{"id":9644,"date":"2019-01-09T16:10:10","date_gmt":"2019-01-09T22:10:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.baseballroundtable.com\/?p=9644"},"modified":"2019-01-10T13:57:17","modified_gmt":"2019-01-10T19:57:17","slug":"a-rifle-arm-and-the-longest-baseball-throw-ever","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/baseballroundtable.com\/a-rifle-arm-and-the-longest-baseball-throw-ever\/","title":{"rendered":"A Rifle Arm … and the Longest Baseball Throw Ever"},"content":{"rendered":"
Those of you who have been following Baseball Roundtable are likely familiar with the tale of actor Chuck Connors<\/strong><\/span> \u2013 who gained fame as Lucas McCain the television series \u201cThe Rifleman.\u201d<\/strong><\/em>\u00a0 Connors, who won a Golden Globe Award (Best Television Performer) for the part he played in The Rifleman<\/em> also played first base for the Chicago Cubs, forward and center for the Boston Celtics and was \u00a0drafted by the NFL Chicago Bears.<\/p>\n <\/a>This post, however, is not about the multi-talented Chuck Connors (for his full story, click here<\/a>).\u00a0 It is about a different kind of \u201crifleman<\/em>\u201d \u2013 former MLB outfielder Glen Edward Gorbous<\/strong><\/span>, who has (since 1957) held the record for the longest-ever baseball throw (Guinness Book of World Records<\/em>).<\/p>\n Canadian-born Gorbous \u2013 a 6.-2\u201d, 175-pound outfielder, had neither a long nor spectacular baseball career; but his hardball skills did get him into the Guinness Book of World Records.\u00a0 \u00a0His record-breaking throw, in fact, took place when he was just 26-years-old \u2013 but had already played his final major league game and was just one season away from his last professional campaign. Gorbous began his pro-career as a 19-year old (1950), signed out of a Dodgers\u2019 tryout camp. Over his first five (minor league) seasons, Gorbous played in 593 games, hitting .290 with 39 home runs. \u00a0In 1953, he collected 204 hits (.336 average) for the Single A Pueblo Dodgers and began to show some power, reaching double digits in home runs (11) for the first time. \u00a0The following season, promoted to Fort Worth of the Double A Texas League, Gorbous hit .283-16-71 (with ten steals) \u2013 punching his ticket to the big leagues (but not with Brooklyn).<\/p>\n The Reds plucked Borbous from the Dodgers in the November 1954 Rule Five Draft. He opened 1955 on the Reds\u2019 MLB roster, but was traded to the Phillies (in a multi-player deal) on the last day of April (after appearing in just eight games for Cincinnati).\u00a0 He spent the remainder of 1955, 1956 and opening days of the 1957 season with the Phillies, but seemed over-matched against major league pitching \u2013 putting up a .238-4-29 stat line in 117 games.<\/p>\n Traded by the Phillies to the Cardinals in May of 1957, Gorbous was sent down to the Double A Omaha Cardinals \u2013 where he was playing when he set the baseball throw record in a pregame exhibition.<\/p>\n At that time, the record for a baseball throw was 445 feet-one inch, held by a player named Don Grate (more on Grate in a bit). Gorbous was always willing to show off his rifle arm and teammates urged him to make a run (throw) at Grate\u2019s mark. On August 1, 1957 \u2013 throwing from the right field corner toward the left field corner \u2013 Gorbous launched one (reportedly his fourth throw) 445 feet-ten inches, setting a record that still stands.<\/p>\n Just how remarkable was that throw?\u00a0 Here\u2019s some perspective. If Gorbous was throwing from the goal line of a football field, the ball would have gone through the uprights at the far end, across the 45-50 feet of space between the end zone and the grandstand and landed (on the fly) among the spectators in Row 25.<\/p>\n