Sheldon Jones


Sheldon Leslie "Available" Jones was an American professional baseball player, a right-handed pitcher who played in the Major Leagues from 1946 through 1953 for the New York Giants, Boston Braves and Chicago Cubs. He earned his nickname from a character in the Li'l Abner comic strip and because of his durability as both a starting pitcher and a reliever early in his MLB career as a member of the Giants. The native of Tecumseh, Nebraska, stood tall and weighed.
Jones' professional career began in 1941 and was interrupted by three years of service in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II. When he returned to baseball after the war, he posted back-to-back stellar seasons in the minor leagues, winning 32 of 44 decisions in 1946–47 before his permanent recall to the Giants.
In 1948, Jones appeared in 55 games played, 21 as a starter and 34 in relief, worked in 201 innings, and won 16 of 24 decisions, with five saves and eight complete games, while posting a creditable earned run average of 3.35. The following year, 1949, Jones was mostly a starter. He appeared in 207 innings, won 15, lost 12, and had 11 complete games. He registered no saves, but still finished nine games, and lowered his ERA to 3.34. Finally, in 1950, Jones worked in 40 games, 28 as a starter. He logged 199 innings, 11 more complete games and two saves, but his effectiveness diminished, as he posted a losing record and a poor 4.61 ERA.
Jones pitched one more season in New York as a member of the 1951 National League pennant winners, and although again ineffective during the regular season, he pitched well during the 1951 World Series, appearing in two contests and saving Game 3 for Giants' starter Jim Hearn. In World Series play, he allowed one run in 4 innings pitched, posting an earned run average of 2.08, against the eventual champion New York Yankees.
Jones wrapped up his MLB career with 61 games played, mostly in relief, for the Braves and Cubs. All told he surrendered 909 hits and 413 bases on balls in 920 innings pitched during his Major League tenure. Of his 260 games pitched, 101 were as a starter and 159 came in relief. He finished with 12 saves.