Jim Lindeman

James William Lindeman (born January 10, 1962) is a former Major League Baseball player. He played mostly in the outfield and at first base, appearing in parts of nine seasons in the majors from 1986 until 1994.

Jim Lindeman
Outfielder/First baseman
Born: (1962-01-10) January 10, 1962
Evanston, Illinois
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 3, 1986, for the St. Louis Cardinals
Last MLB appearance
August 11, 1994, for the New York Mets
MLB statistics
Batting average.244
Home runs21
Runs batted in89
Teams

Professional career

He was the St. Louis Cardinals' first-round draft pick in the 1983 Major League Baseball Draft out of Bradley University. In 1986, he led the AAA Louisville Redbirds with 82 runs, 38 doubles, 20 home runs, and a league-leading 96 RBIs.[1] He made his major league debut with the Cardinals in 1986, and played with them through the 1989 season. He saw the most playing time of his major league career in 1987, setting career highs in games played (75), at bats (207), hits (43), home runs (8) and RBI (28). Filling in for the injured Jack Clark, he batted .308 with a home run in the NLCS against the Giants and hit .333 in the World Series against the Twins.

Over the next five seasons he played for four different teams, never playing in more than 75 games in a season in his career. His final professional season was spent with the minor league Oklahoma City 89ers, a Texas Rangers farm team, in 1995.

Personal life

Lindeman currently lives in Elk Grove Village, Illinois with his wife and four children. He teaches P.E. at Rolling Meadows High School and coaches the baseball team and the freshmen basketball B team.[2]

Notes

  1. Jim Tommey and Kip Ingle, ed. (1987). St. Louis Cardinals 1987 Media Guide. St. Louis National Baseball Club. p. 102.
  2. "Where Are They Now? Jim Lindeman" Peoria Journal-Star, October 18, 2010
gollark: The real reason is probably that I interact quite heavily with people who do use gendered pronouns and do not care about not doing so much.
gollark: If you say "he was declared an apioform" that (mostly) rules out about half the possible people you might be referring to.
gollark: Although outside of pure parsing ambiguity it does help distinguish people you're referring to in "real life".
gollark: Yes, sentences where it makes a difference are quite rare and also typically rather confusing anyway.
gollark: Also stuff like "Mr" and "Mrs".


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