Tom Hilgendorf was signed by the Cardinals as a free agent in 1960 after attending
St. Mary's High School in Clinton, Iowa. It took until 1969 for him to make it to the major leagues when the Cardinals brought him up from the
minors as a 27-year-old
rookie. The left-hander made his debut against
Atlanta. He was traded to the
Kansas City Royals, then on to Cleveland, where the fork-baller managed six
saves and a 5–3 record for a team that did not win very many games — in fact, the Indians finished last that year of in the
American League East Division. The following year, he was involved in the infamous
Ten Cent Beer Night on June 4, 1974, and was hit by a steel folding chair thrown by one of the drunk fans who took part in the riot that ended the Indians game in a forfeit. The next night he came on in relief in the Indians' rout of the
Texas Rangers. Two days later, on Saturday, July 6, 1974 following Cleveland's 1-0 victory over the California Angels in Anaheim, Hilgendorf was walking back to his hotel and spotted a boy in the bottom of a pool at the Saga Motel near Disneyland. The pitcher dove into the pool fully clothed and saved the boy, 13-year-old Jerry Zaradte of San Francisco who had suffered leg cramps and could not move. “I got him up once, but he slipped back,” Hilgendorf was quoted as saying in newspapers. “The second time I made it. He’s a lucky kid. Normally I wouldn’t have passed by the pool but I decided to take a shortcut because it was getting late.” His best year was also his last year when he won 7 and lost 3 with the Philadelphia Phillies in . Hilgendorf died on March 25, 2021, at the age of 79 at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City, Iowa. ==References==