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DETROIT TIGERS’ 4 GREATEST HITTERS Table of CONTENTS Contents Warm-Up, with a Side of Dedications ....................................................... 1 The Ty Cobb Birthplace Pilgrimage ......................................................... 9 1 Out of the Blocks—Into the Bleachers .............................................. 19 2 Quadruple Crown—Four’s Company, Five’s a Multitude ..................... 29 [Gates] Brown vs. Hot Dog .......................................................................................... 30 Prince Fielder Fields Macho Nacho ............................................................................. 30 Dangerfield Dangers .................................................................................................... 31 #1 Latino Hitters, Bar None ........................................................................................ 32 3 Hitting Prof Ted Williams, and the MACHO-METER ......................... 39 The MACHO-METER ..................................................................... 40 4 Miguel Cabrera, Knothole Kids, and the World’s Prettiest Girls ........... 47 Ty Cobb and the Presidential Passing Lane ................................................................. 49 The First Hammerin’ Hank—The Bronx’s Hank Greenberg ..................................... 50 Baseball and Heightism ............................................................................................... 53 One Amazing Baseball Record That Will Never Be Broken ...................................... -
Baseball Classics All-Time All-Star Greats Game Team Roster
BASEBALL CLASSICS® ALL-TIME ALL-STAR GREATS GAME TEAM ROSTER Baseball Classics has carefully analyzed and selected the top 400 Major League Baseball players voted to the All-Star team since it's inception in 1933. Incredibly, a total of 20 Cy Young or MVP winners were not voted to the All-Star team, but Baseball Classics included them in this amazing set for you to play. This rare collection of hand-selected superstars player cards are from the finest All-Star season to battle head-to-head across eras featuring 249 position players and 151 pitchers spanning 1933 to 2018! Enjoy endless hours of next generation MLB board game play managing these legendary ballplayers with color-coded player ratings based on years of time-tested algorithms to ensure they perform as they did in their careers. Enjoy Fast, Easy, & Statistically Accurate Baseball Classics next generation game play! Top 400 MLB All-Time All-Star Greats 1933 to present! Season/Team Player Season/Team Player Season/Team Player Season/Team Player 1933 Cincinnati Reds Chick Hafey 1942 St. Louis Cardinals Mort Cooper 1957 Milwaukee Braves Warren Spahn 1969 New York Mets Cleon Jones 1933 New York Giants Carl Hubbell 1942 St. Louis Cardinals Enos Slaughter 1957 Washington Senators Roy Sievers 1969 Oakland Athletics Reggie Jackson 1933 New York Yankees Babe Ruth 1943 New York Yankees Spud Chandler 1958 Boston Red Sox Jackie Jensen 1969 Pittsburgh Pirates Matty Alou 1933 New York Yankees Tony Lazzeri 1944 Boston Red Sox Bobby Doerr 1958 Chicago Cubs Ernie Banks 1969 San Francisco Giants Willie McCovey 1933 Philadelphia Athletics Jimmie Foxx 1944 St. -
Torrance Press
CHE MESS Sunday, July 9, 1961 JUSTICE Justice Willicim (). Douglas of the U.S. Supreme Court will speak on "Koreign Poli cy at, Home and Abroad," and will answer questions form a studio audience on NBC-TV's "The Nation's Future" pro gram of Saturday, July 15 (9:30-10 p.m.). The program was recorded on tape in NBC's New York Studios, Wednesday, June 14 for broadcast July 15. Edw.in Newman is the moderator. Justice Douglas was ap pointed to the Supreme Court by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in ]fl.'!D. He was then 40 years old the young est justice in 127 year.-. After he was graduated from Whitman College, Walla Walla, wash., and Co lumbia University, he prac ticed law in New York City rand was on the faculty of the C o 1 u m b i a and Yale Law Schools. He became chairman of the Securities and Ex change Commission in 1037. Justice Douglas is known as the Supreme Court's lead ing dissenter, and has de- lared that "the court should THE SECRET LIFE OF DANNY KAYE—Danny Kaye reports 10 p.m. :eep one age unfettered by on hit frip for UNICEP Thunday on J^SJTV. Channel^ 2, at_ he fears and limited vision :>f a n o t h e r." He lectures a ;reat deal and. unlike some >f his fellow justices, often Lineups Announced peaks on political matters. He spends his summers raveling throughout the For All-Star Game rvorld, mountain climbing and writing The starting lineups, excluding pitchers, have been about his travels*. -
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NAME STATISTIC NAME STATISTIC Jim Abbott No-Hitter 9/4/93 Ralph Branca 3x All-Star Bobby Abreu 2005 HR Derby Champion; 2x All-Star George Brett Hall of Fame - 1999 Tommie Agee 1966 AL Rookie of the Year Lou Brock Hall of Fame - 1985 Boston #1 Overall Prospect-Named 2008 Boston Minor Lars Anderson Tom Browning Perfect Game 9/16/88 League Off. P.O.Y. Sparky Anderson Hall of Fame - 2000 Jay Bruce 2007 Minor League Player of the Year Elvis Andrus Texas #1 Overall Prospect -shortstop Tom Brunansky 1985 All-Star; 1987 WS Champion Luis Aparicio Hall of Fame - 1984 Bill Buckner 1980 NL Batting Champion Luke Appling Hall of Fame - 1964 Al Bumbry 1973 AL Rookie of the Year Richie Ashburn Hall of Fame - 1995 Lew Burdette 1957 WS MVP; b. 11/22/26 d. 2/6/07 Earl Averill Hall of Fame - 1975 Ken Caminiti 1996 NL MVP; b. 4/21/63 d. 10/10/04 Jonathan Bachanov Los Angeles AL Pitching prospect Bert Campaneris 6x All-Star; 1st to Player all 9 Positions in a Game Ernie Banks Hall of Fame - 1977 Jose Canseco 1986 AL Rookie of the Year; 1988 AL MVP Boston #4 Overall Prospect-Named 2008 Boston MiLB Daniel Bard Steve Carlton Hall of Fame - 1994 P.O.Y. Philadelphia #1 Overall Prospect-Winning Pitcher '08 Jesse Barfield 1986 All-Star and Home Run Leader Carlos Carrasco Futures Game Len Barker Perfect Game 5/15/81 Joe Carter 5x All-Star; Walk-off HR to win the 1993 WS Marty Barrett 1986 ALCS MVP Gary Carter Hall of Fame - 2003 Tim Battle New York AL Outfield prospect Rico Carty 1970 Batting Champion and All-Star 8x WS Champion; 2 Bronze Stars & 2 Purple Hearts Hank -
Justin Verlander Named Tiger of the Year by the Detroit Chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: MEDIA RELATIONS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2011 313-471-2000 / tigers.com @Official_Tigers / @TigresdeDetroit facebook.com/tigers JUSTIN VERLANDER NAMED TIGER OF THE YEAR BY THE DETROIT CHAPTER OF THE BASEBALL WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA DETROIT – Justin Verlander has been selected as the Tiger of the Year for 2011 in voting by the Detroit Chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America. The righthander received 25 of the 26 first place votes, with the other vote going to first baseman Miguel Cabrera. Verlander led the American League with 24 wins, a 2.40 ERA and 250 strikeouts in 2011 to become just the second pitcher in franchise history to lead all three categories in a single season, joining Hal Newhouser, who accomplished the feat in 1945. He became the first American League pitcher to win the triple crown since Minnesota’s Johan Santana did so in 2006. In addition to leading the league in wins, ERA and strikeouts, Verlander also topped all league pitchers with an .828 winning percentage, 251.0 innings pitched, a .192 batting average against, 6.24 hits per nine innings and 8.39 baserunners per nine innings. Additional season superlatives included a 16-3 record following a Tigers loss. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, it marked the most wins by a pitcher following a team loss since Steve Carlton posted 19 such wins for the Philadelphia Phillies during the 1972 season. With 250 strikeouts, Verlander has now recorded 200-or-more strikeouts in three straight seasons, marking the longest streak by a Tigers pitcher since Mickey Lolich did so in six straight seasons from 1969-74. -
Revised Pages
Revised Pages The Best of Bacon: Select Cuts John U. Bacon https://www.press.umich.edu/9764639/best_of_bacon University of Michigan Press, 2018 The Voice of the Tigers May 5, 2010 The Detroit News If you grew up in Michigan in the seventies, as I did, Bob Seger sang the soundtrack to your summers, and Ernie Harwell provided the voice over. Who is Ernie Harwell? Well, if you were listening to a baseball game and the announcer somehow claimed to know that the fan who just caught the foul ball is from Calumet, Kalkaska, or Kalamazoo, it’s a safe bet you were tuned in to Ernie Harwell. Our family trips up north were always accompanied by Harwell’s com- fortable cadences flling the car. He didn’t simply broadcast baseball games. He turned them into stories. In Harwell’s world, a batter didn’t merely strike out. He was “called out for excessive window shopping,” or “caught standing there like the house by the side of the road.” Like millions of others, my love of baseball was fostered by Ernie Har- well. He covered more games than anyone in baseball history, including forty-one years’ worth for the Tigers. When Sports Illustrated drew up its all-time baseball dream team, it tapped Harwell as the radio announcer. In 1981, he became the frst active announcer to be inducted into the baseball Hall of Fame, and his voice has appeared in six flms, including classics like Cobb, Paper Lion, and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. “TV, and especially the instant replay, made the analyst the number one guy in the booth, not the play-by-play man,” Harwell told me. -
University Library 11
I ¡Qt>. 565 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PRINCIPAL PLAY-BY-PLAY ANNOUNCERS: THEIR OCCUPATION, BACKGROUND, AND PERSONAL LIFE Michael R. Emrick A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY June 1976 Approved by Doctoral Committee DUm,s¡ir<y »»itti». UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 11 ABSTRACT From the very early days of radio broadcasting, the descriptions of major league baseball games have been among the more popular types of programs. The relationship between the ball clubs and broadcast stations has developed through experimentation, skepticism, and eventual acceptance. The broadcasts have become financially important to the teams as well as the advertisers and stations. The central person responsible for pleasing the fans as well as satisfying the economic goals of the stations, advertisers, and teams—the principal play- by-play announcer—had not been the subject of intensive study. Contentions were made in the available literature about his objectivity, partiality, and the influence exerted on his description of the games by outside parties. To test these contentions, and to learn more about the overall atmosphere in which this focal person worked, a study was conducted of principal play-by-play announcers who broadcasted games on a day-to-day basis, covering one team for a local audience. With the assistance of some of the announcers, a survey was prepared and distributed to both announcers who were employed in the play-by-play capacity during the 1975 season and those who had been involved in the occupation in past seasons. -
We Have Met the Enemy Joshua 9:1-27 There's a Popular Television Game Show on ABC Called to Tell the Truth. the Original Vers
We Have Met the Enemy Joshua 9:1-27 There’s a popular television game show on ABC called To Tell the Truth. The original version of the show began in 1956 and ran through 1968. If you’ve not seen it, there are three contestants on a panel who are questioned by four celebrity judges. The central character on the panel has an usual job or has had a significant life experience of some kind. Two of the people on the panel are imposters and one is the actual person. The judges question each contestant and then have to decide which person they think is telling the truth. In many cases, the celebrity judges pick one of the imposters because they’re so convincing and skilled at deception. Have you ever been deceived by someone? I’m sure all of us have. Our study today in the book of Joshua brings us to chapter 9. In Joshua chapter 9, we find the story of a lie that Joshua and the children of Israel fell for. It was a lie that could have been detected had they sought God’s wisdom. But instead, they made a binding covenant with one of their enemies. What happened as a result of falling prey to this deception? What lessons can we learn about spiritual discernment and why it’s so vital in our walk with God? Let’s take a moment to put Joshua chapter 9 into context. In taking possession of the Land of Promise, the sequence of battles recorded in the first half of this narrative shows that Joshua’s first objective was to conquer the center part of the land. -
Outside the Lines
Outside the Lines Vol. III, No. 3 SABR Business of Baseball Committee Newsletter Summer 1997 Copyright © 1997 Society for American Baseball Research Editor: Doug Pappas, 100 E. Hartsdale Ave., #6EE, Hartsdale, NY 10530-3244, 914-472-7954. E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]. Chairman’s Letter Thanks to all who attended the Business of Baseball Committee’s annual meeting during the Louisville convention. Some developments from the convention: New Co-Chair. A hearty welcome to Claudia Perry, new Co-Chair of the Business of Baseball Committee. Claudia, who also co-chairs the Women in Baseball Committee, has held numerous SABR offices and is our only four-time Jeopardy champion. In real life she’s a pop music critic at the Newark Star-Ledger. Claudia can be reached at 311 York Street, Jersey City, NJ 07302, or at [email protected]. Proposed Business of Baseball Award. At our annual meeting, Don Coffin proposed that the Committee establish an annual award for excellence in research into the business of baseball. The award -- a cash prize of approximately $200, raised through sponsorship or donations -- would be given annually at the SABR convention. Don and I believe that such an award could raise the Committee’s visibility among academics and other non-SABRites researching in our field, attracting new members and encouraging non- members to send copies of their work to the Committee. Some details of Don’s proposal: • All research published or completed during the previous calendar year would be eligible. • Candidates need not be SABR members, and may be nominated by others or nominate themselves. -
DEC, 1956 ™ WM Ft« \Zdm\*Mmmwm \M&Wjm Coliseum Opener Jlb»I|H T-^^^A^ |N TH|S |SSUE TEST|NG MEMO WM L^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^W Football Final ]R£Im*>Lin'
DEC, 1956 ™ WM ft« \Zdm\*mmmwm \M&WJm Coliseum Opener jLB»i|H T-^^^A^ |N TH|S |SSUE TEST|NG MEMO WM L^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^W Football Final ]R£im*>lin' A THIS is THE MONTH of discarding the comes on the scene. And the change in old, faded calendars and bringing on the the students when it arrives. new, unmarked ones. It is the month of Dot Crosland's pride in the library and "Peace on Earth and Good Will to Men." the way she works at making it the best. It is a month of happiness mixed with a The taste of Varsity food. Even after touch of sadness as another year breathes 17 years we haven't grown tired of it. its last. In the spirit of December, here The way Fred Ajax handles the Tech are the people and things that have made placement service. And the respect that 1956 worth remembering for one man: the companies have for Tech because ot The way Dr. Paul Weber did his job him. as Tech's acting president for the past 11 The great pride that Shirley Clements months. And all of the midnight oil he and Diane Michel took in being Tech's burned doing double duty as Dean of first female graduates. Faculties and acting head man. Roane Beard's fierce devotion to Tech. The sad but beautiful simplicity of the The incredible amount of work that Anglican Burial of the Dead service be the Alumni Office's number 1 girl, Mary ing read over Blake Van Leer on a dis Peeks, can turn out in a given period. -
Class of 1947
CLASS OF 1947 Ollie Carnegie Frank McGowan Frank Shaughnessy - OUTFIELDER - - FIRST BASEMAN/MGR - Newark 1921 Syracuse 1921-25 - OUTFIELDER - Baltimore 1930-34, 1938-39 - MANAGER - Buffalo 1934-37 Providence 1925 Buffalo 1931-41, 1945 Reading 1926 - MANAGER - Montreal 1934-36 Baltimore 1933 League President 1937-60 * Alltime IL Home Run, RBI King * 1936 IL Most Valuable Player * Creator of “Shaughnessy” Playoffs * 1938 IL Most Valuable Player * Career .312 Hitter, 140 HR, 718 RBI * Managed 1935 IL Pennant Winners * Led IL in HR, RBI in 1938, 1939 * Member of 1936 Gov. Cup Champs * 24 Years of Service as IL President 5’7” Ollie Carnegie holds the career records for Frank McGowan, nicknamed “Beauty” because of On July 30, 1921, Frank “Shag” Shaughnessy was home runs (258) and RBI (1,044) in the International his thick mane of silver hair, was the IL’s most potent appointed manager of Syracuse, beginning a 40-year League. Considered the most popular player in left-handed hitter of the 1930’s. McGowan collected tenure in the IL. As GM of Montreal in 1932, the Buffalo history, Carnegie first played for the Bisons in 222 hits in 1930 with Baltimore, and two years later native of Ambroy, IL introduced a playoff system that 1931 at the age of 32. The Hayes, PA native went on hit .317 with 37 HR and 135 RBI. His best season forever changed the way the League determined its to establish franchise records for games (1,273), hits came in 1936 with Buffalo, as the Branford, CT championship. One year after piloting the Royals to (1,362), and doubles (249). -
H. Res. 1328 in the House of Representatives, U
H. Res. 1328 In the House of Representatives, U. S., May 11, 2010. Whereas William Earnest ‘‘Ernie’’ Harwell was born in Washington, Georgia, in 1918, graduated from Emory University, and began his career as a copy editor and sportswriter for the Atlanta Constitution and as a re- gional correspondent for The Sporting News; Whereas Ernie Harwell served four years in the United States Marine Corps during World War II, after which he announced games on the radio for the Atlanta Crack- ers of the Southern Association; Whereas Ernie Harwell became the only announcer in base- ball history to be traded for a player when the Brooklyn Dodgers acquired his services from the Atlanta Crackers in 1948; Whereas Ernie Harwell called baseball games for the Brook- lyn Dodgers through 1949, the New York Giants from 1950 to 1953, including his call of Bobby Thomson’s ‘‘shot heard ’round the world’’ in the 1951 National League pennant playoff game on NBC television, and the Baltimore Orioles from 1954 to 1959; Whereas in 1960, Ernie Harwell began calling games at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull as the ‘‘voice’’ of De- 2 troit Tigers baseball, until his retirement from broad- casting in 2002; Whereas Ernie Harwell called the 1984 World Series for the Tigers and WJR Radio, exclaiming ‘‘Here comes Hern- don, he’s got it! And the Tigers are the champions of 1984!’’; Whereas Ernie Harwell broadcast two Major League All-Star Games (1958 and 1961) and two World Series (1963 and 1968) for NBC Radio, numerous American League Championship Series and American League Division Se- ries for CBS Radio and ESPN Radio, the CBS Radio Game of the Week from 1992 to 1997, professional and college football, and the Masters Tournament of golf; Whereas Ernie Harwell was honored by the National Baseball Hall of Fame as the fifth broadcaster to receive its Ford C.