found: O'Brien, Charlie. The Cy Young catcher, 2015:ECIP title page (Charlie O'Brien) data view (Charlie O'Brien played fifteen seasons as catcher in the major leagues and had the distinction of working with thirteen pitchers who won the Cy Young Award, baseball's most prestigious pitching honor, presented annually to one pitcher each in the American and National Leagues, as voted on by the Baseball Writers Association of America. In 1990, O'Brien led National League catchers in caught-stealing percentage, with a score of 45.7 percent, and three times he led the league in outs and assists by catchers. His clutch hitting contributed to a National League Championship and subsequent World Series Championship for the Atlanta Braves in 1995. He is retired from baseball and lives in Oklahoma)
found: Wikipedia, viewed December 11, 2014:Charlie O'Brien (Charles Hugh O'Brien (born May 1, 1960 in Tulsa, Oklahoma) is a former Major League Baseball catcher who played for the Oakland Athletics (1985), Milwaukee Brewers (1987-90), New York Mets (1990-93), Atlanta Braves (1994-95), Toronto Blue Jays (1996-97), Chicago White Sox (1998), Anaheim Angels (1998-99) and Montreal Expos (2000))