Who Was Ken Hubbs?

Hubbs was born in Riverside, California and resided in nearby Colton.

He played in the 1954 Little League World Series. Colton represented California. They beat Virginia in the first round and Illinois in the second. In the final game of the Series, Schenectady, New York beat California 5-3. Two future big league players played on the Schenectady team: Jim Barbieri, with the Los Angeles Dodgers, and Bill Connors, with the Chicago Cubs, both in 1966. Highlights of Hubbs playing defense at second base were captured on film. The video includes a play where Hubbs ran from the shortstop position to back up the second baseman and caught a bloop fly into short right field.

He signed as an amateur free agent with the Chicago Cubs prior to the 1959 season. The Cubs sent him to the Appalachian League, where he started his professional career.

During the 1961 season, the Cubs played Don Zimmer and Jerry Kindall at second base, both of whom struggled at the plate; while Zimmer made the Major League Baseball All-Star team that year, he only hit .252 while Kindall hit .242. Hubbs was called up from the minor leagues in an attempt to solve the Cubs' difficulties at second base.

He entered the Cubs lineup on September 10, 1961 in a game against the Philadelphia Phillies. He had three at-bats, gaining two hits and one run batted in in a 12-5 Cubs loss. He played in ten games in his debut season, with five hits in 26 at bats, and one home run. The New York Mets drafted Zimmer in the 1961 expansion draft, and Cubs traded Kindall, leaving Hubbs as the starting second baseman for ninth-place Chicago in 1962. Hubbs played in 160 games on the season, getting 172 hits with five home runs and 49 runs batted in. He led all National League rookies in games, hits, doubles, triples, runs, and batting average. He was named the Rookie of the Year, earning 19 out of 20 votes and becoming the second consecutive Cubs player to win the award after Billy Williams, as he hit .260. In the field, he set records with 78 consecutive games and 418 total chances without making an error, breaking Bobby Doerr's Major League Baseball records. His performance made him the first rookie to win a Gold Glove Award. He also led the league in two less desirable categories that season by striking out 129 times and grounding into 20 double plays. His prime achievement as a fielder came on September 30, when he started a triple play in the final game of the season against the Mets.

In the 1963 season, Hubbs played in 155 games, earning a career low .235 batting average with eight home runs and 47 runs batted in. His fielding helped the Cubs achieve an 82-80 record.

More About Ken Hubbs

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Hubbs had a fear of flying, which he decided to overcome by taking flying lessons. He took the lessons during the off season between the 1963 and 1964 Major League Baseball seasons. He received his pilot's license in January of 1964. Hubbs' long time friend, Dennis Doyle, was a new father in February of 1964. Doyle's wife had taken the train from Colton, CA to Provo, Utah to spend time with her parents and their new grand child. Hubbs and Doyle set out to surprise Doyle's wife with a one day trip to Provo on February 12. While in Provo, the pair decided to stay the night and return to Colton the next day. Hubbs played in a charity basketball game that night.

A storm arrived in the Utah Valley the morning of February 13. Hubbs thought he could beat the storm and decided to attempt the return flight. Hubbs and Doyle took off in a red and white Cessna 172 from Provo Airport, which sits on the edge of Utah Lake. Hubbs did not file a flight plan but told staff at Provo Airport that the pair were heading for Morrow field near Colton, California. Euliss Hubbs, Ken's father, reported that they had not arrived in Colton by Friday, February 14. A search began Saturday morning in areas of Utah, Nevada and California along a route the pair might have used. Rescuers found the plane's wreckage a quarter mile south of Bird Island in Utah Lake