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Lloyd Peever

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Baseball player
Lloyd Peever
Pitcher

Lloyd Charles Peever (born September 15, 1971) is an American former baseball pitcher known primarily for his athletic exploits atLouisiana State University. He also played professionally, but never reached themajor leagues. He peaked atTriple-A, the level directly below the majors.

He was born inLivermore, California and attendedAda High School inAda, Oklahoma. During his senior year with the school, he won 18 games and had 189 strikeouts to earn All-State honors.[1] Prior to attending LSU, he attendedSeminole State College in 1990 and 1991. For 1992, he transferred to LSU and posted a 14–0win–loss record, a 1.98 ERA, three complete games and a shutout in 17 appearances (15 starts). In 104.2 innings, he allowed only 67 hits and 20 walks, while striking out 116 batters. His campaign, dubbed "one of the best individual seasons ever in college baseball,"[2] earned him numerous honors and considerable recognition. He was named Collegiate Baseball Player of the Year byCollegiate Baseball Newspaper, earned All-American selections by theAmerican Baseball Coaches Association andBaseball America, was voted first team all-Southeastern Conference, earned a selection to the SEC all-tournament team and was twice named National Player of the Week.[2] He was also aGolden Spikes Award finalist.[3]

He was drafted by theColorado Rockies in the fourth round of the1992 Major League Baseball Draft, a few picks after third basemanTom Evans.[4] He initially ascended through their system one level at a time, starting with the Low-ABend Rockies (3-2 W-L, 2.91 ERA) in 1992, then the high-ACentral Valley Rockies (2-4, 4.18) in 1993, then the Double-ANew Haven Ravens (9-8, 3.43) in 1994 and then the Triple-AColorado Springs Sky Sox (3-2, 5.36) in 1995. After missing 1996, he returned to go 5–5 with a 5.21 ERA between theSalem Avalanche and New Haven to conclude his career. Overall, he was 22–21 with a 4.13 ERA in 82 games (55 starts).[5] He is one of the few College Players of the Year to not eventually reach the majors: He was the first sinceMarteese Robinson, who won the award in 1987, and the last untilKellen Kulbacki andWes Roemer, who co-won the award in 2006.

He was elected to LSU's Athletic Hall of Fame in 2011.[2] He has also been a candidate for theNational College Baseball Hall of Fame.[6]

He later worked forGlaxoSmithKline.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Ada's Peever Tops Olympic Festival's South Baseball Roster
  2. ^abcLSU Athletics Hall of Fame Inductee Lloyd Peever
  3. ^USA Baseball.com
  4. ^1992 draft
  5. ^BR Minors page
  6. ^2014 College Baseball Hall of Fame Ballot
  7. ^FORMER TROJAN ELECTED TO LSU ATHLETIC HALL OF FAME
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lloyd_Peever&oldid=1231613058"
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