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#1
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Yep, when the team went on strike for Cobbs suspension, he went in to bat to fill some holes.
__________________
Looking for 1880-1930s Detroit Tigers 1907 Wolverine News Postcards 1907 Dietsche Detroit Tigers Postcards 1907-1909 H.M. Taylor Detroit Tigers Postcards 1908 Brush Detroit Postcards 1908 Detroit Free Press Postcards 1909 Topping & Co Postcards 1935 M120 Detroit Free Press. Complete |
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#2
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I wish they still did this. I would love to see Donnie Baseball get up there and take some swings just to entertain the crowd for one moment.
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#3
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Minoso made a couple of guest appearances long after he retired.
__________________
Four phrases I have coined that sum up today's hobby: No consequences. Stuff trumps all. The flip is the commoodity. Animal Farm grading. |
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#4
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Sam Thompson returned for 8 games in 1906 -- at age 46...
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#5
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It seems like there are 2 types of players here. Coaches and Managers that stepped in when injuries, strikes or other problems struck and the team needed a warm body, and then players who came back as entertainment stunts. I can't think of a guy after Minoso of either type
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#6
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Don’s bench coach for Toronto so he would fit the bill.
The only guy I can think of who got a special at bat in recent memory was Adam Greenberg. |
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#7
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On a related note, there are those players whose gaps between MLB appearances were large due to many years of toil in the minors. Millard "Dixie" Howell, Clay Touchstone and Al Epperly to name a few.
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#8
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Charles Bender pitched an inning for the White Sox in 1925, eight years after his retirement. He was their pitching coach at the time and the game was part of a doubleheader due to a rainout earlier that week. I'd guess he was just trying to keep his staff from overwork.
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"When the seagulls follow the trawler, it's because they think sardines will be thrown into the sea. Thank you very much." -Eric Cantona |
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#9
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At the beginning of the twentieth century, the coaches' boxes were manned by players who were not in the game that day, or sometimes by the manager. When John McGraw hired Arlie Latham and Wilbert Robinson to be non-playing coaches in 1909, he had to add them to the team roster along with the players; there was not a separate roster for the manager and coaches. This situation persisted for years as more teams hired coaches who were generally not expected to play. All of these coaches could enter a game when needed, or as a lark at the end of the season.
Last edited by RUKen; 06-23-2023 at 09:53 AM. |
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#10
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Raphael Palmeiro made a comeback attempt a few years ago (2019). He had a .919 OPS in independent ball in 31 games.
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