About: Al Lopez   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Born in Ybor City in Tampa, Florida, the son of a cigar factory worker, Lopez' baseball career began with the local team, the Tampa Smokers, in 1924. He broke into the major leagues briefly in 1928 with the Brooklyn Dodgers, and became their starting catcher in 1930. Over a career which ran until 1947, he played for the Dodgers (1928, 1930-1935), Boston Bees (1936-1940), Pittsburgh Pirates (1940-1946) and Cleveland Indians (1947). He compiled modest numbers, including 613 runs, 51 home runs, and 652 RBI and a .261 batting average. His best season was in 1933, when he hit .301, stole 10 bases, and finished 10th in National League MVP voting. In 1945, he surpassed Gabby Hartnett's record for career games as a catcher. The record stood until 1987, when Bob Boone broke it; Lopez' National Leag

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Al Lopez
  • Al Lopez
rdfs:comment
  • Alfonso Ramon „Al“ Lopez (* 20. August 1908 in Tampa, Florida; † 30. Oktober 2005 ebenda) war ein US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler und -manager in der Major League Baseball.
  • Born in Ybor City in Tampa, Florida, the son of a cigar factory worker, Lopez' baseball career began with the local team, the Tampa Smokers, in 1924. He broke into the major leagues briefly in 1928 with the Brooklyn Dodgers, and became their starting catcher in 1930. Over a career which ran until 1947, he played for the Dodgers (1928, 1930-1935), Boston Bees (1936-1940), Pittsburgh Pirates (1940-1946) and Cleveland Indians (1947). He compiled modest numbers, including 613 runs, 51 home runs, and 652 RBI and a .261 batting average. His best season was in 1933, when he hit .301, stole 10 bases, and finished 10th in National League MVP voting. In 1945, he surpassed Gabby Hartnett's record for career games as a catcher. The record stood until 1987, when Bob Boone broke it; Lopez' National Leag
dcterms:subject
GEBURTSORT
dbkwik:resource/Cb9o46QHfg4I1-prajyj-g==
  • Tampa, Florida
dbkwik:resource/Jc1HrjBXgkY-CWwynwSQng==
  • 2005-10-30(xsd:date)
ALTERNATIVNAMEN
  • Lopez, Alfonso Ramon
dbkwik:baseball/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:vereins/pro...iPageUsesTemplate
Name
  • Lopez, Al
Title
KURZBESCHREIBUNG
  • US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler und -manager
Before
Years
  • 1951(xsd:integer)
  • 1957(xsd:integer)
  • 1968(xsd:integer)
After
GEBURTSDATUM
  • 1908-08-20(xsd:date)
abstract
  • Alfonso Ramon „Al“ Lopez (* 20. August 1908 in Tampa, Florida; † 30. Oktober 2005 ebenda) war ein US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler und -manager in der Major League Baseball.
  • Born in Ybor City in Tampa, Florida, the son of a cigar factory worker, Lopez' baseball career began with the local team, the Tampa Smokers, in 1924. He broke into the major leagues briefly in 1928 with the Brooklyn Dodgers, and became their starting catcher in 1930. Over a career which ran until 1947, he played for the Dodgers (1928, 1930-1935), Boston Bees (1936-1940), Pittsburgh Pirates (1940-1946) and Cleveland Indians (1947). He compiled modest numbers, including 613 runs, 51 home runs, and 652 RBI and a .261 batting average. His best season was in 1933, when he hit .301, stole 10 bases, and finished 10th in National League MVP voting. In 1945, he surpassed Gabby Hartnett's record for career games as a catcher. The record stood until 1987, when Bob Boone broke it; Lopez' National League record was broken by Gary Carter in 1990. Lopez' largest contributions to the sport began in 1951, when he became the manager of the Cleveland Indians, a position he would hold until 1956. In 1954, the Indians won a then American League record 111 games (since broken by the 1998 New York Yankees and 2001 Seattle Mariners). In every other season he spent with the team, the Indians finished second to the Yankees. According to Hank Greenberg's autobiography (Greenberg was GM during Lopez' tenure with Cleveland). Lopez' resignation after the 1956 season was forced by Greenberg and the Cleveland stockholders. Lopez moved on to manage the Chicago White Sox in 1957 and carried his success over to his new team. As White Sox manager until 1965, he never had a losing season. The White Sox won the American League pennant in 1959 and finished in second place five times, never posting fewer than 82 victories. His 1954 and 1959 teams were the only non-Yankee clubs to win the AL pennant between 1949 and 1964. Lopez briefly returned to manage 47 games in 1968 for the White Sox and 17 games in 1969, then retired. His 1410 wins ranked 11th all-time upon his retirement, and his 840 wins with the White Sox still rank second in franchise history, behind Jimmy Dykes (899). Lopez was selected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1977 by the Veterans' Committee along with Joe Sewell and Amos Rusie. This marked the last time prior to 1995 that the Vets' picked more than 2 candidates in one election. In 1954, Al Lopez Field in his hometown of Tampa was named in his honor. He was later ejected from a spring training exhibition game at that field after yelling at an umpire. The Field was razed in 1989, and its former location is now the south end zone of Raymond James Stadium. Al Lopez Park, formerly Horizon Park north of the stadium, was renamed in his honor in 1992, and a statue of him was erected there. Lopez died in Tampa at the age of 97, just four days after the White Sox won the World Series for the first time in 88 years, in their first pennant-winning season since Lopez led the 1959 team. He had been hospitalized for a heart attack, suffered two days earlier at his son's home. He was the longest-lived member of the Baseball Hall of Fame, and the last living major leaguer to play in the 1920s.
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