Dale Sveum

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Dale Sveum
Infielder
Born: November 23, 1963 (1963-11-23) (age 44)
Batted: Switch Threw: Right
MLB debut
May 12, 1986
for the Milwaukee Brewers
Final game
October 3, 1999
for the Pittsburgh Pirates
Career statistics
Batting Average     .236
Home Runs     69
RBI     340
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Dale Curtis Sveum [swaim] (born November 23, 1963 in Richmond, California) is a retired Major League Baseball player and the third base coach of the Milwaukee Brewers.

A talented athlete, Sveum was an All-State and All-American quarterback while attending Pinole Valley High School(CA), in addition to being a fine baseball player. Drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers in the 1st round (25th pick) of the 1982 amateur draft as a shortstop and third baseman, he turned down a baseball and football scholarship to Arizona State University in order to sign with the team.[citation needed] He went on to play 12 seasons in MLB, hitting .236 with 69 home runs.

Sveum's best season came in 1987, when he hit 25 home runs and drove in 95 runs while batting mostly in the ninth spot in the Brewers' lineup. On April 19 (Easter Sunday), he hit a walkoff home run at County Stadium to give Milwaukee a 6-4 victory over the Texas Rangers, their twelfth in a row. The moment is perhaps the greatest of Sveum's career, and the game one of the most remembered in Brewers history. Later that year, he enjoyed the best single game of his career when, on July 17, he hit three home runs and had six RBIs, leading his team to a 12-2 thumping of the California Angels.

The following season, Sveum had a career-threatening collision with teammate Darryl Hamilton in which his leg was broken. He missed the rest of the 1988 season and all of the 1989 season. He was never the same player after the incident, and was replaced on the Milwaukee roster by Gary Sheffield.

Prior to coaching in Milwaukee, Sveum was employed by the Boston Red Sox. He was third base coach in Boston for some time, including during the team's 2004 World Series victory. On October 30, 2007, it was announced that Sveum would move from his role as the Brewers bench coach to become the team's third base coach. [1]

Sveum and his wife Darlene have a daughter Britanne and a son Rustin.[citation needed] He is also the cousin of the two-time major league all star John Olerud.

[edit] References

  1. ^ ESPN - Simmons named Brewers' bench coach; Sveum back at third base - MLB

[edit] See also

[edit] Sources

Preceded by
Mike Cubbage
Red Sox Thirdbase Coach
2004-2005
Succeeded by
DeMarlo Hale