Pete Ward


Peter Thomas Ward is a retired Canadian-born professional baseball player who appeared in 973 games over nine seasons in Major League Baseball as a third baseman, outfielder and first baseman for the Baltimore Orioles, Chicago White Sox and New York Yankees. Ward was the runner-up for the American League Rookie of the Year Award in, but was named that season's AL Rookie of the Year by The Sporting News. He finished in the Top 10 in the AL's Most Valuable Player poll in both 1963 and .

Early life

Ward batted left-handed, threw right-handed, and was listed as tall and . Born in Montréal, he is the son of former National Hockey League forward Jimmy Ward, who played 11 seasons for the Montreal Maroons and Montreal Canadiens, and who later became a longtime coach in professional and amateur hockey in Portland, Oregon. Pete Ward attended Portland's Jefferson High School and played college baseball at Lewis & Clark College.

Playing career

Ward signed with the Orioles in 1958 as a shortstop, but soon moved to the outfield; although he would be known in the major leagues as a third baseman, the big-league Orioles possessed future Baseball Hall of Famer Brooks Robinson, only a month older than Ward, at the position. Ward batted over.300 at three levels of minor league baseball and won the batting title in the Class B Three-I League in 1960 with a.345 mark. After he was selected to the International League All-Star team in as an outfielder, Ward received a September trial with Baltimore; he hit.143 with two doubles in 21 at bats.
On January 14, 1963, he was included in one of the off-season's biggest transactions when the Orioles traded him, future Hall of Fame pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm, shortstop Ron Hansen and outfielder Dave Nicholson to the White Sox for shortstop and future Hall of Famer Luis Aparicio and veteran outfielder Al Smith. The White Sox installed Ward as their regular third-baseman, and he responded with a stellar rookie campaign: 177 hits, 34 doubles, 22 home runs, and a.295 batting average. Chicago won 94 games and finished second to the Yankees. In 1964, Ward avoided the "sophomore jinx" by hitting.282 with 23 home runs and a career-best 94 runs batted in, as the White Sox battled the Yankees and Orioles to the wire before finishing second by a single game.
Ward's production fell off in, when he hit only.247 in 138 games and, troubled by a back injury, he would fail to reach the.250 mark for the rest of his Chicago tenure. He appeared in only 84 games in, and although he was able to play regularly as the White Sox' left fielder in and third baseman in, only his power numbers remained robust. He was traded to the Yankees in December 1969 for pitcher Mickey Scott and played a single season for the 1970 Yankees as a pinch hitter and back-up first baseman to Danny Cater, a former White Sox teammate. For his nine-year MLB career, Ward amassed 776 hits, including 136 doubles, 17 triples and 98 home runs; he batted.254 with 427 career runs batted in.

Manager and coach

Ward remained with the Yankees as a minor-league manager, then coached for one season for Bobby Cox with the Atlanta Braves, before returning to the minors, where he eventually managed his hometown Portland Beavers. He is a member of the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame, the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, and the Chicagoland Sports Hall of Fame.