St. Louis Cardinals
Born in
Dorris, California, he grew up in
Chico, California where he played
baseball at
Chico Senior High School. He met his wife, Ginger Briles, in their high school musical, Damn Yankees. He then played baseball at
Santa Clara University (1961-1963) before signing with the
St. Louis Cardinals as an amateur free agent in . He spent just one season in their
farm system before joining the Cards in . Though used primarily as a
starting pitcher in with the
Tulsa Oilers, Briles pitched out of the
bullpen upon his arrival in the majors. He was 1–2 with a 3.29
earned run average and one
save as a
relief pitcher when he made his first start on September 25 against the
Los Angeles Dodgers. Though he pitched well (seven innings, one
earned run), he was out-pitched by
Sandy Koufax, and lost his first major league start. He was far less effective in his next start (six earned runs in seven
innings pitched), however managed to win that one thanks to the nineteen
runs his Cardinals teammates put on the board. Briles suffered through a hard luck season, going 4-15 despite a relatively modest 3.21 ERA. He was 4–3 with a 3.55 ERA and six saves in when an injury to
Bob Gibson (a broken leg suffered at the hands of a
Roberto Clemente line drive) forced him into the starting rotation. He lost two of his first three starts, but then won his last nine
decisions to end the season at 14–5 with a
National League leading .737
winning percentage (the Cardinals also won his two no-decisions during that stretch). His 2.43 ERA was also best on the Cardinals staff. The Cards finished the season at 101–60 to cruise into the
World Series. Facing the
Boston Red Sox, Briles was tabbed as the game three starter.
Triple crown winner Carl Yastrzemski emerged as the game two hero for the Bosox with two
home runs and four
runs batted in. After the loss, Cardinals manager
Red Schoendienst commented to the media that Red Sox starter
Jim Lonborg was brushing back Cardinal hitters. In Yastrzemski's first
at-bat in game three, Briles hit him on the calf with a pitch causing an argument at
home plate between the two teams' managers. From there, Briles held Yastrzemski hitless on his way to a 5-2
complete game victory. He also pitched two scoreless innings in game six. Briles won his first four starts of to bring his winning streak to thirteen games (14 including the post-season). He won a career high nineteen games with a career high 141
strikeouts that year to establish himself as a legitimate number two starter behind Gibson. The World Champion Cardinals returned to the World Series in to face the
Detroit Tigers. Briles made the game two start against
Mickey Lolich, and gave up four earned runs in five plus innings to take the loss. Paired up against Lolich again for game five, Briles left the game in the seventh inning with a 3–2 lead and a runner on first. The bullpen, however, was unable to hold the lead. Briles went 15–13 with a 3.52 ERA in as the Cards slumped to fourth place in the newly formed
National League East. He left in the third inning of his May 12, start against the
Philadelphia Phillies with a pulled muscle in his right leg. He tried pitching through the injury, but was ineffective, and placed on the disabled list for the first time in his career on June 13. He was never able to regain form, and ended the season at 6–7 with a 6.24 ERA. Just as pitchers and
catchers were reporting the following season, he and
Vic Davalillo were sent to the
Pittsburgh Pirates for
Matty Alou and
George Brunet. ==Pittsburgh Pirates==