Education
McRae attended Elizabeth High School and signed with the Tigers in 1966 as an undrafted free agent.
McRae attended Elizabeth High School and signed with the Tigers in 1966 as an undrafted free agent.
Born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, he stood 6 feet 1 inch (185 m) tall and weighed 195 pounds (88 kg). He moved through the Tiger farm system and after his fourth minor league campaign he was given a three-game, late-season trial in 1969. The following year, he had midand late-season auditions with Detroit as a relief pitcher, working in 19 games.
Although he failed to record a decision or a save, McRae had some success, allowing 26 hits in 31⅓ innings pitched and fashioning a 2.87 earned run average — although he issued more bases on balls (25) than he had strikeouts (16).
He then was included in a controversial off-season trade. The trade was a boon for the Tigers, and a catastrophe for the Senators.
His career was all but over at the age of 26. In 1971, he lost 22 games, the Senators lost 96 games and drew the fewest fans in baseball.
Washington owner Bob Short, who was his own general manager and made the trade, would spend much of the season petitioning the American League, successfully, to move the franchise to Dallas-Fort Worth.
McRae, for his part, made no contribution to the Senators and never appeared in an official game for them. He spent the remainder of his career in the minor leagues and left the game after the 1972 season. In his 22 MLB games, all with the Tigers, he allowed 28 hits and 12 earned runs in 34⅓ innings pitched, with 26 bases on balls and 19 strikeouts.
On October 9, 1970, the 23-year-old McRae was sent to the Washington Senators with former Cy Young Award winning pitcher Denny McLain, outfielder Elliott Maddox and third baseman Don Wert for pitchers Joe Coleman and Jim Hannan, shortstop Editor Brinkman and third baseman Aurelio Rodríguez. McLain, just two years removed from winning 31 games for the world champion 1968 Tigers (and one year after notching 24 victories for Detroit"s 1969 club), had been suspended for much of the 1970 season by Commissioner of Baseball Bowie Kuhn on gambling allegations and had won only three of eight decisions. Meanwhile, Coleman would twice win 20 games for the Tigers and pitch for them through 1976, while Brinkman and Rodríguez would anchor the left side of the Tiger infield for several seasons, including 1972 when Detroit won the American League East Division title.