San Francisco Giants (1958–1970) Davenport made his major league debut with the San Francisco Giants on April 15, 1958, taking the team's first
at bat on the West Coast, striking out against
Don Drysdale of the
Los Angeles Dodgers at
Seals Stadium. His best season was , when he batted .297 with 14 home runs and 58 RBIs and made the
All-Star team for the only time in his career. In the
first of 1962's two MLB All-Star games, played July 10 at
DC Stadium, Davenport took over for
Ken Boyer as the
National League's third baseman in the sixth
inning with the Senior Circuit ahead, 2–1. In the eighth frame, his
single off
Dick Donovan set up
Maury Wills' insurance run, as the Nationals ultimately won 3–1. Davenport played
errorless ball in the field over the game's last four innings. That same season, Davenport was critical to the Giants' winning their first
pennant since moving to
San Francisco five years before. After going four for nine (.444) in the first two games of the
1962 National League tie-breaker series against the Dodgers, including a home run off
Sandy Koufax in Game 1, Davenport drew a bases-loaded
walk off
Stan Williams in the ninth inning of the decisive Game 3 to get credit for the
game-winning RBI in the Giants' eventual 6–4 victory, which gained them their first NL title since 1954, when they played in
New York City. In the
1962 World Series that followed, he started all seven games against the
New York Yankees, but could muster only three hits in 22
at bats (.136), although he drew four more bases on balls. Defensively, he made three errors in 21
total chances at third base. The Giants lost the Series in seven games. However, Davenport was known for his fielding, leading National League third basemen in fielding percentage each season from 1959 to 1961 and winning a
Gold Glove at third base in 1962. Davenport played 97 consecutive errorless games at third base from July 26, 1966, to April 28, 1968, a record that stood until it was broken by
John Wehner in the 1990s. He had a career
batting average of .258 with 77
home runs and 456
RBIs, with 1,142 career
hits, also including 177
doubles and 37
triples, in 4,427
at bats. He played in 1,501 regular-season games in 13 years, the fourth-most in San Francisco Giants history after
Willie McCovey (2,256),
Willie Mays (2,095) and
Barry Bonds (1,976). His 1,130 games played at third base are the most in Giants' history. ==Post-playing career==