my first announcer in 1950. still one of top 3 tiger announcers of all time.the guys that they got now could'nt carry his lunch bucket. thank you.
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| - Harry Heilmann
- Harry Heilmann
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| - my first announcer in 1950. still one of top 3 tiger announcers of all time.the guys that they got now could'nt carry his lunch bucket. thank you.
- Harry Heilmann was a major league baseball player and Hall of Famer.
- Harry Edwin Heilmann (* 3. August 1894 in San Francisco, Kalifornien; † 9. Juli 1951 in Southfield, Michigan) war ein US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler in der Major League Baseball. Sein Spitzname war Slug.
- Harry Edwin Heilmann (August 3, 1894 – July 9, 1951), nicknamed “Slug,” was a Major League Baseball player who played 17 season with the Detroit Tigers (1914, 1916-1929) and Cincinnati Reds (1930, 1932). Heilmann was a line drive hitter who won four American League batting crowns in 1921, 1923, 1925, and 1927. Prior to World War II, he was the only AL player other than Ty Cobb (11 titles) to win 4 or more batting titles. He and Ted Williams are the last two American League players to hit .400, Heilmann having accomplished the feat in 1923 with a batting average of .403 and Ted Williams in 1941 with .406 (In NL, Rogers Hornsby batted .400 3 times in the 1920s and Bill Terry batted .401 in 1930). Heilmann was considered the AL equivalent of Rogers Hornsby during his career - although he face
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| - San Francisco, Kalifornien
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| - US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler
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| - 1921(xsd:integer)
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- 1927(xsd:integer)
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abstract
| - Harry Edwin Heilmann (August 3, 1894 – July 9, 1951), nicknamed “Slug,” was a Major League Baseball player who played 17 season with the Detroit Tigers (1914, 1916-1929) and Cincinnati Reds (1930, 1932). Heilmann was a line drive hitter who won four American League batting crowns in 1921, 1923, 1925, and 1927. Prior to World War II, he was the only AL player other than Ty Cobb (11 titles) to win 4 or more batting titles. He and Ted Williams are the last two American League players to hit .400, Heilmann having accomplished the feat in 1923 with a batting average of .403 and Ted Williams in 1941 with .406 (In NL, Rogers Hornsby batted .400 3 times in the 1920s and Bill Terry batted .401 in 1930). Heilmann was considered the AL equivalent of Rogers Hornsby during his career - although he faced more premier hitters/sluggers in the American League. Heilmann’s career batting average of .342 is the 12th highest in Major League history. [1]. Heilmann was also an excellent slugger, ranking among the American League leaders in both slugging percentage and RBIs in 12 seasons. He is among the all-time Major League leaders in doubles with 542 (23rd all-time), triples with 151 (49th all-time) and RBIs with 1,539 (39th all-time). Heilmann played in 2,148 Major League games, including 1,518 as a right fielder and 448 as a first baseman. Heilmann played for the Cincinnati Reds in 1930 and part of 1932. He homered in every major league ball park he played in during his career. Other pre-expansion players to do it were Jeff Heath and Johynny Mize. He was elected to Hall of Fame by BBWAA along with Paul Waner in 1952 after his death in July, 1951.
- my first announcer in 1950. still one of top 3 tiger announcers of all time.the guys that they got now could'nt carry his lunch bucket. thank you.
- Harry Heilmann was a major league baseball player and Hall of Famer.
- Harry Edwin Heilmann (* 3. August 1894 in San Francisco, Kalifornien; † 9. Juli 1951 in Southfield, Michigan) war ein US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler in der Major League Baseball. Sein Spitzname war Slug.
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