Portal:Baseball
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Baseball, at both the professional and amateur levels, is popular in North America, Central America, parts of South America, parts of the Caribbean, and East Asia. The modern version of the game developed in North America during the eighteenth century. The consensus of historians is that it evolved from earlier bat-and-ball games, such as rounders, brought to the continent by British and Irish immigrants. By the late nineteenth century, baseball was widely recognized as the national sport of the United States. The game is sometimes referred to as hardball to differentiate it from similar sports such as softball. (more...)
Robert William Meusel (July 19, 1896 – November 28, 1977) was an American left and right fielder in Major League Baseball who played eleven seasons from 1920 to 1930, all but the last for the New York Yankees. He was best known as a member of the Yankees championship teams of the 1920s, nicknamed the "Murderers' Row", during which time the team won its first six American League pennants and first three World Series titles.
Meusel, noted for his strong throwing arm in the outfield, batted fifth behind Baseball Hall of Famers Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig.[1] In 1925 he joined Ruth in becoming the second Yankee to lead the AL in either home runs (33), runs batted in (138) or extra base hits (79). Nicknamed "Long Bob" because of his 6 foot, 3 inch (1.91 m) stature, Meusel batted .313 or better in seven of his first eight seasons, finishing with a .309 career average; his 1,005 RBI during the 1920s were the fourth most by any major leaguer, and trailed only Harry Heilmann's total of 1,131 among AL right-handed hitters. Meusel ended his career in 1930 with the Cincinnati Reds. He hit for the cycle three times, a feat accomplished by only one other player previously and one since.
His older brother, Emil "Irish" Meusel, was a star outfielder in the National League during the same period, primarily for the New York Giants, who shared a stadium with the Yankees during part of their careers. He had a comparable career batting average (.310) but, unlike Bob, had a weak throwing arm which prevented him from being a great outfielder.[1] (more)
Portal:Baseball/Selected article/June, 2008
Portal:Baseball/Selected picture/June, 2008
- December 13, 2007: Former United States Senator George Mitchell releases a report detailing the use of banned substances by current and former Major League Baseball players. (MLB) (ESPN) (BBC)
- November 15, 2007: Major League Baseball player Barry Bonds is indicted by a federal grand jury in San Francisco for perjury and obstruction of justice, having allegedly lied under oath about his use of steroids. (AP via ESPN)
- November 6, 2007: The 2007 Baseball World Cup begins in Taiwan. It is scheduled to end November 18.
- October 28, 2007: The Boston Red Sox defeat the Colorado Rockies to complete a sweep and win the 2007 World Series.
- ...that Sidd Finch, an enigmatic New York Mets pitching prospect with a 103 miles-per-hour fastball, was a creation of journalist George Plimpton? Sports Illustrated ran a story on Finch as part of an April Fools Day hoax in 1985.
- ...that the St. Paul Saints, a team in the independent American Association known for their over the top promotions, are owned in part by the son of Bill Veeck?
- ...that Disco Demolition Night was a promotional stunt held between the two games of a doubleheader between the Chicago White Sox and the Detroit Tigers, where fans were asked to bring disco records that would then be blown up? Spectators stormed the field, and the White Sox were forced to forfeit the second game due to safety concerns.
- ...that before joining the St. Louis Cardinals, Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Gibson played one season of basketball for the Harlem Globetrotters?
- We are and have been traveling along a fictitious prosperity for the last two or three years, and the sooner we step down the better it will be for the game and everybody concerned. Next season may not be so good for the owners. Good times have affected their heads and they are unconsciously doing baseball an almost irreparable injury by inflating the price on players as they have this year. There is likely to be a slump in baseball and then some of the owners will wish they had kept the strings tied to their pocketbooks. — American League President Ban Johnson, December 24, 1922.
- When [Scott] Boras talks to Tom Hicks, does he first have to enter a PIN number? — Los Angeles Times sportswriter Mike DiGiovanna, on free agency negotiations subsequent to the 2006 Major League Baseball season betwixt the two, respectively a sports agent and the owner of the Texas Rangers, theretofore collective brokers of US$383 million in contracts
- If you're going to play at all, you're out to win. Baseball, board games, playing Jeopardy!, I hate to lose. — New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter, pictured at right, on winning
- Expand a baseball-related stub.
- Help the Players task force by adding Template:Infobox MLB player to active players' articles.
- Rank an unassessed baseball article.
WikiProject Baseball
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Wikipedia:WikiProject Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
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WikiProject Boston Red Sox
- Basics: Rules - Field positions - Equipment - Ballparks - Baseball statistics - Manager - Umpire (more...)
- History: Origins - History in the United States - History outside the United States - Negro League baseball (more...)
- Players: Babe Ruth - Sadaharu Oh - Jackie Robinson - Roger Clemens - Satchel Paige - Cap Anson (more...)
- Teams: New York Yankees - Cuba national team - Pittsburgh Crawfords - San Francisco Seals (more...)
- Leagues: Major League Baseball - Nippon Professional Baseball - Federal League - New York - Penn League - Liga Mexicana de Beisbol (more...)

