Barry Latman


Arnold Barry Latman was a professional All Star Major League Baseball pitcher.

Early and personal life

Latman was born in Los Angeles, California, and was Jewish. Latman would not pitch on the Jewish High Holidays. His parents were Nathan and Elsie Latman. He had two younger sisters, Ann Lorraine and Carolee. When he was 10 years old, his parents required that he stop playing baseball for three years, to leave himself time to study for his bar mitzvah. He was nicknamed “Shoulders.” He died on April 28, 2019 in Richmond, Texas.

High school and college

He attended Fairfax High School, pitching for the baseball team, and playing alongside future major leaguer Larry Sherry. He threw a perfect game in 1954, and was named the Los Angeles All-City Player by the Helms Athletic Foundation. He then attended the University of Southern California on a baseball scholarship.

Career

In the minor leagues in 1955 he pitched in Waterloo, Iowa for the Waterloo White Hawks, in the Class-B Three-I League, and was 18-5 with an earned run average of 4.12, leading the league in innings pitched, and with his 18 wins one behind league leader Mudcat Grant. In 1956, he pitched for the Memphis Chicks in the Double-A Southern Association, and was 14-14 with a 3.85 earned run average. In 1957 he pitched for the Indianapolis Indians of the Triple-A American Association, going 13-13 with an earned-run average of 3.95, and in three starts for the team the following year he was 3-0 with a 0.76 ERA.
Latman played all or part of 11 seasons in the majors, from 1957 until 1967, for the Chicago White Sox, Cleveland Indians, Los Angeles/California Angels, and Houston Astros.
In 1959 he was 6th in the American League in strikeouts per 9 innings pitched. In 1961 he was 4th in the AL with a.722 winning percentage, as he went 13–5 for the Indians. Latman was an All Star in both 1961 and 1962.
In 1997 he was inducted into the Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.
Through 2010, Latman was 6th all-time in career strikeouts, and 8th in games and wins among Jewish major league baseball players.