Georges Henri Maranda (January 15, 1932 – July 14, 2000) was a Canadian professional baseball player, a right-handed pitcher who appeared in 49 Major League Baseball games, including eight starts, for the 1960 San Francisco Giants and the 1962 Minnesota Twins.
Maranda won 18 games and lost only six in 1959; he led American Association pitchers in wins and was selected a league All-Star.
He was acquired by the Giants in the Rule 5 draft that off-season.
He then spent the entire 1960 season on the San Francisco roster, working in 17 games, with four starts.
On August 21, he earned his first MLB win when he went seven innings in a start at Wrigley Field against the Chicago Cubs, and held the Cubbies to seven hits and three earned runs.
The Giants won the game, 5–3.
However, this became Maranda's only victory (against four losses) in that 1960 campaign after which he was assigned to Triple-A Tacoma at the close of the year, spending all of 1961 in the Pacific Coast League posting a 10–4 win–loss record through 32 games.
The Twins then selected Maranda in the 1961 Rule 5 draft and kept him on their roster for the 1962 campaign.
On June 22, he made a spot start (just his second of the season) against the Los Angeles Angels at Metropolitan Stadium, leaving the game for a pinch hitter in the fifth inning, trailing 2–0.
Minnesota then rallied in that inning to take a 3–2 lead, which they held for the rest of the game.
It was Maranda's only triumph as a member of the Twins and his second and last MLB victory.
A week after the season ended, Maranda was traded to the Cleveland Indians after which he never again pitched in the big leagues, retiring after spending the 1963 season with the Triple-A Jacksonville.
In his 49 MLB games, Maranda lost seven of nine decisions (.222) and posted a 4.52 earned run average in 123?1/3 innings pitched, allowing 119 hits, 16 home runs and 65 bases on balls, while fanning 64.