This day in Dodgers history: Maury Wills reaches career milestone
Briefly

This day in Dodgers history: Maury Wills reaches career milestone
Maury Wills recorded his 2,000th career hit on May 26, 1971, during the Los Angeles Dodgers’ 6-4 loss to the San Francisco Giants at Dodger Stadium. The milestone came in the bottom of the fifth inning off Gaylord Perry, when Wills hit an RBI single that scored Bobby Valentine and pulled the Dodgers to 4-2. Los Angeles later tied the game, but San Francisco took the lead in the ninth inning on a go-ahead single by Chris Speier. Willie Mays added an insurance run with a sacrifice fly. Wills went 1-for-4 and hit .281 in 149 games in 1971, his final full year with the Dodgers. He finished his Dodgers career with 1,732 hits and 490 stolen bases, earning major honors including the 1962 MVP, seven All-Star selections, and multiple championships. He later joined the Legends of Dodger Baseball and was honored after his death.
"Wills' milestone hit came in the bottom of the fifth inning off Hall of Famer Gaylord Perry. The RBI single scored Bobby Valentine and brought the Dodgers to within 4-2. L.A. would eventually pull even, but San Francisco took a decided lead in the ninth inning when Chris Speier delivered a go-ahead single off Jim Brewer. Willie Mays then provided an insurance run with a sacrifice fly that further extended the Giants' advantage."
"Wills finished 1-for-4 in the contest. He hit .281 in 149 games during the 1971 season, which was his final full year with the Dodgers. Wills is among 13 players to record their 2,000th career hit in a Dodgers uniform. Freddie Freeman is the most recent player to do so, accomplishing the feat during the 2023 season."
"Wills played 12 seasons with the Dodgers over two separate stints, batting a combined .281/.331/.332 with 150 doubles, 56 triples, 17 home runs, 374 RBI and 490 stolen bases in 1,593 games. Among Dodgers franchise leaders, Wills ranks first in stolen bases, 10th in total at-bats (6,156), runs scored (876) and hits (1,732)."
"He was a seven-time All-Star, three-time World Series champion, two-time Gold Glove winner and the recipient of the 1962 National League MVP Award. In April 2022, Wills became the fourth member of the "Legends of Dodger Baseball," joining Steve Garvey, Don Newcombe and Fernando Valenzuela. Kirk Gibson, Manny Mota, Orel Hershiser, Dusty Baker and Ron Cey have since joined the group as well."
Read at Dodger Blue
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