Jeff Musselman

Jeffrey Joseph Musselman (born June 21, 1963) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher. He played for the Toronto Blue Jays and the New York Mets from 1986–1990.

Jeff Musselman
Pitcher
Born: (1963-06-21) June 21, 1963
Doylestown, Pennsylvania
Batted: Left Threw: Left
MLB debut
September 2, 1986, for the Toronto Blue Jays
Last MLB appearance
September 7, 1990, for the New York Mets
MLB statistics
Win–loss record23–15
Earned run average4.31
Strikeouts125
Teams

Career

Musselman graduated from Central Regional High School in Bayville, New Jersey and Harvard University.[1] In 1984, he played collegiate summer baseball in the Cape Cod Baseball League for the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox.[2]

He was drafted in the sixth round of the 1985 Major League Baseball draft by the Blue Jays. His best season in the majors was 1987, when he appeared in 68 games for Toronto, posting a 12-5 record with a 4.15 ERA at 54 strikeouts in 89 innings of work.

On July 31, 1989, he was traded by the Toronto Blue Jays with minor leaguer Mike Brady to the New York Mets for Mookie Wilson. He appeared in 20 games for the Mets in 1989, posting a 3-2 record with a 3.08 ERA.

Personal

After retiring as a player, Musselman remained in baseball as a vice-president in the offices of sports agent Scott Boras.[3] Musselman has three daughters. His middle daughter is Maddie Musselman, 2016 Olympic women's water polo gold medalist.

gollark: Oh, and if you look at versions where it's "pull lever to divert trolley onto different people" versus "push person off bridge to stop trolley", people tend to be less willing to sacrifice one to save five in the second case, because they're more involved and/or it's less abstract somehow.
gollark: There might be studies on *that*, actually, you might be able to do it without particularly horrible ethical problems.
gollark: You don't know that. We can't really test this. Even people who support utilitarian philosophy abstractly might not want to pull the lever in a real visceral trolley problem.
gollark: Almost certainly mostly environment, yes.
gollark: It's easy to say that if you are just vaguely considering that, running it through the relatively unhurried processes of philosophizing™, that sort of thing. But probably less so if it's actually being turned over to emotion and such, because broadly speaking people reaaaallly don't want to die.

References

  1. Joe Sexton (August 8, 1989). "A Bright Outlook For New Met Reliever". nytimes.com. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  2. "Major League Baseball Players From the Cape Cod League" (PDF). capecodbaseball.org. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  3. Christian Red (April 28, 2018). "As MLB evolves, an inside look at how Scott Boras - baseball's super agent - remains at top of the game". nydailynews.com. Retrieved September 25, 2019.


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