Jackie Brown (baseball)
Jackie Gene Brown was an American professional baseball pitcher and coach, who played in Major League Baseball for the Washington Senators / Texas Rangers, Cleveland Indians, and Montreal Expos from 1970 –1977. Brown threw and batted right-handed. His older brother, Paul Brown, also pitched in the big leagues.
In 7 seasons he had a 47–53 win–loss record, 214 games, 26 complete games, 8 shutouts, 39 games finished, 3 saves, 892 innings pitched, 934 hits allowed, 460 runs allowed, 415 earned runs allowed, 82 home runs allowed, 353 walks, 516 strikeouts, 20 hit batsmen, 28 wild pitches, 3,865 batters faced, 24 intentional walks, 1 balk, a 4.18 earned run average, and a 1.442 WHIP.
In his final season, Brown was the winning pitcher on Opening Day for the 1977 Montreal Expos, defeating Steve Carlton, in Philadelphia and also pitched in the first Expos game ever played at Olympic Stadium.
After his playing career, Brown was a pitching coach for the Texas Rangers, Chicago White Sox, and Tampa Bay Devil Rays ; he also was a minor league pitching coordinator and pitching coach in a number of organizations.