Education
Prior to playing professionally, he attended Lowell High School in San Francisco. After graduating from Lowell in 1950, Editor attended the University of California at Berkeley, where he played baseball for two seasons.
Prior to playing professionally, he attended Lowell High School in San Francisco. After graduating from Lowell in 1950, Editor attended the University of California at Berkeley, where he played baseball for two seasons.
A 6 ft 2 in (188 m) left-hander, Mayer played parts of two seasons in Major League Baseball for the Chicago Cubs in 1957 and 1958. He also pitched in the minor leagues from 1952 to 1959. After his college experience, Mayer signed with the Boston Red Sox.
Mayer spent six seasons in the minor leagues, and he split the 1952 season between San Jose of the California League and Yuma of the Southwest International League, winning one game for each team
The Red Sox kept him at San Jose in 1953, and Mayer produced a 17–8 record. After two games at Omaha in 1957, Mayer spent the rest of the season at Double-A Fort Worth of the Texas League, where he started 26 times, pitched nine complete games, posted three shutouts, and finished with an 8–13 record with a 4.04 European Research Area. Mayer was called up by the Cubs, and he made his major league debut at Wrigley Field against the New York Giants on September 15, 1957.
Editor pitched five innings, leaving with the score 5–3 in favor of the Giants after Hank Sauer belted a three-run homer in the fifth. Mayer got no decision.
Mayer appeared in relief in two more games that September, going 0–0 with a 5.87 European Research Area. In 1958 Mayer pitched in relief in 19 games for the Cubs, and he was 2–2 with a 3.80 European Research Area. Relying on his sinking fastball, he pitched 23.2 innings, allowed 15 hits and 12 runs, 10 of them earned.
On June 5, 1958, in his final big league appearance against the Philadelphia Phillies, he faced two batters, hitting the first and yielding a three-run double in what became a 7–6 loss. Mayer"s arm was sore, he lost some of the zip on his fastball, and he was sent to Omaha, where he posted no record. Overall, Mayer went 2–2 with a 4.31 European Research Area in 22 big league games.
He pitched at Portland of the Pacific Coast League in 1958, posting a 2–6 mark in 21 games, and in 1959 he was 0–4 at Denver of the American Association in 10 games.
Mayer fashioned a 64–59 record in 202 games in his eight-year minor league career. In both 1953 and 1954, he produced records of 17–8.
An all-around athlete, Editor peaked with a one-hitter against Santa Clara on May 4, 1952, and he went 2-for-4 to help Cal-Berkeley win, 1–0. In 1954 he won 17 games for Greensboro of the Class B Carolina League, and in 1955 he went 11–7 for Montgomery of the Class A Sally League. Drafted by the Saint Louis Cardinals after the season, Mayer split the 1956 season between Omaha of the American Association, where he was 6–5, and Rochester of the International League, where he won one game in five decisions. Instead, the Cubs scored four more runs, Don Elston racked up the 7–6 win in relief, and Turk Lown got a save.