Former big league pitcher John Morris passed away last week at the age of 84, according to an obituary posted to the Cape Gazette in Morris’s hometown of Lewes, Delaware.
A veteran of eight MLB seasons, Morris is perhaps best known as a member of the Seattle Pilots during the club’s lone 1969 season. Morris signed into the Phillies organization for his age-18 season in 1960 but spent the first several years of his career in the minors before making his big league debut with Philadelphia in 1966. He threw just 13 2/3 innings of work in that brief cameo in the majors before returning to Triple-A for the 1967 season, where he dominated with a 1.54 ERA across 33 relief appearances.
He was traded to the Orioles ahead of the 1968 season and briefly returned to the majors in 1968 with Baltimore but once again was sent back to Triple-A for much of the 1969 campaign, though he did make it to Seattle and pitch 12 2/3 innings for the Pilots. When the Pilots franchise moved to Milwaukee the following year, Morris remained with the club and became a regular fixture of the Brewers’ bullpen for the 1970 and ’71 seasons. In 1970, Morris served as a swing man and pitched to a 3.93 ERA across 20 games, including nine starts.
The highlight of Morris’s career came on May 13 and May 19, 1970 as he threw complete games in back-to-back starts. Morris surrendered four runs on ten hits and three walks while striking out 11 batters across those two complete games, both of which ended in wins for the Brewers. Morris’s May 19 start against the Oakland A’s saw him out-duel All-Star and future Hall of Famer Catfish Hunter on the mound as Milwaukee won 6-3. Morris’s solid season a swing man earned him a full-time look in the Milwaukee bullpen for the 1971 campaign, and he posted a 3.72 ERA in 67 2/3 innings of work across 43 appearances for the team.
Morris was traded to the Giants following the 1971 season and was mostly relegated to work at the team’s Triple-A affiliate once again. He pitched for San Francisco in parts of three seasons and ended his career on a high note with a 3.05 ERA in 17 appearances for the 1974 Giants in his age-32 season. In all, Morris appeared in 132 games for the Phillies, Orioles, Pilots, Brewers, and Giants across his eight seasons in the majors. He pitched to a 3.95 ERA, struck out 137 batters, finished his career with a lifetime 11-7 record and picked up two saves along the way.
We at MLB Trade Rumors send our condolences to Morris’s family, friends, and loved ones.

RIP.
84 years including making it to MLB is a great run.
Should be a link.
Just brought out my 1971 Topps PSA 8 of him on the Brewers. Sweet card. Very tough high # in a super tough set with the black borders.
Forgot he was a Giant! At least they won that trade.
RIP John Morris.
R.I.P. A member of the 1969 Seattle Pilots, a feat not many can claim!
Shitfvck. Or Fvckshit.
(from Ball Four)
He’s up there pounding the ol’ Budweiser with Joe Schultz and the boys.John Gelnar knows know you will never get them out drinking Dr Pepper!
It’s a round ball and a round bat and you gotta hit it square!
Fun reading. Several times.
I interviewed Mantle shortly after the book came out. I came away thinking the guy was a jackaxs, but I did ask more than one question relative to the book.
I had some of his old baseball cards too. RIP.
I had no idea who John Morris was, much less he was a Seattle Pilot!
However, after reviewing Jim Bouton’s Ball Four ….. John Morris was mentioned twice
1. ) When he was being sent to Vancouver for the Pilot AAA team and another when Bill Henry retired … he was 42 and felt he did not belong in the Majors anymore John Morris took his spot… I think lol… if I read it correctly…
While Bill Henry got to pitch in a World Series Game for the Reds…. John Morris actually got to pitch for the Pilots and was a part of their ‘One’ Year History and he pitched for the Baltimore Orioles to a perfect 2 and 0 record….. so there’s that too!!!
So may John Morris Rest in Peace!
RIP John…..
Only player in Pilots history to bat 1.000.
RIP
Thee Dooley Womak?