Hank Greenberg’s American League RBI Record
Hall of Fame slugger Hank Greenberg wrote, “My goal in baseball was always RBIs, to break (Lou) Gehrig’s record of 184 RBIs.” Did he come closer than he thought to doing so?
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Hall of Fame slugger Hank Greenberg wrote, “My goal in baseball was always RBIs, to break (Lou) Gehrig’s record of 184 RBIs.” Did he come closer than he thought to doing so?
The New York Yankees’ Babe Ruth gazes towards the right field stands after hitting a ball in front of an unknown Boston Red Sox catcher and unknown umpire at Fenway Park. 1933-34. (Leslie Jones photo, courtesy of the Boston Public Library.) The ultimate comparison of sluggers in baseball occurs when a player is linked […]
On Friday, April 10, 1953, August Anheuser “Gussie” Busch Jr., head of the firm that purchased the St. Louis Cardinals from Fred Saigh less than two months earlier, announced that the Anheuser-Busch brewery had also purchased Sportsman’s Park for $1.1 million from Bill Veeck, the owner of St. Louis Browns. He said the park would […]
The Chicago White Sox of the early twentieth century provided the inspiration and the subject matter for three of America’s greatest novelists. JAMES T. FARRELL For most of his youth, Farrell lived with his grandmother and a maternal uncle in several neighborhoods, all close to Comiskey Park. He attended as many as 40 White […]
I was winding up another night in front of the sports microphone at Armed Forces Radio in Washington when the first bulletin of Lee Allen’s death came over the wire. My initial reaction, that night in May 1969, was one of sudden shock, and then of deep sadness for this unique man who had gone […]
Babe Ruth, right, battled fiercely with Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert and manager Miller Huggins over the years. (NATIONAL BASEBALL HALL OF FAME LIBRARY) He filled the ballpark with fans who craved to see him hit the long ball. His home runs forever changed the game from scientific baseball to power hitting, and he helped […]
Hilda Chester and her famous cowbell (NATIONAL BASEBALL HALL OF FAME LIBRARY) The New York Yankees have their Bleacher Creatures. The crosstown Mets had Karl “Sign Man of Shea” Ehrhardt, while “Megaphone Lolly” Hopkins was the super-fan of the Boston Red Sox and Braves. Cleveland Indians, Chicago Cubs, Detroit Tigers, and Baltimore Orioles rooters […]
“But then Clyde Sukeforth is an unusual fellow. He is a medium-sized, lithe-limbed chap with the expression of eternal youth in his sharp but regular features. He hails from up in the state of Maine and leads a rugged outdoor life the year round.” — Tommy Holmes1 Clyde Sukeforth shrugged off his importance to […]
Babe Ruth and Boston Braves executives in a Copley Plaza Hotel room, after signing with the Boston Braves, February 28, 1935. (l to r): Charles F. Adams, Babe Ruth, and Judge Emil Fuchs. (Leslie Jones photo, courtesy of the Boston Public Library.) When George Herman “Babe” Ruth arrived in St. Petersburg in 1935 for […]
Chicago White Sox pitcher Lucas Giolito trying out VR during spring training in 2016. (ARTURO PARDAVILA III / WIKIMEDIA COMMONS) A NEW KIND OF BATTING PRACTICE Mariano Rivera wasn’t always destined to be the greatest closer of all time. He entered the majors as an old rookie at age 25 and took a […]
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