Hooks Wiltse Stats & Facts

Hooks Wiltse Essentials

Positions:
Bats: R Throws: L
72 Weight: 185
Born: 9 7, 1879 in Hamilton, NY USA
Died: 1 21 1959 in Long Beach, NY USA
Debut: 4/21/1904
Last Game: 9/25/1915
Full Name: George Leroy Wiltse

Though overshadowed on the Giants staff by Christy Mathewson, Wiltse won in double figures for New York in each of his first eight seasons and was with them for five pennants. He had a sensational rookie year in 1904, winning his first 13 starts and finishing 13-3. On May 15, 1906, he struck out seven consecutive Cincinnati batters in two innings. He pitched 29 career shutouts.

Wiltse’s nickname did not come from his curveball but from the way he would reach out with his long right arm to snare line drives and high bounders coming back through the box. Frank Bowerman, his catcher with the Giants, would shout, “That’s hooking them, George,” and the name Hooks stuck. Wiltse’s brother Lewis pitched with four ML teams in 1901-03.

In the first game of a July 4, 1908 doubleheader, Wiltse pitched a 10-inning, 1-0 no-hitter against Philadelphia. He almost had a 30-out perfect game. With two out in the ninth, umpire Cy Rigler failed to give Wiltse a third strike, which he later admitted could have been called. The next pitch hit the batter. Wiltse got the next man, and was perfect in the tenth after his team scored a run.

Wiltse pitched in relief in two 1911 World Series games, but appeared in the 1913 WS only at first base. Regular first baseman Fred Merkle was hurt, and his replacement, Fred Snodgrass, injured his leg sliding in the second game. Wiltse, a great fielder who loved to work out at first base, was sent in, and made several sensational plays to save Christy Mathewson’s shutout of Philadelphia.