Mustang Daily, March 8, 1972
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Cal Poly in the MLB Draft
Cal Poly in the MLB Draft (Top 10 Rounds) First Round John Orton, C (25th Overall Selection) California Angels 1987 Mitch Haniger, OF (38th Overall Selection -- Compensatory) Milwaukee Brewers 2012 Garrett Olson, LHP (48th Overall Selection -- Compensatory) Baltimore Orioles 2005 Second Round Spencer Howard, RHP (45th Overall Selection) Philadelphia Phillies 2017 Matt Imhof, LHP (47th Overall Selection) Philadelphia Phillies 2014 Grant Desme, OF (74th Overall Selection) Oakland Athletics 2007 Third Round Dave Oliver, 3B (53rd Overall Selection) Cleveland Indians 1977 Brent Morel, 3B (86th Overall Selection) Chicago White Sox 2008 Mark Mathias, 2B (93rd Overall Selection) Cleveland Indians 2015 Logan Schafer, OF (94th Overall Selection) Milwaukee Brewers 2008 Chase Johnson, RHP (101st Overall Selection) San Francisco Giants 2013 Gary Daley, RHP (106th Overall Selection) St. Louis Cardinals 2006 Evan Reed, RHP (110th Overall Selection) Texas Rangers 2007 Fourth Round Ozzie Smith, SS (86th Overall Selection) San Diego Padres 1977 Lee Hancock, RHP (97th Overall Selection) Pittsburgh Pirates 1988 Nick Torres, OF (117th Overall Selection) San Diego Padres 2014 Kevin Correia, RHP (127th Overall Selection) San Francisco Giants 2002 Jimmy Shull, RHP (131st Overall Selection) Oakland Athletics 2005 Alex McKenna, OF (132nd Overall Selection) Houston Astros 2018 Erich Uelmen, RHP (135th Overall Selection) Chicago Cubs 2017 Bobby Crocker, OF (136th Overall Selection) Oakland Athletics 2011 Adam Buschini, INF (137th Overall Selection) Philadelphia -
2019 California League Record Book & Media Guide
2019_CALeague Record Book Cover copy.pdf 2/26/2019 3:21:27 PM C M Y CM MY CY CMY K 2019 California League Record Book & Media Guide California League Championship Rings Displayed on the Front Cover: Inland Empire 66ers (2013) Lake Elsinore Storm (2011) Lancaster JetHawks (2014) Modesto Nuts (2017) Rancho Cucamonga Quakes (2015) San Jose Giants (2010) Stockton Ports (2008) Visalia Oaks (1978) Record Book compiled and edited by Chris R. Lampe Cover by Leyton Lampe Printed by Pacific Printing (San Jose, California) This book has been produced to share the history and the tradition of the California League with the media, the fans and the teams. While the records belong to the California League and its teams, it is the hope of the league that the publication of this book will enrich the love of the game of baseball for fans everywhere. Bibliography: Baarns, Donny. Goshen & Giddings - 65 Years of Visalia Professional Baseball. Top of the Third Inc., 2011. Baseball America Almanac, 1984-2019, Durham: Baseball America, Inc. Baseball America Directory, 1983-2018, Durham: Baseball America, Inc. Official Baseball Guide, 1942-2006, St. Louis: The Sporting News. The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2007. Baseball America, Inc. Total Baseball, 7th Edition, 2001. Total Sports. Weiss, William J. ed., California League Record Book, 2004. Who's Who in Baseball, 1942-2016, Who's Who in Baseball Magazine, Co., Inc. For More Information on the California League: For information on California League records and questions please contact Chris R. Lampe, California League Historian. He can be reached by E-Mail at: [email protected] or on his cell phone at (408) 568-4441 For additional information on the California League, contact Michael Rinehart, Jr. -
2019 NWL Media Guide & Record Book
1 Northwest League of Profesional Baseball Northwest League Officers The Northwest League has now completed its 6th Mike Ellis, President season since its inception in 1955. Including its pre- 140 N. Higgins Ave #211, Missoula, MT 59802 decessor leagues, the NWL has existed since 1901. Because major-league base- Office Phone: (406) 541-9301 / Fax Number: (406) 543-9463 ball did not arrive on the west coast until the late 1950‘s, minor-league baseball e-Mail: [email protected] prospered in the Northwest. Cities like Tacoma played the same role Eugene, Salem-Keizer, and Spokane do today. 2019 will be Mike Ellis’ seventh year as President of the Northwest League. Ellis Portland was the first champion of the Pacific Northwest league which was has been involved in Minor League Baseball for more than 20 years. His baseball in existence in 1901-02. Butte won the first championship in the Pacific National experience includes the ownership of three baseball franchises, he has been the Vice President of two leagues, served a term on the MiLB Board of Trustees, and has served as member of MiLB committees. League which operated in 1903-04. The Northwestern League then came into As part of his team involvement he has negotiated the construction of two new stadiums . play and lasted until 1918. Vancouver won five championships with Seattle get- Ellis has degrees in Civil Engineering Technology and Urban Studies, and two years of ting four during this time. Everett shared the first crown with Vancouver while post-graduate study in Urban and Regional Planning. -
History of Toledo Baseball (1883-2018)
History of Toledo Baseball (1883-2018) Year League W L PCT. GB Place Manager Attendance Stadium 1883 N.W.L. 56 28 .667 - - 1st* William Voltz/Charles Morton League Park 1884 A.A. 46 58 .442 27.5 8th Charles Morton 55,000 League Park/Tri-State Fairgrounds (Sat. & Sun.) 18851 W.L. 9 21 .300 NA 5th Daniel O’Leary League Park/Riverside Park (Sun.) 1886-87 Western League disbanded for two years 1888 T.S.L. 46 64 .418 30.5 8th Harry Smith/Frank Mountain/Robert Woods Presque Isle Park/Speranza Park 1889 I.L. 54 51 .568 15.0 4th Charles Morton Speranza Park 1890 A.A. 68 64 .515 20.0 4th Charles Morton 70,000 Speranza Park 1891 Toledo dropped out of American Association for one year 18922 W.L. 25 24 .510 13.5 4th Edward MacGregor 1893 Western League did not operate due to World’s Fair, Chicago 1894 W.L. 67 55 .549 4.5 2nd Dennis Long Whitestocking Park/Ewing Street Park 18953 W.L. 23 28 .451 27.5 8th Dennis Long Whitestocking Park/Ewing Street Park 1896 I.S.L. 86 46 .656 - - 1st* Frank Torreyson/Charles Strobel 45,000 Ewing Street Park/Bay View Park (Sat. & Sun.) 1897 I.S.L. 83 43 .659 - - 1st* Charles Strobel Armory Park/Bay View Park (Sat. & Sun.) 1898 I.S.L. 84 68 .553 0.5 2nd Charles Strobel Armory Park/Bay View Park (Sat. & Sun.) 1899 I.S.L. 82 58 .586 5.0 3rd (T) Charles Strobel Armory Park/Bay View Park (Sat. -
Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Nominees, 2011 Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Council
Central Washington University ScholarWorks@CWU CWU Athletic Hall of Fame Sports Statistics and Histories 12-31-2011 Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Nominees, 2011 Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Council Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/cwu_hall_of_fame Recommended Citation Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Council, "Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Nominees, 2011" (2011). CWU Athletic Hall of Fame. Book 14. http://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/cwu_hall_of_fame/14 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Sports Statistics and Histories at ScholarWorks@CWU. It has been accepted for inclusion in CWU Athletic Hall of Fame by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@CWU. HALL OF FAME NOMINEES FOR 2011 PREVIOUSLY ELECTED/NOT INDUCTED NOMINEES _____ Robin MacAlpine, Wrestling Kristi Wilson (See attached). _____ Jeff Hillis, Swimming Marc Greeley, Baseball - Honorable mention All-American in 1988. Key figure on national qualifying 1988 baseball _____ Theartris Wallace, Basketball (By Veterans) team. Set CWU career leader in games, at bats, runs, hits, total bases, RBI, walks, stolen bases. Second in home runs. _____ Mark Brown, Track and Field Had .330 career average. Twenty years later still ranks second in games, third in at bats, second in runs, third in hits, ______ Bob Gregson, Swim Coach fourth in triples, third in home runs, third in total bases, second in RBIs, second in walks and first in stolen bases. (Note: Gregson refused induction. Hillis and Brown have had (See attached). travel or conflict issues. MacAlpine has not been located. Wallace preciously expressed no interest). -
Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Nominees, 2013 Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Council
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by ScholarWorks at Central Washington University Central Washington University ScholarWorks@CWU CWU Athletic Hall of Fame Sports Statistics and Histories 12-31-2013 Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Nominees, 2013 Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Council Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/cwu_hall_of_fame Recommended Citation Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Council, "Central Washington University Athletic Hall of Fame Nominees, 2013" (2013). CWU Athletic Hall of Fame. Book 16. http://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/cwu_hall_of_fame/16 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Sports Statistics and Histories at ScholarWorks@CWU. It has been accepted for inclusion in CWU Athletic Hall of Fame by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@CWU. HALL OF FAME NOMINEES FOR 2013 *Indicates re-nominated Art Hutton, Track and Field Coach (Nominated by Steve Slavens): CWU Track and Field Coach 1964-71 and Cross Country Coach 1963-70. .Led track team to Top 10 national PREVIOUSLY ELECTED/NOT INDUCTED finishes in 1966 (5th), 1967 (7th), 1968 (9th) and 1969 (8th). Those are the only Top 10 national finishes in school history. ______ Bob Gregson, Swim Coach Won District 1 titles in 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968 and 1971. No district meet was held in 1969 or 1970. .Coached _____ Jeff Hillis, Swimming 1970 cross country team to a sixth place national finish in its first-ever national meet appearance. .Steve Slavens writes _____ Theartis Wallace, Basketball (By Veterans) in his nomination: “In eight years of coaching track and field at Central Coach Hutton built a dominant force with his teams. -
Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter
PSA/DNA Full LOA PSA/DNA Pre-Certified Not Reviewed The Jack Smalling Collection Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter Cap Anson HOF Letter 7 Al Reach Letter Deacon White HOF Cut 8 Nicholas Young Letter 1872 Jack Remsen Letter 1874 Billy Barnie Letter Tommy Bond Cut Morgan Bulkeley HOF Cut 9 Jack Chapman Letter 1875 Fred Goldsmith Cut 1876 Foghorn Bradley Cut 1877 Jack Gleason Cut 1878 Phil Powers Letter 1879 Hick Carpenter Cut Barney Gilligan Cut Jack Glasscock Index Horace Phillips Letter 1880 Frank Bancroft Letter Ned Hanlon HOF Letter 7 Arlie Latham Index Mickey Welch HOF Index 9 Art Whitney Cut 1882 Bill Gleason Cut Jake Seymour Letter Ren Wylie Cut 1883 Cal Broughton Cut Bob Emslie Cut John Humphries Cut Joe Mulvey Letter Jim Mutrie Cut Walter Prince Cut Dupee Shaw Cut Billy Sunday Index 1884 Ed Andrews Letter Al Atkinson Index Charley Bassett Letter Frank Foreman Index Joe Gunson Cut John Kirby Letter Tom Lynch Cut Al Maul Cut Abner Powell Index Gus Schmeltz Letter Phenomenal Smith Cut Chief Zimmer Cut 1885 John Tener Cut 1886 Dan Dugdale Letter Connie Mack HOF Index Joe Murphy Cut Wilbert Robinson HOF Cut 8 Billy Shindle Cut Mike Smith Cut Farmer Vaughn Letter 1887 Jocko Fields Cut Joseph Herr Cut Jack O'Connor Cut Frank Scheibeck Cut George Tebeau Letter Gus Weyhing Cut 1888 Hugh Duffy HOF Index Frank Dwyer Cut Dummy Hoy Index Mike Kilroy Cut Phil Knell Cut Bob Leadley Letter Pete McShannic Cut Scott Stratton Letter 1889 George Bausewine Index Jack Doyle Index Jesse Duryea Cut Hank Gastright Letter -
2011 Ragin' Cajuns Baseball Record Book
2011 Ragin’ Cajuns Baseball Record Book timeline historical 1903: Louisiana’s first baseball team takes the field 1916: Louisiana hosts the Cincinnati Reds 1939: Baseball returns to UL after 11-year hiatus feared, to be an April fool, did not take place until the 1902 second and was indeed the played on this campus as 1916 SLII organizes baseball team yet. The Reds and the Blues played and at the end of the Cajuns Play Reds, Again The following is an account of a baseball team seventh inning, the score stood 6-6, but at the end of the March 24, 1916: A year later, the Cincinnati Reds again being organized on the SLII campus as told by the ninth, the score stood 15-11 in favor of the Reds. Saturday travelled to Lafayette to take on the boys of SLII on Friday, March 1, 1902 edition of the Lafayette Gazette: Now evening the Blues expected to reinstate themselves in March 24. According to a promo poster, “the game called that the football season is over, the boys at the Industrial the good graces of their supporters, but we are sorry to at 1:30 p.m. promptly on institute campus...teams begin Institute are about to organize a baseball team: in fact, announce that they were badly beaten by the Reds again practice at 12:30.” The poster also declared that “such stars the necessary equipment in the shape of masks, stomach that afternoon. The score stood 15-26, and yet the Reds as Toney Herzog, Wingo, Groh, Mollwitz and Clark WILL protectors, bats and balls, have already been ordered, and did not play their last inning. -
The BG News March 9, 1979
Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 3-9-1979 The BG News March 9, 1979 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News March 9, 1979" (1979). BG News (Student Newspaper). 3595. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/3595 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. Trustees increase room, board fees$25 increased by $15 a quarter. The basic By Tom Smith The board approved the merger of department chairmen and grievance Marso said there will be a transition senate of faculty in the College of Arts coupon plan will cost $205. the departments of Health and Physical Staff Reporter procedure changes. Both measures quarter this summer to help high school and Sciences. In other ""tr1"—. John Hernandez, Education and Physical Education and were approved by at least a two-thirds students adjust to college life. Roller responded that the observation The University Board of Trustee! maintenance worker and local Ohio Recreation into the new School of vote of the Faculty Senate. In a report presented by Jerry L. was his impression that he theoriasd yesterday Increased room and board Association of Public Schools Health, Physical Education and The enrollment report for winter Updegraff, director of alumni fund because the senate acts as an adviser to fees by at least 125 effective summer Employees (OAPSE) organizing Recreation (HPER). -
Cal Poly Magazine, Fall 1998
E ITOR'S OTES hen we pulled into the young vineyard roofs of other farmhouses and the blue Coast in the Santa Maria foothills we saw Range where our future hid. We were witnesses to W grapevines that showed only the hint the ebb and flow of Valley life, from the thick of a future crop. Slender canes curled lime-green winter fogs to the sudden blossoming of peach tendrils out the tall ends of protective yellow trees to the reseeding of the fragrant four-o'clocks grow tubes. Yet as the tubes were removed for around our deck. our photographer, I felt the old promise of One morning a coyote came trotting toward fall harvest. us as we ate breakfast, stopping to lift his nose [ was swept back to the San Joaquin before he turned and melted into the shadows Valley, where my husband and I lived for behind our shed. Another day a cottontail moved several years on a small family ranch through the violet shade of a summer vine. south of Fresno. The grapes there were Cinnamon teal ducks swam in a pond across the grown for raisins, not wine, and the road and bluejays argued in the English walnut vines were decades-old, but the covenant of trees overarching our yard. One January first a harvest was the same. shining pheasant heralded the new year. Daily we We knew the black stumps would leaf out in saw mother quail and their babies hurry by like a spring surprise, grow lush over the summer, pull toys and every evening at sunset we watched and by late August hang heavy with Thompson a great horned owl fly from a eucalyptus grove to Seedless grapes. -
2011 Louisiana Baseball Record Book
2011 Louisiana Baseball Record Book 2011 Louisiana Baseball Quick Facts Table of Contents University Information Name _______________________________________________ University of Louisiana 2010 Season in Review ..... 1-5 Location ____________________________________________________ Lafayette, La. Founded ___________________________________________________________1898 Season Notebook .............................1 Enrollment _______________________________________________ 16,763 (Fall 2010) Nickname ___________________________________________________ Ragin’ Cajuns Season Results ...................................2 Colors ________________________________________ Vermilion (PMS 193) and White Affiliation _________________________________________________ NCAA Division I Individual Stats .................................3 Conference ______________________________________________________ Sun Belt Miscellaneous Stats .........................4 President ______________________________________________ Dr. E. Joseph Savoie Interim Director of Athletics _____________________________________Scott Farmer Sun Belt Standings/Stats ...............5 Ticket Office Phone __________________________________________ (337) 265-2100 Web Site ____________________________________________ www.RaginCajuns.com Records ............................ 6-15 Ballpark Information Name ______________________________________________ M.L. “Tigue” Moore Field Individual Records .......................6-7 Surface _______________________________________ ProGrass Synthetic Turf -
1979 Topps Baseball Card Checklist+A1
1979 Topps Baseball Card Checklist+A1 1 Batting Leaders (Rod Carew/Dave Parker) 2 Home Run Leaders (George Foster/Jim Rice) 3 RBI Leaders (Jim Rice/George Foster) 4 Stolen Base Leaders (Ron LeFlore/Omar Moreno) 5 Victory Leaders (Ron Guidry/Gaylord Perry) 6 Strikeout Leaders (Nolan Ryan/J.R. Richard) 7 ERA Leaders (Ron Guidry/Craig Swan) 8 Leading Firemen (Rich Gossage/Rollie Fingers) 9 Dave Campbell 10 Lee May 11 Marc Hill 12 Dick Drago 13 Paul Dade 14 Rafael Landestoy 15 Ross Grimsley 16 Fred Stanley 17 Donnie Moore 18 Tony Solaita 19 Larry Gura 20 Joe Morgan 21 Kevin Kobel 22 Mike Jorgensen 23 Terry Forster 24 Paul Molitor 25 Steve Carlton 26 Jamie Quirk 27 Dave Goltz 28 Steve Brye 29 Rick Langford 30 Dave Winfield 31 Tom House 32 Jerry Mumphrey 33 Dave Rozema 34 Rob Andrews 35 Ed Figueroa 36 Alan Ashby 37 Joe Kerrigan 38 Bernie Carbo 39 Dale Murphy 40 Dennis Eckersley 41 Twins Team 42 Ron Blomberg 43 Wayne Twitchell Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 44 Kurt Bevacqua 45 Al Hrabosky 46 Ron Hodges 47 Fred Norman 48 Merv Rettenmund 49 Vern Ruhle 50 Steve Garvey 51 Ray Fosse 52 Randy Lerch 53 Mick Kelleher 54 Dell Alston 55 Willie Stargell 56 John Hale 57 Eric Rasmussen 58 Bob Randall 59 John Denny 60 Mickey Rivers 61 Bo Diaz 62 Randy Moffitt 63 Jack Brohamer 64 Tom Underwood 65 Mark Belanger 66 Tigers Team 67 Jim Mason 68 Joe Niekro 69 Elliott Maddox 70 John Candelaria 71 Brian Downing 72 Steve Mingori 73 Ken Henderson 74 Shane Rawley 75 Steve Yeager 76 Warren Cromartie 77 Dan Briggs 78 Elias Sosa 79 Ted Cox 80 Jason Thompson