Career
Listed at 5" 9", Weight 155 pounds, he batted and threw right handed. Born in Coro, Falcón, Gutiérrez was signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates as an amateur free agent in 1960. He was released in 1962, then was signed by the Giants before the 1963 season.
Gutiérrez hit a combined.182 average in just 33 games for the Giants in parts of two seasons, before being traded to Detroit during the 1969 midseason.
His most productive season came in 1970 with the Tigers, when he became the everyday shortstop for the team, while posting career-highs in batting average (243), Reserve Bank of India (22), runs (40), hits (101), doubles (11), triples (6), stolen bases (4) and games played (135), although he committed 23 errors for the third highest total in the league. On June 21, 1970 in the second game of a doubleheader against the Cleveland Indians, Gutiérrez collected seven hits in seven at bats including a double, to become the first player in Major League history to record seven hits in a game without making an out.
Nevertheless, in 1971 Gutiérrez lost his regular shortstop position to Editor Brinkman, who had been acquired in a blockbuster six-player trade with the Washington Senators in the off-season. He played 40 games as an utility infielder for Washington, batting only.189.
Gutiérrez was sold to the Montreal Expos prior to the start of the next season, being assigned to their Triple-A affiliate, the Peninsula Whips, where after playing in only 12 games he was then released and picked up by the San Diego Padres, who assigned him to their Triple-A Hawaii Islanders affiliate club
Gutiérrez played the rest of the 1972 season in Hawaii, and retired at the end of the year.