Gary Disarcina was born November 19, 1967, in Malden, MA, USA.
Gary DiSarcina's birth name is Gary Thomas DiSarcina.
Gary DiSarcina is 6' 1".
Gary Disarcina debuted on September 23, 1989 and played his final game on May 8, 2000.
Gary Disarcina is 6 feet 1 inches tall. He weighs 170 pounds. He bats right and throws right.
Gary Disarcina debuted on September 23, 1989, playing for the California Angels at Anaheim Stadium; he played his final game on May 8, 2000, playing for the Anaheim Angels at Edison International Field.
Gary Disarcina played in just one game at short stop for the California Angels in 1989 and did not start. He played for a total of 3 outs, equivalent to .11 9-inning games. He made no putouts, had no assists, and committed no errors, equivalent to 0 errors per 9-inning game. He had no double plays.
In 1990, Gary Disarcina played in 18 games, batting in all of them. He had 57 at bats, getting 8 hits, for a .140 batting average, with 1 sacrifice hits, 0 sacrifice flies, and 0 runs batted in. He was walked 3 times. He struck out 10 times. He hit 1 doubles, 1 triples, and 0 home runs.
Right now, the bench coach Gary DiSarcina has the number. From 2015-16 catcher Ryan Hanigan had the big 1 0.
Gary Disarcina played in 98 games at short stop for the California Angels in 1995, starting in all of them. He played for a total of 2592 outs, equivalent to 96 9-inning games. He made 146 putouts, had 275 assists, and committed 6 errors, equivalent to .063 errors per 9-inning game. He had 49 double plays.
Gary Disarcina played in 3 games at second base for the California Angels in 1990, starting in 2 of them. He played for a total of 57 outs, equivalent to 2.11 9-inning games. He made 3 putouts, had 8 assists, and committed no errors, equivalent to 0 errors per 9-inning game. He had one double play.
Gary Disarcina played in 14 games at short stop for the California Angels in 1990, starting in 13 of them. He played for a total of 375 outs, equivalent to 13.89 9-inning games. He made 14 putouts, had 49 assists, and committed 4 errors, equivalent to .288 errors per 9-inning game. He had 8 double plays.