For more great baseball stories like this one, 'like' us on Facebook - Facebook.com/Greatest21Days

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Todd Hall, Endorsement Deal - 1105

Originally published July 22, 2011, updated June 2013
Todd Hall had his own basic way of breaking in his gloves.

The gloves he got as part of a small minor league endorsement deal with Rawlings, two came each year, Hall recalled to The Lima News in 2009.

"I heard of guys soaking them in shaving cream or hanging them in the shower," Hall told The News. "I put oil on it, put a ball in there, wrapped it up and casually broke it in. I wasn’t going to put a $200 glove soaking in the shower."

While Hall got his endorsement deal gloves in the minors - and got an endorsed glove prominently onto at least one baseball card - he never got an endorsement deal in the majors, or any above AA. His career lasted just five seasons, ending without him making the majors.

Hall's career began in 1986, taken by the White Sox in the 14th round of the draft, out of Bowling Green State University. He went to Bowling Green, out of Shawnee High in his hometown of Lima, Ohio.

He played his first season in the rookie Gulf Coast League. The pitcher went 6-2 there, with a 2.22 ERA. He also struck out 58 in 73 innings of work.

In 1987, Hall moved to single-A Peninsula. He went 8-6, with a 4.26 ERA. He was 3-1, with a 3.38 ERA by mid-May. That's when Hall got a call-up, kind of. The single-A pitcher was called up to pitch in the White Sox-Cubs exhibition game that month.

Hall stayed in single-A for the next two seasons, at single-A Tampa in 1988 and Sarasota in 1989. He posted a 4.15 ERA with Tampa, mainly as a reliever. Returning to starting at Sarasota, Hall went 7-7, with a 3.13 ERA.

Hall picked up one Sarasota win in July, going eight innings, giving up two runs. A week later, he threw a four-hitter in a 7-2 win, The South Florida Sun-Sentinel wrote.

In late August, there was talk a Hall brush-back was something more. But Hall told The Sarasota Herald-Tribune it was nothing more than good pitching.

"You try to work someone who crowds the plate like that," Hall told The Herald-Tribune. "That's what a pitcher does on this level, on any level in the majors."

Hall got just one more year, though, making AA Birmingham in 1990. There, Hall served as a reliever again, with a 4.19 ERA in 33 outings.

Hall has since returned to his old high school in Lima, serving as assistant coach there in 2013. In March 2013, Hall told The News about what one of his pitchers, Cory Wilder, needed to do to improve.

"Repeatability for Cory is the major challenge this year, but he's come along way in doing that," Hall told The News. "To get repeatable, you're more consistent in the zone and through that you're more consistent with your breaking pitches and change-up. He's come a long way. He's done well."
1990 CMC-Pro Cards Tally  
Players/Coaches Featured:1,167
Made the Majors: 674 - 57.8%
Never Made Majors: 493-42.2%
5+ Seasons in the Majors: 291
10+ Seasons in the Minors: 174

No comments:

Post a Comment