Jim Morris Baseball Stats by Baseball Almanac

Jim Morris Stats

Jim Morris was born on Sunday, January 19, 1964, in Brownwood, Texas. Morris was 35 years old when he broke into the big leagues on September 18, 1999, with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. His biographical data, year-by-year hitting stats, fielding stats, pitching stats (where applicable), career totals, uniform numbers, salary data and miscellaneous items-of-interest are presented by Baseball Almanac on this comprehensive Jim Morris baseball stats page.

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"He Played A Boy's Game. He Lived A Man's Life. As a lonely child, Jim Morris took one thing with him wherever his family moved-his ability to hit and throw a baseball. For Jim, the passion of becoming a major-league ballplayer was his anchor and inspiration...until injuries and life got in the way. A decade after Jim walked away from the minors and began a life of fatherhood and mortgage payments, he made a promise to the hardscrabble high-school team he coached: If they could win their local championship, he would try out again for the big leagues. They did-and he did." - Amazon Book Review. The Rookie: The Incredible True Story of a Man Who Never Gave Up on His Dream. Grand Central Publishing. 1 March 2002.

Jim Morris

Jim Morris Autograph on a 2000 Skybox Baseball Card (#282)

Jim Morris Autograph on a 2000 Skybox Baseball Card (#282)

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Birth Name:   James Samuel Morris
Nickname:   Jim
Born On:   01-19-1964  (Capricorn)
Place of Birth Data Born In:   Brownwood, Texas
Year of Death Data Died On:   Still Living (1,000 Oldest Living)
Place of Death Data Died In:   Still Living
Cemetery:   n/a
High School:   Brownwood High School (Brownwood, TX)
College:   None Attended
Batting Stances Chart Bats:   Left   Throwing Arms Chart Throws:   Left
Player Height Chart Height:   6-03   Player Weight Chart Weight:   215
First Game:   09-18-1999 (Age 35)
Last Game:   05-09-2000
Draft:   1983 : 1st Round (4th)

Jim Morris

Jim Morris Pitching Stats

1999 35 Devil Rays 5 0 3 0 0 .000 5.79 0 0 0 4.2 21 3 3 3 1 2 0 3 0 1 0 0
2000 36 Devil Rays 16 0 3 0 0 .000 4.35 0 0 0 10.1 48 10 5 9 1 7 1 10 1 0 0 0
2 Years 21 0 6 0 0 .000 4.80 0 0 0 15.0 69 13 8 12 2 9 1 13 1 1 0 0

Jim Morris

Jim Morris Hitting Stats

1999 35 Devil Rays 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000
2000 36 Devil Rays 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000
2 Years 21 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000

Jim Morris

Jim Morris Fielding Stats

1999 Devil Rays P 5 0 14 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 n/a n/a n/a .000 0.00
2000 Devil Rays P 16 0 31 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 n/a n/a n/a .000 0.00
P Totals 21 0 45 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 n/a n/a n/a .000 0.00
2 Years 21 0 45 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 n/a n/a n/a .000 0.00

Jim Morris

Jim Morris Miscellaneous Stats

1999 Devil Rays 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.50 5.79 3.86
2000 Devil Rays 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.43 8.71 6.10
2 Years 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.44 7.80 5.40

Jim Morris

Jim Morris Miscellaneous Items of Interest

1999 Tampa Bay Devil Rays 63 $200,000.00 - -
2000 Tampa Bay Devil Rays 63 $200,000.00 - -

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Did you know Jim Morris was portrayed by actor Dennis Quaid in the feature Disney film called The Rookie which was a true story about Jim Morris's climb to the big leagues? A brief synopsis:

Jim Morris was originally selected 466th overall in the January 1982 amateur baseball draft by the New York Yankees, but did not sign. He would then later be selected fourth overall in the January 1983 amateur baseball draft by the Milwaukee Brewers and signed with the organization. He suffered several arm injuries in the minor leagues, and was released during the 1987 season, never having progressed past the single-A minor leagues. He signed with the Chicago White Sox organization for 1989, but was again unable to rise past the single-A leagues.

Morris, due to the reoccurring injuries, retired to become a high school physical science teacher and baseball coach at Reagan County High School in Big Lake, Texas.

While coaching baseball for the Reagan County Owls in the spring of 1999, Morris made a promise to his team that he would try out for Major League Baseball if his team won the District Championship, something the team had never accomplished before. His team won the title, and Morris kept his end of the bargain by attending a Tampa Bay Devil Rays tryout.

The scout wasn't interested in Morris, but gave him a tryout solely to let Morris keep his promise to his players. Surprisingly, Morris discovered that in spite of his age, and having several surgeries on his arm, he was able to throw 12 consecutive 98-mph fastballs.

Morris signed a professional contract with the Devil Rays organization at the age of 35 after his tryout. He started out with the Minor League Double-A Orlando Rays, but after a few appearances he moved up to a spot with the Triple-A Durham Bulls. Thanks to solid pitching performances with Durham, Tampa Bay gave him a chance to pitch with the big club when the rosters expanded, and on September 18, 1999, against Royce Clayton of the Texas Rangers, the 35-year old Morris made his debut, striking Clayton out on four pitches. His goal of pitching in the majors was finally realized.

Jim Morris wasn't really the oldest rookie (Diomedes Olivo holds the National League record and Satchel Paige holds the Major League / American League record), but the story of his climb to "the show" was exceptional. ESPN columnist Jeff Merron (ESPN Page 2. The Rookie in reel life.) pointed out a few more subtle and not-so subtle differences from "reel life" to "real life":

In reel life: Disney's version of life in the minors is rated "G."
In real life: Life in the minors is rated "R."

In reel life: Morris is played by the 47-year-old Quaid.
In real life: Morris was 35 when most of the events depicted in the movie happened. Believing Quaid is 35 is a stretch—you've got to really suspend belief when you look at his face, which is as rumpled as Mick Jagger's. But Quaid gives a superb performance and is quite convincing on the mound, despite having no experience as a pitcher.

In reel life: Quaid is thin and clean-shaven.
In real life: Morris, circa 1999, was big and husky—6-foot-2, 225 pounds or so—and wore a mustache flecked with gray.

In reel life: Morris teaches and coaches at Big Lake High School.
In real life: Morris taught at Reagan County High School, which is in Big Lake. There is no "Big Lake High School" in Texas. Filmmakers probably liked the sound of "Big Lake," and might have wanted to avoid the political connotations of the name Reagan.

In reel life: Oil is so omnipresent in Big Lake that there's an oil pump out in front of the high school.
In real life: Morris' school does indeed have an oil pump in front.

In reel life: Much is made of the almost mythic importance of oil in Big Lake, with talk of the Santa Rita oil well.
In real life: Big Lake is, indeed, a town whose economy is based on oil. On May 28, 1923, a "gusher" at Santa Rita No. 1 started a boom—more than 140 million barrels of oil came from the Big Lake oil field. Santa Rita No. 1, named the "Oil Well of the Century" by Texas Monthly, was productive until 1990. The University of Texas owned the land on which the oil was discovered, and the well has helped make the state university one of the country's richest.

In reel life: The 1-year-old in the movie is played by triplets.
In real life: The Morrises have three children, including a 1-year-old.

In reel life: The Big Lake Owls baseball team has only 10 players.
In real life: Morris writes in "The Rookie" that in 1999 Big Lake had 55 players try out for the team, "of whom 15 were legitimate varsity baseball players."

In reel life: The story hinges on a promise—if the hapless Owls "win district" and go to the state playoffs, Morris will go to a major-league tryout. Morris "reminds" his team they had only one win in each of the last three seasons.
In real life: Reagan dropped down to a division for smaller schools in 1999, and was coming off a 9-13 season, with the core of that team returning. The team won the District 1-2A championship, making the playoffs for the first time since 1993.

In reel life: Morris pulls his pickup off the side of the road near a speed display board. He throws a pitch past the board in order to measure its speed.
In real life: "That didn't happen," Quaid says. "But it could have happened." No, it couldn't have, a salesman at Stalker Radar, which sells roadside speed display signs, told me last week. A speed display board can measure anything that goes by in a straight line. However, a roadside board wouldn't pick up a baseball, unless its sensors were adjusted to pick up something that small.

In reel life: Morris has some difficulty deciding whether to leave Big Lake, where he lives and has lived since he was a boy, for a better, more lucrative job in Fort Worth. His wife, Lorri, also works at Big Lake as a counselor, although we only see her at the school in an early scene.
In real life: Because he didn't have a teaching certificate, Morris could no longer teach at Reagan County after 1999. He had to leave the job. And Morris never lived in Big Lake—his home was 70 miles away, in the town where Lorri worked (and still works) in admissions at Angelo State University.

In reel life: Grass won't grow on the Owls' home field because deer are eating the seed that has been spread on the dry, dusty surface. In order to get the grass to grow, sympathetic locals drive the deer away by spreading human hair, collected from the local barbershop, all around the field, to scare away the deer, who presumably would be frightened by the scent. It works, and the grass grows.
In real life: There was grass on the field when Morris arrived in Big Lake, according to Roy Levario, the father of one of the real Owls. "Hey, we've got one of the nicest fields in West Texas," he recently told the Dallas Morning News.

In reel life: The Devil Rays hold an open tryout in San Angelo—which, it appears from a road sign in the movie, is 97 miles from Big Lake.
In real life: San Angelo is 70 miles from Big Lake. But the tryout Morris attended was in Brownwood—which is 97 miles from San Angelo.

In reel life: At the Devil Rays tryout, Morris shows up wearing blue jeans and pitches wearing blue jeans—which is pretty much all he wears throughout the film, although he does don an Owls uni during games.
In real life: Morris, who'd been playing competitive softball for years, wore his softball pants while trying out. And, writes Kevin Sherrington in the Dallas Morning News, "Morris (usually) wore a coach's requisite windsuit, cap and Oakleys, hardly ever dressing like Dwight Yoakam."

In reel life: Morris, the last pitcher to take the mound at the tryout, throws 98 mph, and later he tells Lorri that the scouts thought something was wrong with their radar guns.
In real life: At the tryout, Morris did throw 12 straight at 98 mph, and the scouts did, indeed, double-check their radar guns.

In reel life: Morris returns home from the tryout the same day and there are already messages from the Devil Rays, saying they want another look.
In real life: The Devil Rays did leave many messages on Morris' answering machine that day.

In reel life: Morris pitches for the scouts again two days after his first tryout, this time in a downpour. He's on the mound, getting soaking wet, and still throws accurate heat.
In real life: It was raining hard on that day, but the Devil Rays had someone out on the mound with Morris, holding an umbrella over his head, and handing him dry balls to throw.

In reel life: Morris goes from coaching high school baseball to Double-A ball to Triple-A ball to the majors all within the course of a few months.
In real life: This is one of the rare cases where a movie's "telescoped" time actually corresponds roughly to reality. Morris signed his contract in June 1999, went to "extended spring training" for two weeks to get in shape, played for Double-A Orlando for a week, joined the Bulls in late July, and was in the majors Sept. 19.

In reel life: When Morris arrives in Arlington after being called up, he enters the empty ballpark early with "Brooks," a teammate who'd been called up at the same time. This gives them time to register awe at The Ballpark at Arlington's towering arches and then enter the locker room and gaze in awe at jerseys reading "Canseco" and "Boggs" and "McGriff" on the back.
In real life: Morris, who was called up with Steve Cox, met the team at their hotel, and they all knew of his story and greeted him with enthusiasm. Both Wade Boggs and Fred McGriff hugged him when they met him, and Jose Canseco shook his hand. Morris took the team bus to the stadium.

In reel life: The team Morris coached—and seemingly the entire town—turns out for his debut at Arlington on Sept. 19, 1999. Team members post signs telling everyone to meet at 2 p.m., presumably to form a caravan going to Arlington.
In real life: In his book, Morris mentions a quiet celebration with his family after the game—nothing about the Owls, or the whole town, greeting him. Making this scene even more unlikely is that Big Lake is 334 miles from Arlington and home games start at 7:05. So they would have had to drive real fast, had no trouble parking and found their seats awful quick to make it in time. But they didn't have to, because they were watching their former coach on TV. "My kids all knew about it," Morris told NPR's Weekend Edition recently. "They were all around the TV that night, and everybody was calling my cell phone and talking to me."

In reel life: Morris strikes out Royce Clayton, the only batter he faces in his debut, on three pitches.
In real life: Morris struck out Clayton on four pitches -- in his book, he writes that one was 96 mph and the other three were 98 mph. "Yeah, I know. It was four pitches in real life. It was three in the movie. But that was only because it would have been another minute," former Brewers pitcher Mark Ciardi, who produced the film, told ESPN's Jayson Stark. Hancock told the Daily Trojan that the problem was a practical one—Clayton fouled off one of Morris' pitches in real life. "You could sit there all day long trying to get that," Hancock said.

In reel life: In an emotional scene after his debut in Arlington, Morris gives his dad the "game ball."
In real life: That's Hollywood. "I've still got the ball," Morris told Joe Henderson of the Tampa Tribune.

In reel life: The film ends after Morris' first big-league appearance. After the fade to black, this sentence appears: "Jim Morris pitched in the major leagues for two seasons."
In real life: That's a bit of a stretch. Morris played a few weeks at the end of 1999 and made his last major-league appearance, against the Yankees, on May 9, 2000. He was invited to the Dodgers 2001 spring training camp but retired in late February, citing his continuing problems with tendinitis.

Jim Morris, Uniform #63 | Baseball Almanac

Jim Morris | Tampa Bay Devil Rays (#63) | Photoshopped by Baseball Almanac
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When Jim Morris made his Major League debut on September 18, 1999, he wore #63the first Tampa Bay Devil Rays player to use the number in a regular season game!