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-   -   It has only ever happened once... (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=326468)

Gorditadogg 01-24-2023 06:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by doug.goodman (Post 2307707)
He did say 'started'...

Yep, you gotta pay attention to the details.

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doug.goodman 01-24-2023 06:44 PM

May 8, 1971

Two current members of the 3000 hit club hit home runs in the same game.

https://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/...080SFN1971.htm

tedzan 01-24-2023 07:07 PM

Ted Breitenstein pitched a No-Hitter in his first complete game as a rookie for the St. Louis Browns in 1891.
He faced exactly 27 batters, but it was not a Perfect No-Hitter, as he walked one batter.

Furthermore, at age 40 (near end of his career) he pitched another No-Hitter.
It was his 3rd No-Hitter during an 11-year Major League career.


http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...350xCOUPON.jpg
http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...50xCOUPONb.jpg


TED Z

T206 Reference
.

Fred 01-24-2023 07:11 PM

A pitcher (Armando Galarraga) has pitched 8-2/3 perfect innings and an ump (Jim Joyce) totally blows a call on the 27th batter to deny a deserving pitcher a perfect game.

I don't think it's occurred in the past or since.

MLB should give Galarraga the perfecto. If reviews were allowed to turn over the play in the past, then this wouldn't have happened. Yeah, I know, but what about all the other blown calls? Well, this one was an especially screwed up call.

guy3050 01-24-2023 07:23 PM

1 Attachment(s)
fastest no-hitter by MLB team, Bill Stoneman throws a No-hitter in just the 9th game of The Montreal Expos history

Yoda 01-24-2023 08:57 PM

Son Larsen pitches a perfect game in the 1956 WS.

Casey2296 01-24-2023 09:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fred (Post 2307750)
A pitcher (Armando Galarraga) has pitched 8-2/3 perfect innings and an ump (Jim Joyce) totally blows a call on the 27th batter to deny a deserving pitcher a perfect game.

I don't think it's occurred in the past or since.

MLB should give Galarraga the perfecto. If reviews were allowed to turn over the play in the past, then this wouldn't have happened. Yeah, I know, but what about all the other blown calls? Well, this one was an especially screwed up call.

Jim Joyce had the class to apologize for the blown call.

It's only happened once, an umpire apologizing.

Gorditadogg 01-24-2023 10:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Casey2296 (Post 2307800)
Jim Joyce had the class to apologize for the blown call.



It's only happened once, an umpire apologizing.

Haha. You win the thread.

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cammb 01-25-2023 03:27 PM

In 2012, zack greinke started three consecutive games. Was thrown out of game in the first game in the first inning. Came back next day to pitch and lasted a couple of innings. All star break came . Started the next game after all star break

Fred 01-25-2023 05:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Casey2296 (Post 2307800)
Jim Joyce had the class to apologize for the blown call.

It's only happened once, an umpire apologizing.

Now that is funny! :p

cgjackson222 02-01-2023 08:09 PM

On September 13, 1936, Bob Feller, just 17 at the time, struck out 17 against the Philadelphia Athletics, setting the American League record.

It was the only time someone struck out his age in the in the American League.

Kerry Wood would later strikeout 20 as a 20 year old for the Cubs in 1998, the only time a pitcher would strike out his age in the National League.

Aaron Seefeldt 02-01-2023 10:30 PM

On April 28, 1989 Mitch Williams, of the Cubs, entered the 9th inning with 2 outs and a 3-1 lead over the Padres. He proceeded to pick a runner off 2nd without throwing a pitch.

Williams is the only player in MLB history to record a save without throwing a pitch.

I was watching the game on WGN and thought it was pretty cool.

TheBig6 02-01-2023 10:42 PM

In 1963 pitching for the Colt 45’s Ken Johnson is only pitcher to pitch a complete 9 inning game No-Hitter and lose 1-0

Aaron Seefeldt 02-01-2023 11:07 PM

On June 12, 1970 Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Doc Ellis threw a no hitter while tripping on LSD. He walked 8 men and hit a batter.

cgjackson222 02-02-2023 04:53 AM

Only one switch-hitter managed to hit .300 from both sides of the plate in his career.
Chipper Jones hit .304 from his natural right side, and .303 from the left.

His idol Mickey Mantle hit .330 from his natural right, but .281 from the left.

doug.goodman 02-02-2023 10:03 PM

1 Attachment(s)
On May 18, 1988 Elrod Hendricks managed a team during a regular season major league game, for the first and only time.

Why he signed this lineup card the next day when Frank Robinson is credited as the manager is anybody's guess.

Yoda 02-03-2023 11:25 AM

I believe that the first HR in the old Yankee Stadium was hit by none other than Casey Stengel and it was an inside the park dinger.

doug.goodman 02-03-2023 01:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 2310714)
I believe that the first HR in the old Yankee Stadium was hit by none other than Casey Stengel and it was an inside the park dinger.

Wrong you are.

Not Stengel it was.

Ruth it was.

Tabe 02-03-2023 01:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2278776)
. And it was also the only time in history, to my knowledge, Ty Cobb ever appeared in a ML type/level game in anything other than a Tiger's uniform.
.

I'm pretty sure Ty didn't wear Tigers jerseys during his two years with Philadelphia ;)

Eric72 02-03-2023 02:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 2310714)
I believe that the first HR in the old Yankee Stadium was hit by none other than Casey Stengel and it was an inside the park dinger.

"...He did so in Game One of the 1923 Series, in the ninth inning, to give the New York Giants the victory over the Yankees. This gave Stengel the distinction of having hit the first postseason home run in the new Yankee Stadium..."

As Casey would have said, "you can look it up."

Source: sabr.org

https://sabr.org/gamesproj/game/may-...gainst-braves/

tedzan 02-03-2023 02:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 2310714)
I believe that the first HR in the old Yankee Stadium was hit by none other than Casey Stengel and it was an inside the park dinger.


John

You are partially correct.

In 1923, Stengel played with the N.Y. Giants....and, he did hit the 1st HR in Yankee Stadium....in the World Series that year.


https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...ngel%20_3_.jpg


TED Z

T206 Reference
.

tedzan 02-03-2023 03:00 PM

The NUMBERS on the auxiliary Scoreboard in this picture tells the whole story......


https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...photoAutog.jpg



TED Z

T206 Reference
.

doug.goodman 02-03-2023 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eric72 (Post 2310787)
"...He did so in Game One of the 1923 Series, in the ninth inning, to give the New York Giants the victory over the Yankees. This gave Stengel the distinction of having hit the first postseason home run in the new Yankee Stadium..."

As Casey would have said, "you can look it up."

Look it up you could

LeftHandedDane 02-03-2023 05:01 PM

Not sure if its ever been done again but Bruce Sutter blew a save twice in the same game (the famous Ryne Sandberg game in 1984), giving up game-tying HR's to Ryno in the 9th and 10th innings.

BobC 02-03-2023 10:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LeftHandedDane (Post 2310848)
Not sure if its ever been done again but Bruce Sutter blew a save twice in the same game (the famous Ryne Sandberg game in 1984), giving up game-tying HR's to Ryno in the 9th and 10th innings.

Is that possible? I would think after having blown a save, if his team then came back to take the lead, Sutter was now in line not for a save, but for a win. So, if he blew the lead a second time, I would think that gives him a loss, not another blown save.

brianp-beme 02-04-2023 12:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2274681)
Johnny Burnett is the only MLB player to get 8 hits in a game, an 18 inning contest in 1932.

He's also the only one to get 9 hits in a game.

Late to the party, but pretty impressive for a player that, as far as I know, has his only card during his playing days in the 1934 Al Demaree set. As a shortstop and third baseman that played in 129 games for the Indians in the 1932 season and batted .297 in over 500 at bats, you would think he would have at least snuck into the 1933 Goudey set.

Brian

Aaron Seefeldt 02-04-2023 09:50 AM

Baseball legend, Rickey Henderson, wanted to remind himself he “made it.”

He wanted, daily, to walk past the check for $1 million – from the Oakland A’s – marking the point his life changed forever.

And not just because of the amount of money, but because of the validation the check represented.

So he framed the check.

As in, he framed the check and didn’t cash it.

Seriously. He didn’t cash the million-dollar check. He put it in a frame, hung it on the wall, and didn’t think much more about it.

It didn’t take long for the A’s finance department to catch the extra million bucks that wasn’t balancing in their checkbooks and trace it back to Rickey. They reached out and talked him into depositing the original and keeping a photocopy on the wall. He obliged.

BobbyStrawberry 02-04-2023 02:31 PM

About to happen for the first time: The SF Giants open the season at the NY Yankees (!?)

Leon 02-08-2023 01:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aaron Seefeldt (Post 2311009)
Baseball legend, Rickey Henderson, wanted to remind himself he “made it.”

He wanted, daily, to walk past the check for $1 million – from the Oakland A’s – marking the point his life changed forever.

And not just because of the amount of money, but because of the validation the check represented.

So he framed the check.

As in, he framed the check and didn’t cash it.

Seriously. He didn’t cash the million-dollar check. He put it in a frame, hung it on the wall, and didn’t think much more about it.

It didn’t take long for the A’s finance department to catch the extra million bucks that wasn’t balancing in their checkbooks and trace it back to Rickey. They reached out and talked him into depositing the original and keeping a photocopy on the wall. He obliged.

I have forgotten a 20 in my pocket but....
.

nat 02-08-2023 02:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fred (Post 2307750)
A pitcher (Armando Galarraga) has pitched 8-2/3 perfect innings and an ump (Jim Joyce) totally blows a call on the 27th batter to deny a deserving pitcher a perfect game.

I don't think it's occurred in the past or since.

MLB should give Galarraga the perfecto.


I think it's better that they don't. Because of the terrible call, baseball fans aren't going to forget Armando Galarraga. He's got (a tiny slice of) immortality. But if they retroactively give him the perfecto, he's just another player who pitched a perfect game. I couldn't name half of the players who pitched a perfect game, but I sure know about Galarraga.

Gorditadogg 02-08-2023 04:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nat (Post 2312263)
I think it's better that they don't. Because of the terrible call, baseball fans aren't going to forget Armando Galarraga. He's got (a tiny slice of) immortality. But if they retroactively give him the perfecto, he's just another player who pitched a perfect game. I couldn't name half of the players who pitched a perfect game, but I sure know about Galarraga.

Are you really Dr. Molly Griswold?

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