Despite
batting just .173 with one
home run and eleven
runs batted in for the double A
Memphis Blues, Hodges was brought up to the majors midway through his second professional season when injuries afflicted the Mets' other catchers,
Jerry Grote and
Duffy Dyer. He made his major league debut against the
San Francisco Giants on June 13, , catching a
complete game by
Tom Seaver, and collected his first major league
hit in the seventh off
Tom Bradley. Four days later, he hit his first career home run off the
San Diego Padres'
Bill Greif. Hodges stayed with the Mets for the remainder of the season, batting .260 with eighteen RBIs and just the one home run. He was involved in one of the most famous plays in Mets folklore when their September 20 match-up against the
Pittsburgh Pirates at
Shea Stadium went into
extra innings. In the top of the thirteenth
inning, the Pirates had
Richie Zisk on
first base when
Dave Augustine hit what appeared to be a two-run home run to left. Instead, the ball hit the top of the wall and caromed directly into
left fielder Cleon Jones' glove. Jones fired a strike to
Wayne Garrett as the cut-off man, who in turn, fired a strike to Hodges to nail Zisk at
the plate. In the bottom of the inning, Hodges
singled in the winning run as part of a three game sweep the landed the Mets in first place in the
National League East. He was on the Mets'
postseason roster in 1973 and played in one
game in the
World Series, drawing a
walk in his only
plate appearance. ==Back up catcher==