José R. “Palillo” Santiago (nació en agosto 15 del 1940, en el barrio Lomas de Juana Díaz PR) ex-lanzador de las Grandes Ligas.
Jose Santiago Biography

Jose R. Santiago (born August 15, 1940, in Juana Diaz, Puerto Rico) is a former Major League pitcher.
José started his pro career in 1959 with Olean in the New York-Penn League, with a 6-3 record and a 3.24 ERA in 62 innings. The same year, he moved on to Grand Island in the Nebraska State League, winning 3 and losing 6, with a 3.91 ERA. He pitched for Albuquerque in 1960 and on June 13, José threw a 2-0 no-hitter against Hobbs. It was the first no-hitter in the 28 years of the Albuquerque franchise. Just a walk and two errors - all in the sixth inning - prevented the perfect game. With the bases loaded, José struck out the final batter. With Albuquerque, he had an excellent 15-6 record with a 3.30 ERA and 222 strikeouts.
In 1961, he pitched for both Visalia and very briefly for Shreveport, leading the California League with 218 strikeouts but also leading in bases and balls, with 130. Back in Albuquerque in 1962, he won a league-leading 16 games against just nine losses. For most of 1963, he played for the Portland Beavers in the Pacific Coast League (12-15, 3.66 ERA)
In Jose Santiago's first appearance on a major league mound, he entered a 6-6 tie game against the New York Yankees to pitch the eighth inning. It was September 9, 1963 and he got Elston Howard to ground out back to him on the mound, Joe Pepitone to line out, and Clete Boyer to strike out. When Kansas City scored in the bottom of the eighth, Santiago picked up the win. It was a nice way to start an eight-year career in major league ball, three years with the Athletics and five with the Red Sox.
Possessor of an outstanding curveball, Santiago was a key member of the pitching staff of the 1967 Boston Red Sox, appearing in 50 games, winning 12 games, losing four, with an earned run average of 3.59. He was largely a middle relief pitcher that season, starting only 11 games, and compiled an 8-3 mark in relief with five saves. However, he also made several important starts, including Game 1 of the 1967 World Series, which he lost to Hall of Famer Bob Gibson, 2-1, accounting for the only Boston run with a home run. In Game 1 of the 1967 World Series Santiago establish a few Major League records, he became the 1st Latin American pitcher to start the 1st Game of a World Series, he also became the 1st Latin American player to hit a Home Run in his 1st World Series at bat, became the 1st pitcher ever to hit a Home Run in his 1st World Series at bat and the 1st player in the entire history of the Boston Red Sox franchise to hit a Home Run in his 1st World Series at bat.
Although Santiago lost both of his World Series decisions to the St. Louis Cardinals and compiled an ERA of 5.59, he began the 1968 campaign in the Boston rotation, starting 18 games, compiling a 9-4 record and an ERA of 2.25 before an elbow injury ended his season. He also was selected to the 1968 MLB All-Star Game. The injury effectively ruined his major league career. He appeared in only 18 more games during 1969 and 1970, and never won another MLB game.
Santiago ended his career with 163 appearances, 34 victories and 29 losses and an ERA of 3.74. He had reached the American League in 1963 with the Kansas City Athletics. His contract was sold to the Red Sox after the 1965 season.
In 1975 Santiago started his managerial career back in Puerto Rico in the Winter League with the Ponce Leones. In 1979, Santiago managed in a short-lived Class AAA circuit, the Inter-American League, as skipper of the Puerto Rico Boricuas. In 1980-1984 Santiago managed the Puerto Rico National team. In 1988 managed the Miami Marlins a team in the Florida State League and the overall record was 55-79. In 1996 he managed the Meridian Brakemen of the Big South League an Independent League, he took over for the last 30 games and under him the team went 20-10 and the overall record was 26-45. In 1997 managed the Meridian Brakemen again and the overall record was the best in the league 36-29. In 1998-00 was the pitching coach for the class A team of the Chicago Cubs in Daytona FL. In 2001 was the pitching coach for the Atlantic City Surf in the Atlantic League. In 2008 Santiago created the Jose Santiago Foundation.