Les Layton

Outfielder, Baseball Player

1921 – 2014

37

Who was Les Layton?

Lester Lee Layton was an American professional baseball player. An outfielder whose pro career extended for 11 seasons, he appeared in 63 Major League Baseball games for the 1948 New York Giants.

Layton was born in Nardin, Kay County, Oklahoma, and attended the University of Oklahoma. A right-handed batter and thrower, he stood 6 feet tall and weighed 165 pounds. He signed with the Giants in 1944 and spent his first four seasons with the Jersey City Giants of the top-level International League. After batting .289 with 20 home runs for Jersey City in 1947, Layton made the 1948 varsity Giants' roster. In his first Major League at bat as a pinch hitter May 21 against the Chicago Cubs, Layton homered off Cubs' southpaw Johnny Schmitz. Used primarily as a pinch runner and pinch hitter by managers Mel Ott and Leo Durocher, Layton occasionally spelled corner outfielders Bobby Thomson and Willard Marshall.

He enjoyed his two biggest days as a Major League batsman in the mid-summer of 1948. On July 2, Layton cracked three hits in five at bats against the Brooklyn Dodgers — two off Preacher Roe and one off Rex Barney — in a 6–4 Giant win at Ebbets Field.

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Born
Nov 18, 1921
Nardin, Oklahoma
Profession
Education
  • University of Oklahoma
Lived in
  • Kay County
Died
Mar 1, 2014
Scottsdale

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

Citation

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