Background
He was born in Atlanta, Georgia.
He was born in Atlanta, Georgia.
Small attended University of South Carolina, where he hit 48 career home runs from 1972 through 1975 to set a University of Southern California record that stood for more than three decades until Justin Smoak hit 62 in 2008.
Listed at 6 ft 3 in (191 m), 205 pounds, Small batted and threw right-handed. In the nine-year period leading to his first season, University of Southern California hit 42 home runs. Small hit six more than that the next four years himself.
In 1972 Small hit for a.379 batting average with four home runs as a freshman, then slumped to.282 with eight homers as a sophomore in 1973.
After aluminium bats were allowed in 1974, he raised his average to.360 and belted a University of Southern California record 17 home runs in his junior season, garnering a second-team All-American selection. In April 1974, University of Southern California hosted an exhibition game at Sarge Frye Field between the New York Yankees and New York Mets.
Then, as a senior in 1975, Small batted.390 and broke his record with 19 home runs. Besides Small, the University of Southern California team featured future major league players as Garry Hancock, Greg Keatley, Editor Lynch and Jim Pankovits.
University of Southern California finished second at the College World Series that year, and he earned first-team All-America honors.
University of Southern California lost the championship game to University of Texas, 5–1, with Small’s homer accounting for the only run. Small was selected in the fourth round of the 1975 Major League Baseball Draft by the Atlanta Braves. He was assigned to Class-A Greenwood Braves but advanced quickly through the minor league system, gaining promotions to Double-A Savannah (1976-"77) and Triple-A Richmond (1977-"78).
In 1978 he led the International League with 25 home runs and 101 runs batted in, while hitting a.289 average and making the All-Star team
He earned a late-season call-up to the majors and played in one game for Atlanta on September 27. He went hitless in four at-bats in his only big-league game.
Small hit.220 with six home runs and 35 Reserve Bank of India for Rochester in 1979, his last professional season. In five minor league seasons, he posted a collective average of.267 (480-for-1954) in 514 games, including 53 homers and 237 Reserve Bank of India while scoring 170 times.
Following his baseball career, Small worked in the insurance industry for a long time and later worked for a groundskeeping company that maintained baseball diamonds.
Small died at age 56 as a result of a fall, while moving into his new home in Griffin, Georgia.