Cleon Joseph Jones
New York Mets
Outfield
Bats: Right Throws: Left Height: 6'0" Weight: 185
Born: August 4, 1942, Plateau, AL
Signed: Signed by the New York Mets as an amateur free agent before 1963 season
Major League Teams: New York Mets 1963, 1965-75; Chicago White Sox 1976
World Series Appearances: New York Mets 1969, 1973
Cleon Jones spent parts of 13 seasons in the majors, but his All-Star season of 1969 was by far his most memorable. Jones first received regular playing time in 1966 as the team's everyday center fielder, and he finished fourth in the league's Rookie of the Year voting after batting .275 with 57 RBIs. After a move to left field to accommodate the newly acquired Tommie Agee (#364), Jones had a career year in 1969. He was named to the All-Star team and batted a career-high .340 (third in the league) with 12 home runs and 75 RBIs. An offensive catalyst for the Amazing Mets, Jones caught the final out of the 1969 World Series, in which the Mets defeated the highly-favored Orioles in five games. The Mets returned to the World Series in 1973, with Jones batting .286 with a pair of doubles and a home run against the victorious Athletics.
Cleon Jones spent parts of 13 seasons in the majors, but his All-Star season of 1969 was by far his most memorable. Jones first received regular playing time in 1966 as the team's everyday center fielder, and he finished fourth in the league's Rookie of the Year voting after batting .275 with 57 RBIs. After a move to left field to accommodate the newly acquired Tommie Agee (#364), Jones had a career year in 1969. He was named to the All-Star team and batted a career-high .340 (third in the league) with 12 home runs and 75 RBIs. An offensive catalyst for the Amazing Mets, Jones caught the final out of the 1969 World Series, in which the Mets defeated the highly-favored Orioles in five games. The Mets returned to the World Series in 1973, with Jones batting .286 with a pair of doubles and a home run against the victorious Athletics.
He played with the Mets through mid-1975, and attempted a comeback with the White Sox in 1976. Jones collected 1,196 hits overall in 1,213 games, batting .281 with 93 home runs and 524 RBIs. He's currently fourth on the Mets' all-time franchise leaderboard with 1,188 hits, and he was inducted into the team's Hall of Fame in 1991.
Some text for this post originally appeared on my 1965 Topps blog.
Building the Set / Card #621
September 21, 2025 from The Philly Show (Vintage Sports)
The Card / Mets Team Set / Accuracy Index +5
1969 Season
As noted above, this was by far Jones' best season in the majors. From his SABR biography, written by Fred Worth:
Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card: 1965 Topps #308
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (11): 1965-75
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 2018 Topps Heritage Miracle of '69 #MO69-CJ
Total Non-Parallel Baseball Cards: 121 in the Beckett online database as of 1/28/26.
Sources:
Baseball Reference / SABR / Wikipedia
Building the Set / Card #621
September 21, 2025 from The Philly Show (Vintage Sports)
On Sunday morning, September 21st, I made the hour-long drive to the Greater Philadelphia Expo Center in Oaks, Pennsylvania for the latest installment of the Philadelphia Sports Card & Memorabilia Show, known to its friends as The Philly Show. The show has a legitimate official sponsor (eBay) and the advertisement for the event notes the show is in its 50th year. I hadn't attended a baseball card show since the last Philly Show in December, and I was flying solo to this one as our oldest son is in his first month of college at Villanova. I posted a full summary of the show over at The Phillies Room.
I made stops at six tables at the show, all yielding needed cards for our 1969 Topps set, and I left the show with just 16 more cards to go for my version of a complete set. My second stop was the aptly named Vintage Sports table. I always appreciate a dealer with clear signage explaining their pricing method, and Vintage Sports had a marker in their selection of 1969 Topps cards laying out that cards without a sleeve were $1 and cards with a sleeve were $2. I had one "high number" in a sleeve, and that was a whopping $4.
I found 28 commons needed before moving on to my third stop. This was the 27th of 28 total cards bought from Vintage Sports, and the 62nd of 91 cards for the set added overall on the day. Sleeved, this card cost less than $2 after a dealer discount.
The Card / Mets Team Set / Accuracy Index +5
Jones' pose on his 1970 Topps card is almost the exact same pose as shown on this card. I had to study both cards side by side to determine they were slightly different photos. Topps reprinted the card in its 2002 Topps Archives set. The back of the card recounts Jones' hot finish to the 1968 season and the cartoon highlights his college football exploits.
Accuracy Index: Jones' card earns a standard +5 for the accurate uniform and hat.
1969 Season
As noted above, this was by far Jones' best season in the majors. From his SABR biography, written by Fred Worth:
Cleon Jones was as big a part of the Mets championship as anyone. He batted .340 with an on-base percentage of .422. He led the team in batting average, on-base percentage, slugging, hits, doubles, stolen bases, walks, and even hit by pitches. He was second on the team in RBIs, one behind Agee. He started in the All-Star Game (two singles, reached on an error, and scored twice) and finished seventh in the league Most Valuable Player voting, behind winner Willie McCovey (#440) and teammates Tom Seaver (#480) and Agee.
During the first National League Championship Series in history, Jones batted .429 with a homer, two doubles, and four RBIs. The Mets hit .327 overall in the three-game sweep of Atlanta.
In the World Series win over Baltimore, Jones hit only .158, but he was in the thick of things. His foot and his knee live in Mets immortality. He was hit by Dave McNally's (#340) "shoe polish" pitch and scored on Donn Clendenon's (#208) homer, getting the Mets back in the game. And then, in the top of the ninth, he gently coaxed Davey Johnson's (#203) fly ball into his glove, making the Mets the world champions.
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First Mainstream Card: 1965 Topps #308
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (11): 1965-75
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 2018 Topps Heritage Miracle of '69 #MO69-CJ
Total Non-Parallel Baseball Cards: 121 in the Beckett online database as of 1/28/26.
Sources:
Baseball Reference / SABR / Wikipedia




















































