bases becoming the first player in Major League Baseball history with more than 20 home runs and 40 stolen bases in their rookie season 7 He was followed by Mitchell Page 1977 Mike Trout 2012 and Corbin Carroll 2023 as the only four rookies to accomplish the feat 7 His performance earned him the American League Rookie of the Year award while his defense in center field earned him a Gold Glove Although he was technically in his 5th major league season MLB s classification of a rookie is determined by plate appearances and time on a major league roster Agee s September call ups had been so brief and his playing time so scarce that he was still eligible for the award Agee was batting 247 with ten home runs and 35 RBIs to earn his second consecutive All Star selection in 1967 His production fell off considerably in the second half of the season he hit only four home runs after the All Star break and ended the season batting 234 with 52 RBIs Though they finished the season in fourth place Chicago finished only three games back of the first place Boston Red Sox and battled Boston the Detroit Tigers and Minnesota Twins until the final week of the season On a team loaded with pitching and short on offense no regular batted over 241 the team s lack of offense possibly cost the White Sox the American League pennant To alleviate this problem the White Sox imported perennial 300 hitter Tommy Davis along with pitcher Jack Fisher and two minor leaguers from the New York Mets for Agee and Al Weis New York Mets edit nbsp The spot where Agee s home run landed at Shea Stadium The marker was removed during the demolition of Shea Stadium and was sold to a private collector who has it on display in his backyard citation needed Agee was hit in the head by Bob Gibson on the very first pitch thrown to a Mets batter in spring training 1968 At the beginning of the regular season he went 0 for 10 in a 24 inning affair with the Houston Astros 8 that saw his batting average go from 313 to 192 It led to an 0 for 34 slump that brought his average down to 102 For the season he batted 217 with five home runs and 17 RBIs 9 1969 season edit Agee got his first career multi home run game in the third game of the 1969 season 10 against the Montreal Expos one of which went halfway up in section 48 of the left field upper deck at Shea Stadium a feat that was never matched Expos right fielder Mack Jones said the ball was still rising when it came into contact with the stands To commemorate the home run there was a painted sign in that section of the stadium with Agee s name and uniform number and the date He also had his first four hit game on May 2 four for four with a walk and a home run 11 By May 21 Agee was batting over 300 and the Mets won their third game in a row for a 500 winning percentage 36 games into the season for the first time in franchise history This was followed by a five game losing streak that saw the Mets fall into fourth place in the newly aligned National League East The Mets then went on an 11 game winning streak that included a two home run four hit performance by Agee against the San Francisco Giants in the final game of the streak 12 By this point the Mets were in second place seven games back of the Chicago Cubs The Mets were two and a half games back on September 8 when the Cubs came to Shea to open a crucial two game series with the Mets Cubs starter Bill Hands knocked down the first batter he faced Agee who had been moved into the lead off spot in the line up in the bottom half of the first inning Jerry Koosman hit the next Cubs batter he faced Ron Santo in the hand breaking it Agee himself retaliated by hitting a two run home run in the third and scored the winning run of the game on a Wayne Garrett single in the sixth inning 13 The Mets swept the Expos in a double header on September 10 Coupled with a Cubs loss the Mets moved into first place for the first time ever during the 1969 season The Mets would not relinquish their lead from this point On September 24 the New York Mets clinched the NL East as Donn Clendenon hit two home runs in a 6 0 Mets win over Steve Carlton and the St Louis Cardinals who struck out a record 19 Mets nine days earlier in a losing effort For the season Agee batted 271 while leading his team with 26 home runs 97 runs scored and 76 RBIs Along with Cy Young Award winner Tom Seaver and Cleon Jones he was one of three Mets to finish in the top ten in NL MVP Award balloting being also named the Sporting News NL Comeback Player of the Year 1969 World Series edit Agee batted 357 with two home runs and four RBIs in the Mets three game sweep of the Atlanta Braves in the 1969 National League Championship Series The Mets were heavy underdogs heading into the World Series against the Baltimore Orioles In Game 3 the first World Series home game in Mets history with the series tied 1 1 Agee had what Sports Illustrated called the greatest single performance by a center fielder in World Series history 14 In the first inning Agee hit a leadoff home run off Jim Palmer for what would eventually be the game winning hit and RBI as the Mets shut out the Orioles 5 0 In the same game Agee also made two catches that potentially saved five runs 15 The first catch came in the fourth inning with Gary Gentry pitching and two outs and runners on first and third Agee playing the left handed hitting Elrod Hendricks to pull made a backhanded catch near the base of the wall in left centerfield The second catch came in the seventh inning with Nolan Ryan relieving Gentry the bases were loaded with two outs and Agee made a headfirst dive in right centerfield on a ball hit by Paul Blair 16 17 1970 72 edit Agee began the 1970 season by going on a 20 game hitting streak from April 16 to May 9 He enjoyed one of the finest games of his career on June 12 when he went four for five with two home runs and four runs scored and he would go on to be named NL Player of the Month for June with a 364 batting average 11 home runs and 30 RBI 18 He also hit for the cycle on July 6 19 Agee displayed his spectacular and daring base running in the 10th inning in the NY Mets 2 1 win over the LA Dodgers when he stole second took third on a wild pitch and surprised every one when he stole home for the victory 20 For the season Agee batted 286 and established a Mets season record for hits with 182 runs with 107 and stolen bases with 31 He also won his second Gold Glove award making him the first African American to win a Gold Glove in both leagues Chronic knee injuries hampered Agee in 1971 and 1972 though he still batted 285 and tied for the Mets lead with 14 home runs in 1971 In 1972 he finished second on the Mets with 47 RBIs despite batting only 227 Later career edit Agee was traded from the Mets to the Houston Astros for Rich Chiles and Buddy Harris at the Winter Meetings on November 27 1972 21 He faced the Mets for the first time in his career on April 24 and went two for three with a walk and a run scored in the Astros 4 2 victory 22 He was batting 235 with eight home runs and 15 RBIs when the Astros dealt him to the St Louis Cardinals on August 18 who were in a battle with the Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates in the NL East He was dealt from the Cardinals to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Pete Richert at the Winter Meetings on December 5 1973 23 He was released during spring training Though he never made a regular season appearance with the Dodgers his final baseball card was 630T in the 1974 Topps Traded series which depicted him as a Dodger Career statistics edit Games PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB SO HBP AVG OBP SLG FLD 1130 4324 3912 558 999 170 27 130 433 167 342 918 34 255 320 412 975Retirement editAfter retirement he operated the Outfielder s Lounge near Shea Stadium Agee was also known as the most active former Met taking part in many charitable events and children s baseball clinics around both the New York area and Mobile He appeared as himself in a 1999 episode of Everybody Loves Raymond along with several other members of the 1969 Mets 24 Tommie visited Shea Stadium often and appeared at old timers games and card shows He was later inducted into the Mobile Sports Hall of Fame and the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame Personal life editAgee met his wife Maxcine at a nightclub and restaurant he ran 25 The couple had a daughter Jnelle 26 Agee suffered a heart attack while leaving a Midtown Manhattan office building on January 22 2001 and died later that day at Bellevue Hospital Center aged 58 26 He was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery in Mobile Alabama 27 Legacy editAgee was posthumously inducted into the New York Mets Hall of Fame in 2002 Agee was also posthumously inducted into the New York State Baseball Hall of Fame in 2022 A middle school was built on the property of Agee s former nightclub in East Elmhurst Queens It opened in 2022 and was called the Tommie L Agee Educational Campus in his honor 25 See also editList of Major League Baseball career stolen bases leaders List of Major League Baseball players to hit for the cycleReferences edit 1969 The Amazin Mets thisgreatgame com Retrieved 26 September 2020 New York Mets Hall of Fame at MLB com mlb com Retrieved 24 September 2020 Minnesota Twins 11 Cleveland Indians 1 Baseball Reference com 1962 09 14 Tommie Agee Stats Baseball Reference com Baseball Reference com Retrieved 2017 09 11 Chicago White Sox 3 California Angels 2 Baseball Reference com 1966 04 12 1966 All Star Game Baseball Reference com 1966 07 12 a b Carroll continues ROY chase as 4th rookie of 20 40 club mlb com Retrieved 28 August 2023 Houston Astros 1 New York Mets 0 Baseball Reference com 1968 04 15 Tommie Agee Ultimate Mets Database Retrieved 2009 01 02 New York Mets 4 Montreal Expos 2 Baseball Reference com 1969 04 10 Chicago Cubs 6 New York Mets 4 Baseball Reference com 1969 05 02 New York Mets 9 San Francisco Giants 4 Baseball Reference com 1969 06 10 New York Mets 3 Chicago Cubs 2 Baseball Reference com 1969 09 08 Agee steals the show in four hit shutout by Gentry amp Ryan 1969 10 14 1969 World Series Game 3 mlb com Retrieved January 20 2015 Tommie Agee 1969 World Series Game 3 ESPN Retrieved November 23 2017 New York Mets 5 Baltimore Orioles 0 Retrosheet October 14 1969 New York Mets 6 Atlanta Braves 1 Baseball Reference com 1970 06 12 New York Mets 10 St Louis Cardinals 3 Baseball Reference com 1970 07 06 Tommy Agee Steals Home in the 10th Inning Durso Joseph Mets Send Agee to the Astros for Pair Yanks Trade Four to Get Graig Nettles The New York Times Tuesday November 28 1972 Retrieved October 24 2020 Houston Astros 4 New York Mets 2 Baseball Reference com 1973 04 24 Koppett Leonard Dodgers Also Acquire Agee From Cards The New York Times Thursday December 6 1973 Retrieved September 27 2022 Big Shots Everybody Loves Raymond 1999 03 01 a b Mayor Queens officials celebrate opening of new East Elmhurst school named after late 1969 Mets star Tommie Agee a b Goldstein Richard 2001 01 23 Tommie Agee of Miracle Mets Dies at 58 New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 25 Resting Places The Burial Sites of More than 14000 Famous Persons Scott WilsonExternal links editCareer statistics and player information from MLB or ESPN or Baseball Reference or Fangraphs or Baseball Reference Minors or Baseball Almanac or Retrosheet Tommie Agee at Find a Grave Tommie Agee at the SABR Baseball Biography Project Silverman Rob January 29 2015 Tell Them Tommie Agee Was Here MetsMerizedOnline com 1969 WS Gm3 Agee homers and makes two great catches MLB com Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 via YouTube Awards and achievementsPreceded byCurt Blefary American League Rookie of the Year1966 Succeeded byRod CarewPreceded byAlex Johnson NL Comeback Player of the Year1969 Succeeded byJim HickmanPreceded byRico Carty Major League Player of the MonthJune 1970 Succeeded byBill SingerPreceded byTony Horton Hitting for the cycleJuly 6 1970 Succeeded byJim Ray Hart Portals nbsp Baseball nbsp Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tommie Agee amp oldid 1179422592, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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