Showing posts with label Roberto Clemente. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roberto Clemente. Show all posts

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Greatest rightfielders in NL history by team

Atlanta Braves: Hank Aaron (1954-74)
Miami Marlins: Giancarlo Stanton (2010-present)
New York Mets: Daryl Strawberry (1983-90)
Philadelphia Phillies: Chuck Klein (1928-33, 1936-39, 1940-44)
Washington Nationals: Vladimir Guerrero (1996-2003)
Chicago Cubs:  Sammy Sosa (1992-2004)
Cincinnati Reds: Frank Robinson (1956-65)
Milwaukee Brewers: Sexto Lezcano (1974-80)
Pittsburgh Pirates: Roberto Clemente (1955-72)
St Louis Cardinals: Enos Slaughter (1938-53)
Arizona Diamondbacks: Justin Upton (2007-14)
Colorado Rockies: Larry Walker (1995-2004)
Los Angeles Dodgers: Carl Furillo (1946-60)
San Diego Padres: Tony Gwynn (1982-2001)
San Fransisco Giants: Mel Ott (1926-47)

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Roberto Clemente: Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 1973

Roberto Clemente
Born: August 18, 1934
1952:Signed with Puerto Rican League
1954: Drafted by Brooklyn Dodgers
1954: Montreal Royals (Minors)
1954: Rule 5 pickup by Pittsburgh Pirates
Debut: April 17, 1955 (Pirates)
1955: Car accident led to back injury which cut playing time
1956: Hit walk off Inside-the-park Grand Slam vs. Cubs (only player to do so)
1958-64: Marine Corps Reserves
1960: Pirates win World Series
1961: GW hit in All Star Game
1961: Won Batting Title (.351)
1964: Won Batting Title (.339)
1965: Won Batting Title (.329)
1966: NL MVP
1967: Won Batting Title (.357)
1970: Pirates move to Three Rivers Stadium

1970: Roberto Clemente Night
1970: Pirates win NL East
1971: Pirates win World Series
1971: World Series MVP
1971: Babe Ruth Award
1972: 3000th Hit
1972: Pirates win NL East
Died: December 31, 1972
1973: Pirates retire #21
1973: Commissioner's Award renamed the Roberto Clemente Award
1973: Congressional Gold Medal and Presidential Citizen's Medal
1973: Elected to Hall of Fame (Special Election)
1984: USPS Stamp issued
1999: All-Century Team finalist
2003: Presidential Medal of Freedom
2005: MLB Latin Legends Team
2006: Historic Achievement Award
2007: Rawlings All-Time Gold Glove Team
Accomplishments:
2x World Champion
1966 NL MVP
1971 World Series MVP
1971 Babe Ruth Award
15x All Star
12x Gold Glove
4x Batting Champ
.317 average
240 HR
1305 RBI
1416 Runs
3000 Hits
440 Doubles
166 Triples
.475 Slugging
.834 OPS
4492 TB
100+ runs: 3x
200+ hits: 4x
30+ doubles:  4x
40 doubles (1964)
10+ triples: 9x
20+ HR: 3x
100+ RBI: 2x
.300+ average: 13x
.350+ average: 3x
.400+ OBP: 3x
.500+ slugging: 6x
300+ TB: 4x
Led league in hits: 2x
Led league in triples (12): 1969
Postseason: .318, 3 HR, 14 RBI, .803 OPS (5 Series)

Monday, June 10, 2013

Branch Rickey: Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 1967


Born: December 20, 1881
1898-1901: Earned B.A. at Ohio Wesleyan University and played catcher on baseball team
1902: Played football
1903: Signed pro contract with Terra Haute
1904-05: Played baseball, taught college, and coached football
1905: Ended up with White Sox, who flipped him to the Browns
Debut: June 16, 1905 (Browns)
1907: Traded to the Highlanders (Yankees)
1907: Allowed 13 stolen bases in one game (record)
1907: Attended University of Michigan and earned LL B.
1913: Joined Browns front office
1913-15: Managed Browns (139-179)
1915: Helped sign George Sisler
1917-1918: World War I service
1919-1925: Managed Cardinals (458-485)
1919-42: Cardinals GM. He pioneered the farm system.
1926: Cardinals won World Seres
1931: Cardinals won World Series
1934: Cardinals won World Series
1942: Cardinals won World Series
1943-50: Dodgers GM
1945: Signed Jackie Robinson
1947: Helped integrate baseball
1950-55: Pirates GM
1954: Drafted Roberto Clemente
1955: His efforts led to the Dodgers world title
1960: His efforts led to the Pirates world title
1965: Died
1967: Elected to Hall of Fame
2013: Played by Harrison Ford in "42"
Accomplishments:
4x World Champion (role in two others) as GM
Helped integrate baseball
Developed the farm system
Jackie Robinson, George Sisler, Roberto Clemente
As a manager: 597-664 (.473)
As a player: .239, 3 HR, 39 RBI, .628 OPS (120 games-343 AB)

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

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Top 10 Pittsburgh Pirates Moments

Babe Adams wins Game 7 on a shutout; it is his 3rd win of the World Series (Game 7 World Series October 16, 1909): Honus Wagner and the Pirates defeated Ty Cobb and the Tigers in an epic World Series. Babe Adams was the hero for the Bucs as he pitched three complete game victories. The other Pirate starters went 1-3. It was Pittsburgh’s first world title.


Kiki Cuyler wins the World Series (Game 7 World Series October 15, 1925): The World Champion Senators led the Pirates 7-6 going into the bottom of the 8th. The Pirates rallied for three to take the lead and deflate Walter Johnson. The Bucs tied the game with 2 outs. With 2 on and 2 out, Max Carey reached on an error loading the bases. The next batter, Kiki Cuyler, hit a ground rule double to right scoring the go-ahead runs. The Senators went down in order in the 9th. The Pirates won their second title.

Ralph Kiner wins 7th straight home run crown (1952): The Pirates enjoyed success in the early twentieth century. By mid-century, they were terrible. Ralph Kiner provided one bright spot by winning seven home run crowns in a row. Beginning in 1946, Kiner stroked 23, 51, 40, 54, 47, 42, and 37. He finished his Hall of Fame career with 369 blasts.

Dale Long homers in eight straight games (May 19-28, 1956): Dale Long hit 27 roundtrippers in 1956. Starting on May 19, he hit at least one in eight straight games breaking the previous record of six. Long included Warren Spahn, Curt Simmons, and Carl Erskine among his victims. The Dodgers and Don Newcombe finally ended the streak. The record has since been tied by Don Mattingly (1987) and Ken Griffey Jr. (1993).

Harvey Haddix is almost perfect (May 26, 1959): Harvey Haddix pitched a perfect game into the 13th inning before allowing a base runner. Unfortunately, the Pirates failed to score. In the 13th, the Braves managed some base runners and Joe Adcock doubled in the winning run. Haddix lost the perfect game, the no-hitter, the shutout, and the ballgame.

Mazeroski’s home run (Game 7 World Series October 13, 1960): Bill Mazeroski won one of the greatest games ever played with a 9th inning walk-off. The Pirates led Game 7 early by a score of 4-0. The Yanks rallied to take a 5-4 lead in the 6th. The game see-sawed into the 9th. The Pirates looked to win the series with a 2-run lead, but New York rallied. With the game tied 9-9 in the bottom of the 9th, Maz hit a Ralph Terry pitch over the left field wall for the first World Series walk-off in history. It was Pittsburgh’s first title since 1925.

Steve Blass beats O’s 2-1 (Game 7 World Series October 17, 1971): The Orioles and Pirates engaged in a classic World Series which was decided in seven games. Pirate starter Steve Blass experienced an extreme case of nerves which Baltimore manager Earl Weaver attempted to fan when he came out to chat with the umpires. Weaver’s efforts had the opposite effect. Blass calmed down and pitched the game of his life. He stopped the O’s on 4 hits and was supported by a homer from Roberto Clemente. The Pirates scored their second run in the 8th. Blass only allowed one in out dueling Mike Cuellar.

Roberto Clemente gets his 3000th , and final, hit (September 30, 1972): Roberto Clemente scored his 3000th hit off Mets righthander John Matlack. The right fielder accomplished the feat in front of his home fans and represented a goodbye of sorts. It was his last regular season at-bat of his career. During the offseason, Clemente died in a plane crash.

Rennie Stennett goes 7-7 (September 16, 1975): The Pirates massacred the Chicago Cubs 22-0. In the process, Rennie Stennett hit safely in all seven at bats. He is the only twentieth century player to accomplish this.

Pops brings it home (Game 7 World Series October 17, 1979): Willie Stargell had a dream that he would do something great in Game 7. In the 6th inning, with the Bucs trailing the Orioles, Stargell hit the go-ahead homer. His two-run shot off Scott McGregor proved the game winner. The Bucs tacked on two in the 9th for a 4-1 victory. Pittsburgh’s “family” overcame a 3-1 deficit and the death of manager Chuck Tanner’s mother to beat a high powered Oriole team. To date, it is the Pirates last title.