On this day, I thought I will have a little fun and do a trivia question. Who has the most all time wins in MLB history among Latin American pitchers?
I will give the answer at the end here in order to give you all a time to think.
Got an idea?
Is it the only Latino pitcher in the Hall of Fame, Juan Marichal? Nope. The Dominican Dandy won 243 big league games in his career.
How about a sure fire Hall of Famer when he becomes eligible next year? Pedro Martinez is also the wrong answer. He won 219 career games.
Luis Tiant? Also wrong. The 3x time All Star and Red Sox World Series hero finished his career with 229 wins.
Fernando Valenzuela? Nope. The 6x time Dodger All Star won 173 games.
What about the active leader in this category? Bartolo Colon has 189 career wins and his 40 years old so he is unlikely to break the record.
The answer? It is none other than El Presidente, Dennis Martinez. The Nicaraguan born righthander won a total of 245 games.
His career spanned from 1976 to 1998 pitching primarily for the Baltimore Orioles, Montreal Expos and Cleveland Indians. The 4x time All Star also pitched a perfect game on July 28, 1991 against the Dodgers while pitching for the Expos and a World Series title in 1983 as an Oriole.
By the way, did you see what I did there? Having El Presidente as an answer to a trivia question today.
Monday, February 17, 2014
Sunday, February 16, 2014
In Memoriam: Jim Fregosi
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1991 Topps |
The younger generation of baseball fans will remember Jim Fregosi mostly as a manager, but he was a very good player also. His managerial career began in 1978 with the Angels and ended with Toronto after the 2000 season. His biggest success was with the Philadelphia Phillies as he led them to the National League pennant in 1993.
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1965 Topps |
Prior to this trade, Fregosi was one of the first stars of the expansion Los Angeles Angels. He was a six time All Star and a Gold Glove winner. For his accomplishments his uniform number 11 was retired by the team in 1998.
Friday, February 14, 2014
In Case You Missed It: Olbermann's Commentary on Jeter's Retirement
New York Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter announced on Wednesday that the 2014 season will be his last. There has been numerous commentaries and tributes on Jeter's career and the actual announcement. ESPN's Keith Olbermann did one of his own on his show. I think he did a nice job, so I will share it:
here
here
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
1991 Card of Week: 1991 BBM Hideo Nomo
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1991 BBM #379 |
The former Dodger All Star is now a Hall of Famer too. No, he was not elected in with Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine and Frank Thomas into Cooperstown's Hall of Fame, but was chosen for Japan's hall of fame in their 2014 class. Also a part of this group includes former Seattle Mariner closer Kazuhiro Sazaki and Koji Akiyama.
An oddity of having Nomo in Japan's hall of fame is that he only played five years in Japan and a total of twelve in MLB. His combined stats from the two major leagues puts him over 200 career wins and 3,000 strikeouts, but his impact reaches beyond just numbers. Congratulations Nomo san.
I
Thursday, February 6, 2014
In Memoriam: Ralph Kiner
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1950 Bowman |
Kiner's successes was partially contributed to fellow Hall of Famer Hank Greenberg, During Greenberg's only season as a Pirate and final one overall in the majors, he gave Kiner instruction in becoming a better hitter. Kiner's home run and strikeout numbers improved subsequently after Greenberg's tutoring. Kiner was also aided by a short left fence in old Forbes Field that became known as "Kiner's Korner".
Kiner is also famously known to author the quote, "Home run hitters drive Cadillacs, while singles hitters drive Fords."
He finished his career after short stays with the Indians and Cubs before embarking on a second career in baseball. He was hired to become an announcer for the expansion New York Mets team in 1962. He stayed in the Met broadcast booth through the 2013 season with his later years in a more limited capacity.
Ralph Kiner was a true baseball legend and lifer and will be missed.
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Happy 80th Birthday Hank Aaron
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1960 Topps |
Perhaps the greatest living Hall of Famer, Hank Aaron turns 80 years old today. On this day of celebration, I will give you all some fun facts you may or may not know about Mr. Aaron.
-Held career record of 755 home runs when he retired. Broke Babe Ruth's 714 mark in April of 1974 while geting racial and death threats from fans during his chase.
-He also holds career MLB records for RBIs (2,297), total bases(6.856) and extra base hits (1.477).
-Even though he hit 755 career homers, he never hit 50 in one season.
-Finished his career with 3,771 hits. If you take his 755 home runs away, he still has over 3,000
-Was 25 time All Star, another MLB record
-Is a 2x batting champion, 4x home run and RBI league leader each
-Won 3 Gold Gloves
-Won his only NL MVP and World Series in 1957
-his #44 uniform is retired for both Braves and Brewers
-1st ever player to play for Brewers to be inducted in baseball Hall of Fame
-teaming with younger brother, Tommie, holds record for career record for home runs as brothers (768)
-last active player in MLB history to have played in Negro Leagues.
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Card of Week: 2013 Panini Cooperstown Vin Scully
In my attempt to attain at least one card of each member of the baseball Hall of Fame, I concentrate on the former players only. I am not really interested in owners, executives, announcers and managers. But I made an exception with Vin Scully.
Not because of my fond memories of listening to him do NBC's Game of the Week with Joe Garagolia during my childhood, but mostly because he was the Grand Marshall of the 100th Tournament of Roses Parade this past January.
This is significant to me because this Rose Bowl pitted my alma mater, Michigan State against the Cardinal of Stanford University. One of the duties of being the Grand Marshall is that he/she flips the opening coin toss prior to the game. When I was watching this, it gave me a hunch that MSU would win the game. Scully called many Dodger games that involved former MSU greats Kirk Gibson, Steve Garvey and Ron Perranoski and felt this is all meant to be. When MSU won the coin toss, it reaffirmed my feeling for the outcome.
On the back of the each card in the set, it gives the line score of a game he participated in. For the Scully card, Game 1 of the 1988 World Series is featured. Of course, it quotes Scully's famous call on Gibson's dramatic walk off home run.
MSU did end up winning the game. Now whenever I look at this 2013 card of Vin Scully, I automatically think of MSU's 2013 Big Ten Championship season and 2014 Rose Bowl victory.
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