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・ Jesse Fuller McDonald
・ Jesse G. Vincent
・ Jesse Garcia
・ Jesse Garcia (baseball)
・ Jesse Garon
・ Jesse Garon (musician)
・ Jesse Garon and the Desperadoes
・ Jesse Gause
・ Jesse Gelsinger
・ Jesse Gibson
・ Jesse Giddings
・ Jesse Gimblett
・ Jesse Glass
・ Jesse Glenn Gray
・ Jesse Glover
Jesse Gonder
・ Jesse Gonzalez
・ Jesse Gove
・ Jesse Grant Chapline
・ Jesse Gray
・ Jesse Green
・ Jesse Green (reggae musician)
・ Jesse Greer
・ Jesse Gress
・ Jesse Grimes
・ Jesse Guthrie
・ Jesse H Turner Park
・ Jesse H. Ausubel
・ Jesse H. Caton House
・ Jesse H. Jones


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Jesse Gonder : ウィキペディア英語版
Jesse Gonder

Jesse Lemar Gonder (January 20, 1936 – November 14, 2004) was an American professional baseball player. A catcher, he appeared in 395 games in the Major Leagues over eight seasons (–) for the New York Yankees, Cincinnati Reds, New York Mets, Milwaukee Braves and Pittsburgh Pirates. Gonder batted left-handed, threw right-handed, and was listed as tall and . He played for Baseball Hall of Fame manager Casey Stengel with both the Yankees (1960) and Mets (1963–1965).
He was born in Monticello, Arkansas, but attended McClymonds High School in Oakland, California, alma mater of Basketball Hall of Fame center Bill Russell, as well as two of Gonder's future MLB teammates, Frank Robinson and Vada Pinson. Gonder signed with Cincinnati in 1955 and began his 15-year professional career. Acquired by the Yankees' Triple-A Richmond Virginians affiliate in , he made his MLB debut that September and hit a pinch home run at Yankee Stadium off Bill Monbouquette for his first big-league hit on September 30.〔(1960-9-30 box score from Retrosheet )〕 He was a member of the Yankees for the first weeks of the season as a pinch hitter before being sent back to Richmond for the rest of the season. The Reds then reacquired Gonder in an off-season trade for pitcher Marshall Bridges.
Assigned to the Triple-A San Diego Padres, Gonder led the Pacific Coast League in batting (.342) and runs batted in (116) and was named the PCL's most valuable player. He was recalled by Cincinnati that September, then spent the following four full seasons in the National League. Gonder batted over .300 in (.304) in part-time duty for the Reds and Mets, and was the Mets' regular catcher in , starting behind the plate for 82 games and setting personal bests in home runs (seven) and runs batted in (35).
Gonder reverted to part-time status in 1965, and for the remainder of his big-league career played behind regular catchers Chris Cannizzaro, Joe Torre and Jim Pagliaroni. He was sent to Triple-A in June 1967 and wrapped up his pro career in 1969.
In the Majors, Gonder collected 220 hits, including 28 doubles, two triples and 26 home runs. Five of those home runs came as a pinch hitter.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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