Elliott Taylor "Bump" Wills (born July 27, 1952) is an American former professional baseball player, a second baseman in the major leagues for the Texas Rangers (1977–1981) and Chicago Cubs (1982). He also played two seasons in Japan for the Orix BlueWave (1983–84).
Wills is the son of a major league shortstop who later managed the Seattle Mariners.
That season at Yankee Stadium, Wills and Ranger teammate Toby Harrah hit back-to-back inside-the-park home runs on Saturday, only the second time this feat has ever occurred in a major league game, and the only time on consecutive pitches. Harrah's came on a drive to the right-center field gap; on the play, Yankee outfielder Lou Piniella hit the wall and was injured. By the time another player was able to retrieve the ball, Harrah was being waved home. Wills' HR came on a drive to center field over the head of Mickey Rivers; both were off reliever Ken Clay. Earlier that year at spring training in Florida, Wills controversially replaced Lenny Randle at second base, which led to Randle's punching Rangers manager Frank Lucchesi in the face, sending him to the hospital with a facial fracture.
Like his father Maury, Wills was respected for his speed. In 1978, Wills stole 52 bases, breaking Dave Nelson's single-season franchise record of 51 in ; the number remains a Ranger record for stolen bases in a season.
After playing with the Chicago Cubs in 1982, Wills played the 1983–1984 seasons in Japan before retiring. His MLB career batting average was .266 with 36 home runs and 302 RBI.
In 1977, Bump married Laverne Capilla, with whom he had one child, daughter Mauricia Morning Wills (named after his father Maury). He and Laverne later divorced and Bump married Marla Boland in 1989. They had two daughters, Meagan and Madeline Wills. They subsequently divorced.
Wills now lives in Garland, Texas, with his wife Deborah (Shriver), whom he married in 2015. He coaches for the Dallas Mustangs, a youth select baseball club. He was slated to be the manager of the Royse City Griffins of the planned Southwest League of Professional Baseball in 2019, but the league folded before ever playing.
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