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Dick Rusteck

Dick Rusteck
Ultimate Mets Database popularity ranking: 667 of 1252 players
Rusteck
Richard Frank Rusteck
Born: July 12, 1941 at Chicago, Ill.
Throws: Left Bats: Right
Height: 6.01 Weight: 175

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First Mets game: June 10, 1966
Last Mets game: October 2, 1966

Share your memories of Dick Rusteck

HERE IS WHAT OTHER METS FANS HAVE TO SAY:

Richard Kissel
Rusteck came up, I think in 1965, won two games and we never heard from him again. He was at one of our Little League dinners. Maybe it was the overcooked roast beef that did him in.

Chris
Rusteck's only big-league win was a 3 or 4 hit shutout he tossed at Shea. I think it was against the Reds. I was there! Ed Bressoud hit 2 homers in that game. Anyone remember any more details about it??

michael
June 16, 2001
Struck me out so many times my head is still spinning. Best pitcher I've ever seen. Go Dad!

len
November 9, 2001
best pitcher, best man, and best cousin i've ever had and I wish he would get a hold of us.

Alan
January 5, 2002
Chris, I was there that night too. He looked really impressive. Does anyone know why he never was heard from again

Feat Fan
May 3, 2002
His debut was on June 10, 1966. We were there, jazzed to see *46, Jimbo Maloney throw for the Reds. Earlier that day, Bob Shaw was purchased from SF. I remember a Gordy Coleman quote claiming that Dick Selma had the nastiest slider in the NL. Anyway, Rusteck throws a neat 4 hit 6k cg sho and Maloney is gone early.

Not sure, but I think Eddie Bressoud hit one out. Al Luplow was in cf, made a nice catch, we ate lots of hot dogs and as usual, travelled to Dairy Queen afterwards for a nightcap!

Frank L
February 5, 2003
He threw a shutout in his ML debut and was hailed as "Golden Arm" in the headlines for his next start...as I recall he came up very soon after with a bad arm, was shelled in his other two starts and that ended that. So we had to wait for Tom Seaver to arrive!

Mike Lukas
November 21, 2007
When we were growing up together in Chicago we used to play "fast pitching" against a brick wall using one of those little pink rubber balls. I never could hit him very well, so I felt a lot better about that many years later when he became a pitcher for the Mets! It was a real tragedy when medical problems cut his career short.

He was a good friend growing up, but we have lost track of each other over the years. Great guy - hope he's doing well today.

R Oplawski
March 30, 2008
He was going to be a great pitcher for the Mets but unfortunately was hit in the left elbow the day after his 4-hit shutout against Maloney and the Reds. After the season he had elbow surgery which isn't what it is today. His love for baseball had him pitch for years in Triple A with great success. Dick and I met in the army in 1963 and were very good friends during the 1960's. Hope all is well with him and his family.

Lou
January 9, 2011
Played with Dick in Greenville. A great talent and a better person.

Gary Pillar
March 18, 2012
I spent the 1963 season with Rich on the Salinas, CA Mets class A ballclub. I remember him as having great stuff as a hard throwing left-hander. Rich was one of the finest guys you could ever know. I'm sorry we lost contact with one another. I now live in the Vail, CO area and teach skiing in the winter and golf in the summer. Will try to connect with Rich down in AZ.

Bruce Bellandi
April 28, 2014
Rich and I played at Salinas, Auburn and Williamsport. We had lots of fun off and on the field. One time we were sitting at a bar in Santa Barbara on the pier, looking at sail boats when Rich said...look at those Yatges..what....look at those Yatges...you have to love those people from Chicago . Rich was a great athlete and good person.

Paul Ivice
June 30, 2020
Dick is one of a handful of pitchers in MLB history to throw a complete-game shutout in his major-league debut and never win another MLB game. I did a telephone interview with Dick years ago and wrote an article for the Jacksonville Suns (now the Jumbo Shrimp) about him and Tom Saver as teammates on the 1966 Jacksonville Suns, which was then the Mets' Triple-A affiliate.

Henry Del Gaudio
October 2, 2024
The first baseball game my father ever took me to alone, just the two of us, was the game Dick Rustek shutout the Reds. I still have the scorecard from the game. I remember Ed Bressoud hitting two home runs in the game. Would love to send the scorecard to Dick or someone in his family as a memory.








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