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lunes, 16 de junio de 2014
Actuación de los venezolanos. Domingo de 4 jonrones
Asdrúbal Cabrera será el próximo en la lista del millar de hits
Martín Prado llegó a la cantidad el fin de semana y es escoltado en el listado histórico por Juan Rivera (950), pero el outfielder de Guarenas está fuera del beisbol organizado y no hay señales de que vaya a recibir un contrato de grandes ligas en 2014.
Elvis Andrus, con 865, viene después de Cabrera.
Esta es la lista completa con los 26 venezolanos que han llegado al millar de hits en las grandes ligas (no incluye los juegos del domingo):
2.877 Omar Vizquel
2.677 Luis Aparicio
2.460 Bob Abreu (*)
2.333 Andrés Galarraga
2.326 David Concepción
2.156 Magglio Ordóñez
2.076 Miguel Cabrera (*)
1.764 Oswaldo Guillén
1.562 Manny Trillo
1.560 Víctor Martínez (*)
1.546 César Tovar
1.532 Edgardo Alfonzo
1.503 Melvin Mora
1.418 Alex González (*)
1.354 Marco Scutaro (*)
1.345 Ramón Hernández (*)
1.331 Carlos Guillén
1.302 Antonio Armas
1.212 Omar Infante (*)
1.199 Alfonso Carrasquel
1.122 Víctor Davalillo
1.103 César Izturis (*)
1.070 Luis Salazar
1.044 Miguel Cairo
1.005 José López (*)
1.000 Martín Prado (*)
(*) Continúan activos en el beisbol profesional
Today in Baseball History: June 16th
| 1996 On June 16, 1996, legendary broadcaster Mel Allen dies at the age of 83. Allen called New York Yankee games from 1939 to 1964, and later narrated the long-running television show, This Week in Baseball. In 1978, Allen received the Hall of Fame's Ford C. Frick Award for broadcasting excellence. |
| 1991 On June 16, 1991, Atlanta Braves speedster Otis Nixon sets a National League record and ties the major league mark by stealing six bases against the Montreal Expos. Nixon matches the record set by Hall of Famer Eddie Collins in 1912. Nixon also picks up three hits in Atlanta's 7-6 loss. |
| 1986 On June 16, 1986, the Baltimore Orioles trade seemingly over-the-hill pitcher Dennis Martinez to the Montreal Expos for a player to be named. Martinez will go on to win 100 games for Montreal over the next eight years and will eventually become the winningest pitcher among all Latin Americans. |
| 1978 On June 16, 1978, Tom Seaver hurls the first no-hitter of his brilliant career. Seaver strikes out three and walks three as the Cincinnati Reds halt the St. Louis Cardinals, 4-0. Seaver had barely missed pitching no-hitters on three previous occasions, losing the bid each time in the ninth inning. |
| 1971 On June 16, 1971, the Oakland A's hit five solo home runs in a 5-1 victory over the Washington Senators. Powerful first baseman Mike Epstein bangs out home runs in his first two at-bats, giving him homers in four straight at-bats over two games. |
| 1962 On June 16, 1962, an injured Mickey Mantle returns after a one-month layoff and hits a dramatic three-run pinch-hit home run in the eighth inning. Although Mantle's blast gives the New York Yankees a 9-7 lead, the Cleveland Indians come back to win the game in the ninth on a home run by Jerry Kindall |
| 1940 On June 16, 1940, a disgruntled group of Cleveland Indians players petitions owner Alva Bradley to fire Oscar Vitt as the team's manager. Bradley turns down the players' request, but eventually watches the team lose its hold on first place during the final weeks of the regular season |
| 1938 On June 16, 1938, the St. Louis Browns walk Boston Red Sox star Jimmie Foxx all six times he comes to the plate. The Browns' decision to pitch carefully to Foxx does not prevent the Red Sox from winning the game, 12-8. |
| 1924 On June 16, 1924, George Kelly homers in his sixth consecutive game, tying a major league record. Kelly, a slugging first baseman on several pennant-winning teams, is elected to the Hall of Fame in 1973. |
| 1916 On June 16, 1916, Tom Hughes of the Boston Braves pitches a no-hitter against the Pittsburgh Pirates, winning the game, 2-0. Six years earlier, Hughes had pitched no-hit ball for nine innings, only to allow a hit in the 10th inning and then lose the game in the 13th. |
domingo, 15 de junio de 2014
Today in Baseball History: June 15th
| 1983 On June 15, 1983, the New York Mets acquire first baseman Keith Hernandez from the St. Louis Cardinals for pitchers Neil Allen and Rick Ownbey. The onetime MVP will help the Mets win the World Series in 1986. |
| 1977 On June 15, 1977, the New York Mets trade franchise pitcher Tom Seaver just moments before the trading deadline. The Mets send Seaver to the Reds for four players: infielder Doug Flynn, outfielders Steve Henderson and Dan Norman, and pitcher Pat Zachry. Seaver will go on to win 75 games for the Reds in five-and-a-half seasons, and hurl his only no-hit game in a Cincinnati uniform. |
| 1976 On June 15, 1976, Oakland A's owner Charlie Finley sells three of his star players. Finley sends Joe Rudi and Rollie Fingers to the Boston Red Sox for $1 million apiece and Vida Blue to the New York Yankees for $1.5 million. Three days later, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn will void the moves, saying they are "not in the best interests of baseball." |
| 1976 On June 15, 1976, a game is rained out at the Houston Astrodome. The game is postponed when heavy rains and flooding prevent players from arriving at the dome. It's the first rainout in Astrodome history. |
| 1973 On June 15, 1973, former Atlanta Braves outfielder Tommie Aaron becomes the first black manager of a team located in the deep South. Aaron is named skipper of Savannah, which becomes the first Double-A team to employ an African-American manager |
| 1969 On June 15, 1969, the New York Mets acquire first baseman Donn Clendenon from the Montreal Expos for infielder Kevin Collins and pitchers Steve Renko, Bill Carden, and Dave Colon. Clendenon will hit 12 home runs over the second half of the season and help the Mets to their first world championship |
| 1964 On June 15, 1964, the St. Louis Cardinals make one of their best trades ever, acquiring outfielder Lou Brock from the Chicago Cubs for pitchers Ernie Broglio and Bobby Shantz and outfielder Doug Clemens. As a member of the Cardinals, Brock will set the all-time stolen base record and reach the 3,000-hit mark. |
| 1952 On June 15, 1952, the St. Louis Cardinals set a National League comeback record by rallying from an 11-0 deficit to post a 14-12 win. The Redbirds score seven runs in the fifth inning, three in the seventh, two in the eighth and two in the ninth to cap off the incredible comeback. |
| 1938 On June 15, 1938, Johnny Vander Meer of the Cincinnati Reds becomes the first and only pitcher in major league history to pitch two consecutive no-hitters. Vander Meer walks eight but allows no hits and no runs in a 6-0 win over the Brooklyn Dodgers. |
| 1938 On June 15, 1938, future Hall of Fame outfielder Billy Williams is born in Whistler, Alabama. Williams will hit .290 with 426 homers in his 18-year career,mostly spent with the Chicago Cubs. |
| 1902 On June 15, 1902, in a minor league game, Nig Clarke reportedly hits eight home runs for Corsicana against Texarkana. Because Sunday games were not allowed in Corsicana, the game was played at a much smaller field in Ennis, TX, where Clarke launched his homers over a short fence. Corsicana hit 21 homers in the game, winning 51-3. Ironically, Clarke hit just six homers in an eight-year major league career. |
Todos ganan en el megacambio de Luis Jiménez, dicen los gerentes
Resultados de Las Grandes Ligas 15/06/2014
Cubano Martín decide victoria de Rangers en la 9na
Kazmir, Oakland mantuvieron a raya bates de N.Y.
Haren conduce triunfo de Dodgers sobre D-backs
Calhoun decide victoria de Angelinos en la 13ma
Braun ayuda a Gallardo, Milwaukee a vencer a Rojos
Cardenales se imponen a Strasburg, Nacionales
Piratas sonaron 18 hits en victoria sobre los Marlins
Hahn lideró a los Padres en blanqueada de Mets
Domínguez, González impulsan a los Astros vs. Rays
Suárez lució en paliza de Tigres sobre Minnesota
HR dentro del campo de Barnes hizo ganar a Rockies
Indios remontaron para doblegar a Medias Rojas
Norris y Davis guiaron a Orioles sobre los Azulejos
Rollins impone marca de hits en victoria de Filis
Duffy condujo a los Reales a su sexto triunfo al hilo
sábado, 14 de junio de 2014
Don Mattingly dice que falta química
Es una de las razones por la que los Dodgers no han despegado
Con récord de 31-30, el equipo de la nómina más alta en la historia de las Grandes Ligas, los Dodgers de Los Ángeles, se encuentran con problemas de química. Así lo indicó el dirigente, Don Mattingly.
"Podemos tener un día aquí y un día allá, pero no se ha sentido como un verdadero equipo a estas alturas", comentó Mattingly. "Hemos hablado de este en muchas ocasiones con distintos jugadores. Reconocemos que no está sucediendo", agregó.
Los Dodgers comenzaron la temporada con salario de $239 millones, la cifra más alta en la historia de la MLB. Se encuentran ocho juegos detrás de los Gigantes de San Francisco, quienes son los líderes de la división oeste de la Liga Nacional.

