sport.wikisort.org - AthleteHerbert Edward Perry Jr. (born September 15, 1969) is an American former college and professional baseball player who was an infielder in Major League Baseball (MLB) for all or parts of nine season during the 1990s and 2000s. Perry played college baseball for the University of Florida, and thereafter, he played professionally for the Cleveland Indians, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Chicago White Sox and Texas Rangers of MLB.
American baseball player
Herbert Perry |
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Third baseman |
Born: (1969-09-15) September 15, 1969 (age 52) Live Oak, Florida |
Batted: Right Threw: Right |
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May 3, 1994, for the Cleveland Indians |
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September 10, 2004, for the Texas Rangers |
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Batting average | .272 |
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Home runs | 55 |
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Runs batted in | 246 |
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- Cleveland Indians (1994–1996)
- Tampa Bay Devil Rays (1999–2000)
- Chicago White Sox (2000–2001)
- Texas Rangers (2002–2004)
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Early years
Perry was born in Live Oak, Florida in 1969. He attended Lafayette High School in Mayo, Florida, and played high school football and baseball for the Lafayette Hornets [1]
College career
Perry accepted an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he played for coach Joe Arnold's Florida Gators baseball team from 1988 to 1991, and was also a quarterback for coach Galen Hall's Gators football team in 1987 and 1988.[2] Perry was a key member of the Gators' first-ever College World Series teams in 1988 and 1991. He led the team with a .370 batting average in 1989. He graduated from the University of Florida with a bachelor's degree in agricultural operations management in 1991.
Professional career
Perry hit twenty-two home runs in 2002 for the Texas Rangers; he only hit twenty-eight previous home runs in seven years total, though on limited playing time. Twelve of those came in 2000 with the Chicago White Sox. Perry was affectionately known as Herbert "The Milkman" Perry by Chicago White Sox announcer Ken Harrelson. Injuries shortened his major league career to only nine seasons. He retired from baseball with a career batting average of .272.
Life after the Major Leagues
Perry currently resides in the town of Mayo, Florida and manages a pre cast septic tank business, He has two sons, 2 daughters- one of which is adopted: Ethan, Drew, Gabrielle and Olivia. Perry and his wife, Sheila, adopted daughter Olivia from Ukraine in 2009.
He is the older brother of MLB utility player Chan Perry.
See also
Baseball portal
Biography portal
College football portal
- Florida Gators
- Florida Gators football, 1980–89
- List of Florida Gators baseball players
- List of University of Florida alumni
References
- "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 22, 2016. Retrieved October 27, 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - 2011 Florida Gators Football Media Guide Archived April 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, University Athletic Association, Gainesville, Florida, pp. 85, 99, 185 (2011). Retrieved August 31, 2011.
External links
Florida Gators starting quarterbacks |
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- Charlie Thompson (1906–08)
- Charlie Bartleson (1908)
- Edgerton (1909–10)
- Bob W. Shackleford (1910–11)
- Harry S. Hester (1912)
- George Mosley (1913)
- Rammy Ramsdell (1913–15)
- Artie Fuller (1916–17)
- Horace Loomis (1917)
- B. Anderson (1919–20)
- T. Hoyt Carlton (1920–21)
- Bill Renfroe (1921)
- George Stanley (1921)
- Joseph Barchan (1922)
- Stewart Pomeroy (1922)
- Edgar C. Jones (1923–25)
- Johnnie Murphree (1924)
- Spic Stanley (1925)
- Goof Bowyer (1926–28)
- Carl Brumbaugh (1927)
- Speedy Walker (1927)
- Clyde Crabtree (1927–29)
- Monk Dorsett (1930–32)
- Sam Davis (1933)
- Wally Brown (1934)
- Ken Eppert (1935)
- Bill Stephens (1935)
- Bob Ivey (1936)
- Ed Manning (1936)
- Paul Brock (1936)
- Jack Blalock (1937–1938)
- Tex Hanna (1939)
- Bill Latsko (1940–42)
- No team (1943)
- Buddy Carte (1944)
- Earl Scarborough (1945)
- Billy Parker (1946)
- Angus Williams (1947–49)
- Haywood Sullivan (1950–51)
- Rick Casares (1952)
- Doug Dickey (1952–53)
- Dick Allen (1954)
- Bobby Lance (1955)
- Jimmy Dunn (1956–58)
- Dick Allen (1959)
- Larry Libertore (1960–62)
- Tom Batten (1961)
- Tom Shannon (1962–64)
- Steve Spurrier (1964–66)
- Jack Eckdahl (1967)
- Larry Rentz (1967–68)
- John Reaves (1969–71)
- Chan Gailey (1972)
- David Bowden (1972–73)
- Don Gaffney (1973–75)
- Jimmy Fisher (1975–76)
- Bill Kynes (1976)
- Terry LeCount (1977)
- Tim Groves (1978–79)
- John Brantley, III (1978)
- Tyrone Young (1979)
- Johnell Brown (1979)
- Larry Ochab (1979–80)
- Bob Hewko (1980–82)
- Wayne Peace (1980–83)
- Kerwin Bell (1984–87)
- Rodney Brewer (1986)
- Kyle Morris (1988–89)
- Herbert Perry (1988)
- Lex Smith (1989)
- Donald Douglas (1989)
- Shane Matthews (1990–92)
- Terry Dean (1993–94)
- Danny Wuerffel (1993–96)
- Eric Kresser (1995)
- Doug Johnson (1997–99)
- Noah Brindise (1997)
- Jesse Palmer (1997–2000)
- Rex Grossman (2000–02)
- Brock Berlin (2001)
- Ingle Martin (2003)
- Chris Leak (2003–06)
- Tim Tebow (2007–09)
- John Brantley (2010–11)
- Jacoby Brissett (2011–12)
- Jeff Driskel (2012–14)
- Tyler Murphy (2013)
- Skyler Mornhinweg (2013)
- Treon Harris (2014–2015)
- Will Grier (2015)
- Luke Del Rio (2016–2017)
- Austin Appleby (2016)
- Feleipe Franks (2017–2019)
- Malik Zaire (2017)
- Kyle Trask (2019–2020)
- Emory Jones (2021)
- Anthony Richardson (2021)
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