Tom Tresh


Thomas Michael Tresh was a professional baseball infielder and outfielder who played in Major League Baseball for the New York Yankees and Detroit Tigers. Tresh was a switch-hitter and threw right-handed. He was the son of the MLB catcher Mike Tresh.

Biography

Born in Detroit, Michigan, Tresh graduated from Allen Park High School. He then attended Central Michigan University.
While Tresh played a majority of his games in the outfield, he opened the season for the Yankees at shortstop, filling in for Tony Kubek who was performing military service. Not until Derek Jeter in would another Yankee rookie shortstop start on Opening Day. He also played third base, with most of his games at third occurring during the season.
Tresh won both the MLB Rookie of the Year and The Sporting News Rookie of the Year awards in 1962, hitting.286, his career best, with 20 home runs and 93 runs batted in in 157 games. When Kubek returned during the 1962 season, Tresh was moved to left field. In Game 5 of the 1962 World Series, he broke a 2–2 tie with a three-run home run in the bottom of the 8th inning off San Francisco's Jack Sanford, leading to a 5–3 Yankee win and a 3–2 series lead.
After nine years in New York, the Yankees traded Tresh to the Detroit Tigers during the season for outfielder Ron Woods. He was released by Detroit prior to the 1970 season, at age 31.
Tresh hit 114 home runs from 1962 to 1966, with a career-high 27 in 1966, and he made the American League All-Star team in 1962 and 1963. A Gold Glove winner in 1965, he also homered from each side of the plate in three games, including a doubleheader in that season in which he hit four home runs, three of them in the second game. In a nine-season career, Tresh was a.245 hitter with 153 home runs and 530 RBI in 1,192 games.
Following his playing career, Tresh returned to his alma mater, Central Michigan University. where he worked as an assistant placement director for many years. He helped to invent the Slide-Rite, a training tool to teach sliding and diving skills for baseball, softball, football and soccer.
Tresh died of a heart attack at his Venice, Florida, home on October 15, 2008.