Showing posts with label Al Kaline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Al Kaline. Show all posts

Sunday, September 27, 2015

The Greatest Rightfielders in AL history by team

Baltimore Orioles: Frank Robinson (1966-71)
Boston Red Sox: Dwight Evans (1972-90)
New York Yankees: Babe Ruth (1920-34)
Tampa Bay Rays: Matt  Joyce (2009-14)
Toronto Blue Jays: Jose Bautista (2008-Present)
Chicago White Sox: Harold Baines (1980-89; 1996-7; 2000-01)
Cleveland Indians: Manny Ramirez (1993-2000)
Detroit Tigers: Al Kaline (1953-74)
Kansas City Royals: Jermaine Dye (1997-2001)
Minnesota Twins: Sam Rice (via Washington) (1915-33)
Houston Astros: Terry Puhl (1977-90)
Los Angeles Angels: Tim Salmon (1992-2006)
Oakland A's: Reggie Jackson (1967-75; 1987)
Seattle Mariners: Ichiro Suzuki (2001-12)
Texas Rangers: Juan Gonzalez (1989-99; 2002-03)

Friday, October 31, 2014

Al Kaline: Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 1980

Born: December 19, 1934

1942: Suffered osteomyelitis resulting in surgery

1953: Signed by Detroit Tigers (Bonus Baby)

Debut: June 25, 1953 (Tigers)

1955: Youngest batting champion (.340)

1955: Hit 2 home runs in one inning

1955: Three home run game

1955: .340, 27 HR, 102 RBI, 200 hits, 121 runs, 321 TB, .967 OPS

1956: .314, 27 HR, 128 RBI, 327 TB, .913 OPS

1959: .327, 27 HR, 94 RBI, .940 OPS

1961: .324, 19 HR, 82 RBI, 41 doubles, 116 runs, .909 OPS

1962: Broken collarbone

1967: Broke hand

1968: Broke arm

1968: Had big hit in Game 5 World Series

1968: Tigers win World Series

1968: Lou Gehrig Award

1969: Hutch Award

1972: Tigers win AL East

1973: Roberto Clemente Award

1974: 3,000th hit

1974: Retired

1975-2002: Tiger broadcaster

1980: Elected to Hall of Fame (88%)

1980: Tigers retire #6

1999: Finalist for All Century Team

2003-present: Special Assistant to Tigers GM

2011: Grandson drafted by Tigers


Accomplishments:
1968 World Champion

3,007 Hits

18x All Star

10x Gold Glove

1973 Roberto Clemente Award

1968 Lou Gehrig Award

1969 Hutch Award

1955 Batting Champion

Player of the Month (September 1974)

.297

399 HR

1,583 RBI

1,622 Runs

498 Doubles

1,277 Walks-1,020 strikeouts

.855 OPS

4,852 TB

100+ Runs: 2x

200 hits (1955): Led league

30+ doubles: 4x

41 doubles (1961): Led league

10 triples (1956)

100+ RBI: 3x

20+ HR: 9x

.300 average: 8x

.400 OBP: 4x

.500 slugging: 8x

300+ TB: 3x

Led league in slugging (.530): 1959

Led league in OPS (.940): 1959

Led league in TB (321): 1955

Led league in IBB: 2x

Postseason: .333, 3 HR, 9 RBI, .935 OPS (2 series)

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Ty Cobb: Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 1936

Detroit Tigers: 1905-1926

Philadelphia A's: 1927-1928

Born: 12-18-1886
August 30, 1905: Mother fatally shoots his father. She was acquitted in 1906.

MLB Debut: August 30, 1905 (doubled in his first AB vs. Jack Chesbro).

1906: Cobb became full time centerfielder for Detroit.

1907: Fought a black groundskeeper during Spring Training.

1907: Youngest batting champ in history (until Al Kaline)

1907: Began investing in Coca Cola, which eventually made him a millionaire.

1907-09: Tigers win three consecutive pennants, but lose the World Series each year. Cobb hits .262 in three World Series.

1909: Won Triple Crown. Also, became last man to lead league in home runs without hitting a single ball over the fence.

1910: Chalmers Controversy

1911: 40-Game Hitting Streak

1911: Hit .420
1911: AL MVP

1912: Cobb attacked a heckler in the stands. He was suspended and the Tigers went on strike in support of their teammate. The team fielded replacement players and lost 24-2.

1915: Set single season stolen base record (96). It was later broken by Maury Wills.

1917: 35-Game Hitting Streak

1917: Sent to France for WWI. Served 67 days and was discharged

1921: Collects 3000th hit

1921-1926: Player/Manager for Detroit Tigers

1925: Goes 6-for-6 with 3 HR and 16 TB for an AL record

1927-1928: Finished his career with A's.

1927: Collects 4000th hit.

1928: Retired

1936: Elected to Hall of Fame in Cooperstown

1941: Celebrity golf matches with Babe Ruth

c. 1959-60: Worked on autobiography with Al Stump

July 17, 1961: Died

1994: Cobb biopic is released starring Tommy Lee Jones as Cobb

1999: All Century Team

Accomplishments:

.366 Lifetime Average (#1 all time)

54 Steals of Home (#1 all time)

Hit .400 three times (1911, 1912, 1922)

12 Batting Titles (1907-15, 1917-19)

897 Stolen Bases (3rd all time, led league 6x)

2246 runs scored (led league 6x)

4189 hits (led league 8x)

724 doubles (led league 3x)

295 triples (led league 4x)

1938 RBI (led league 4x)

.433 OBP (led league 7x)

.512 SLG (led league 8x)

.945 OPS (led league 10x)

5854 TB (led league 6x)




Sunday, May 29, 2011

Top 10 Right Fielders of All Time

Not in any order...other than Ruth is #1. Ichiro is probably the most glaring omission.

Babe Ruth

Hank Aaron

Al Kaline

Roberto Clemente

Sam Crawford

Mel Ott

Reggie Jackson

Frank Robinson

Paul Waner

Dave Winfield

Thursday, August 12, 2010

The Greatest Detroit Tigers Rightfielders

1. Al Kaline (1953-74): HOF, Gold Glove, 1955 Batting Champ, 1968 World Champion, 3000 hits, 1955 AL Hits leader


2. Sam Crawford (1903-17): HOF, 1908 HR Champ, 3x RBI Champ, 5x Triple Champ, .309 career

3. Harry Heilmann (1914-29): HOF, 4x batting champ, .403 in 1923, .342 career, 1921 hit leader, .410 career OBP

4. Kirk Gibson (1979-87, 1993-5): 1984 World Champion, 1984 ALCS MVP, Big HR in 1987 pennant race, The 84 WS HR vs. Goose

5. Magglio Ordonez (2005-present): All-Star, Silver Slugger, 2007 AL Batting Champ, .312 career, Pennant Winning Walk-off HR

6. Jim Northrup (1964-74): 1968 World Champion, Mr. Grand Slam, GW hit 1968 WS

7. Pete Fox (1933-40): 1935 World Champion, .298 career hitter

8. Vic Wertz (1947-52, 1961-3): All-Star, 100 RBI 2x,

9. Pat Mullin (1940-1, 1946-53): All-Star, .271 career hitter

10 . Pat Sheridan (1986-89): .253 career hitter, GW HR in ALCS

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Greatest Games in Michigan History: 1970s #1-10

1. Michigan State: 75 Indiana State: 64 (March 26, 1979): The game that changed basketball. It began the rivalry between Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. Their popularity and skills changed the NBA as they joined the two most important franchises. Before Magic and Larry, the NBA Finals were played on tape delay at midnight. A decade later, it was in prime time and the NBA and NCAA experienced amazing growth.

2. American League: 6 National League: 4 (July 13, 1971): The 1971 All Star Game. At Tiger Stadium, six Hall of Famers homered in the game, Mickey Lolich, Bill Freehan, Norm Cash, and Al Kaline all played for the AL. Johnny Bench, Hank Aaron, Roberto Clemente, Frank Robinson, and Harmon Killebrew homered. Reggie Jackson’s homer hit the power transformer.

3. Tigers: 5 Yankees: 1 (June 28, 1976): The Bird Game. On Monday Night Baseball, Mark Fidrych dominated the Yankees. Rusty Staub homered in the victory. The Bird would win the Rookie of the Year, 19 games, start the All-Star Game, finished 2nd in the Cy Young voting, led the majors in ERA, pitched into extra innings five times, and then blew his arm out in 1977 while playing in the outfield.

4. USC: 17 Michigan: 10 (January 1, 1979): Charles White scored a touchdown while on the 1 yard line on a fumble recovered by the Wolverines and Michigan lost another Rose Bowl in bizarre fashion.

5. UM: 10 Ohio State:10 (November 24, 1973): Both teams entered the game unbeaten. The winner went to the Rose Bowl. They tied 10-10. Big Ten Athletic Directors gave the Rose Bowl to Ohio State. Bo howled. UM quarterback Denny Franklin was injured and the Big Ten wanted to send the team most likely to win, so OSU went. Michigan blamed MSU for this, but the balloting was secret.

6. A’s: 2 Tigers:1 (October 12, 1972): ALCS Game 5. Billy Martin benched Willie Horton and a bad call led to an Oakland run. It was a farewell for this generation of Tigers. All that remained was to play out their careers, reach milestones, and wait for Morris, Parrish, Gibson, Whitaker, and Trammell.

7. Orioles: 5 Tigers: 4 (September 24, 1974): Al Kaline got his 3000th hit. Too bad the team couldn't win for him.

8. Cowboys: 5 Lions: 0 (December 26, 1970): Detroit went 10-4 and won the Wild Card. The Lions had a great defense, but their offense could not score against the Cowboys. Dallas went to the Superbowl and the Lions went home for over a decade.

9. Red Sox: 8 Tigers: 6 (September 9, 1977): The Tigers rapped out 16 hits in a 8-6 loss. Oh yeah, Lou and Tram made their debuts.

10. Lions: 17 Broncos: 14 (Thanksgiving 1978): The Doug English Game. English sacked Craig Morton 4 times and the Lions defense dominated the defending AFC champs.