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Thursday, February 16, 2012

GARY CARTER - 1954 - 2012

                                              Gary Carter dies at 57; baseball Hall of Famer

                                                                        1954 - 2012


                                                         garycarter.org                              mlb.com

Sunday, February 05, 2012

SPRING GAMES START WED. FEB. 29, 2012

DATES TO REMEMBER  - SPRING BALL IS ALMOST HERE!

February 12, 2012


Voluntary report date for pitchers, catchers and injured players (Oakland and Seattle)

February 17, 2012

Oakland and Seattle full squads may report

February 19, 2012

Voluntary report date for pitchers, catchers and injured players (all other clubs)

February 24, 2012

Full squads may report (all other clubs)

Mandatory report date for all players on Oakland and Seattle


February 29, 2012

First exhibition game, Florida State University vs. Philadelphia Phillies, Clearwater, Fla.


March 2, 2012

First Spring Training game, Seattle Mariners vs. Oakland Athletics, Phoenix

Mandatory report date for all players on remaining clubs

March 11, 2012

Last date to renew Major League contracts


March 19, 2012

Last day to place a player on unconditional release waivers and pay 30 days termination pay instead of 45 days

Last date to assign an injured player to a Minor League club, if applicable


March 26, 2012

Earliest date that a club may backdate a placement on the Major League 15-day disabled list


March 28-29, 2012

Japan Opening Series 2012, Tokyo

Seattle Mariners vs. Oakland Athletics
April 4, 2012

Opening Night, St. Louis Cardinals at Miami Marlins

April 5, 2012

Opening Day

WHO REALLY IS THE H.R. KING?

WHO REALLY IS THE SINGLE SEASON HOME RUN KING?

60 home runs in a single season has happened 18 times by 14 players. If all of them played 162 games the list might look like this.

PGA.....GP.....HR.....ADJ.....YEAR.....AGE.....BA.....PLAYER

.514.....140....72.....83.3.....1944.....32.....400....JOE BAUMAN
.504.....123....62.....81.7.....1926.....24.....376.....M. CLABOYGH

.492.....140....69.....79.6.....1948.....29.....404.....BOB CRUSE
.477.....153.....73....77.3.....2001.....36.....328.....BARRY BOND

.468.....141.....66....75.8.....1956.....23.....298.....DICK STUERT
.451....155.....70.....73.2.....1998.....34.....299.....M. MCGWIRE

.450....153.....69.....73.0.....1933.....34.....332.....JOE HAUSER
.442....140.....62.....71.9.....1956.....29.....293.....K. GUETTIER

.424....153.....65.....68.3.....1999.....35.....278.....M. MCGWIRE
.418....153.....64.....67.8.....1954.....25.....345.....B. LENNON

.416....144.....60.....67.5.....1956.....30.....327.....F. KENNEDY
.451....162.....66.....66.7.....1998.....29.....308.....SAMMY SOSA

.400....160.....64.....64.9.....2001.....32.....328.....SAMMY SOSA
.397....151.....60.....64.4.....1927.....30.....356.....BABE RUTH

.388....162.....60.....63.0.....1999.....30.....288.....SAMMY SOSA
.378....161.....61.....61.4.....1961.....26.....269.....ROGER MARI

.375....168.....63.....60.7.....1930.....31.....313.....JOE HAUSER
.304....197.....60.....49.2.....1925.....21.....355.....T. LAZZERI
ADJ. is the adjustment to a 162 game season.
PGA.(per game avg.)  X  162 = ADJ.

This chart shows the true comparisons of each of the 60 homers club members. The rankings are based on a 162 game season. I feel that the per game avg. is the better gage. You can see that LaZZeri played in a 205 game league, he hit 60 homers sure, but if he had stopped at 162 games he would only have had 49 or so home runs. Bonds may hold the record of 73 homers in a season but ranks third on the Per game list. Also notice that Sosa hit over 60 homers three times and that Kennedy’s Per Game Avg. was higher than all three of his seasons.

Organized Baseball only tracks leagues that play 140 games or more per season . Most minor leagues play about 144 games and the majors play 162.

Saturday, February 04, 2012

THE PULE - ALL SPORTS, ALL THE TIME

Dan and David Hoke now host this Webb show live on Monday and Friday at 4:00PM. You can hear all past shows at any time by clicking the link below.  David and Danny are my sisters sons and the grandsons of 60 homers member Forrest (Frosty) Kennedy, my dad.  CHECK IT OUT!

http://www.spreaker.com/show/the_daniel_...


The Pulse - All Sports, All the time!

Thursday, February 02, 2012

Friday, January 20, 2012

Our thoughts and prayers go out to Gary Carter

Baseball Hall of Famer Gary Carter has new tumors on his brain, his daughter announced Thursday on her website.  careingbridge.org/garycarter

Gary Carter was a name I grew up with. In high school we both ran track (high hurdles). I went to Fullerton High and Carter went to Sunny Hills High. One of my high school memories was when we ran against Sunny Hills at Fullerton and I won the race because Carter and David Kingman both went down at the same time and I passed them and won the race. My big claim to fame in high school was beating Carter and Kingman. After high school I followed both of their carriers into MLB. Carter became a bigger name around Fullerton when he got involved with local charities including the Boys and Girls Club of Fullerton.



Our thoughts and prayers go out to Gary Carter and his family in this trying time.





Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Former local player ‘Frosty’ remembered

Former local player ‘Frosty’ remembered


Posted: Tuesday, July 13, 2010 2:27 pm

A baseball player with Plainview ties has made a list of baseball greats.

Forrest "Frosty" Kennedy, who played for Plainview's minor league team in the 1950s, was included on Terry Cannon's list of All-Time Southland Baseball All-Stars.

The story appears on the Los Angeles Times' Web site, www.latimes.com.
Cannon is the executive director of the Baseball Reliquary, which celebrates pioneers and trailblazers, and often emphasizes cultural contributions made by ballplayers over statistical accomplishments. Therefore, his list of all-stars includes both well-known and obscure figures.

Cannon's information on Kennedy, who was born in Los Angeles, says he "never played in the major leagues, but was considered by many to be the Babe Ruth of the minor leagues.
"He hit an astounding 60 home runs for Plainview, Texas, in the Southwestern League in 1956. No one in the majors has hit .400 since Ted Williams in 1941; Kennedy hit .410 at Riverside in the Sunset League in 1949 and .410 at Plainview in 1953.

"Kennedy had a few chances to go up to the bigs, but he opted to stay in the minors because he was making decent money and ‘in the little towns where I played, the people always wanted to buy me dinner, buy me drinks. I made out real well right where I was at.' "

MYPlainview.com
Plainview Daily Herald

Thursday, September 29, 2011

A Look Back to 1998 - Orlando Sentinel

                                                        Orlando Sentinel
                                                          Sept. 30. 1998

Why All The Fuss? Homer Mark Is 72


62 MAC-NIFICENTOk, So It's A Minor-league Record. But Joe Bauman Hit 72 Homers In 1954 - And He Did It In 138 Games.

September 09, 1998
By Michael Rosenberg, Chicago TribuneCHICAGO - The media frenzy around Mark McGwire has reached a crescendo, and it's hard to figure why. All this fuss, and McGwire isn't even close to Joe Bauman's record.

That's not to say McGwire can't catch Bauman. If the St. Louis Cardinals slugger has a hot September, he might surpass Bauman's historic mark of 72 home runs. But really, even that would have to go into the record book with some kind of asterisk, for McGwire has 162 games to slug 72, but Bauman did it in just 138 games.

Of course, most of you older fans already knew that, having spent that magical summer of 1954 following Bauman's Roswell (N.M.) Rockets through the Class C Longhorn League.

McGwire might not reach Bauman, but he can continue his climb up the all-time list. With home run No. 60, he caught Forrest ``Frosty'' Kennedy (Plainview, Southwestern League, 1956), Tony Lazzeri (Salt Lake City, Pacific Coast League, 1925) and Babe Ruth (New York, American League, 1927). Tuesday, he passed someone named Roger Maris, also of New York of the American League, who hit 61 in 1961.

He is now tied with some really big boppers: Ken Guettler of Shreveport in 1956 and Moose Clabaugh of Tyler (Texas) in 1926 hit 62, followed by Joe Hauser of Baltimore of the International League, who hit 63 in 1930. Then come Bob Lennon (Nashville, 1954) at 64 and Dick Stuart (Lincoln, 1956) at 66.

Finally, McGwire will be staring down Bob Crues (Amarillo, 1948) and Hauser again (Minneapolis, 1933), both of whom hit 69.

If McGwire catches Crues and Hauser, then - and only then - can he start thinking about Joe Bauman.

Like McGwire, Bauman felt the pressure of his chase. He hit No. 69 with five games left in the season, then hit a dry spell. When he woke up on the morning of a final-day doubleheader, Bauman was still tied with Hauser and Crues.

In his first at-bat of the doubleheader, Bauman pulled one down the right-field line to make the record his own.

``It created quite a stir,'' recalled Bauman, now 76 and still living in Roswell. ``I was glad it was over.''

Like many of today's sluggers, Bauman received extra money for every home run. But the method of payment was rather unconventional.

``The fans would just poke it in the chicken wire in the fence, and you would go around and pick it up,'' Bauman said. ``I'd make $40, $50, maybe up to $100, sometimes more. The night I broke the record, I got $800 or $900.''

Backed by that kind of loot, Bauman could do what he really wanted to - get out of baseball. He retired 1 1/2 years after breaking the record so he could work full time at his gas station and tire distributorship.
**
This article ran in the Orlando Sentinel on Sept. 30, 1998

A Look Back to 1998

                                                              Los Angeles Times
                                                                June 8, 1998

Lee Smith Signs With Houston


BASEBALL NOTES June 08, 1998
From Associated Press

The Houston Astros signed Lee Smith, the major leagues' career saves leader, to a minor league contract Sunday and assigned him to triple-A New Orleans.

Smith, 40, a seven-time All-Star, had retired last July, then made an unsuccessful comeback attempt in spring training with the Kansas City Royals, who released him. Over 18 seasons, Smith has earned 478 saves with eight teams. He is expected to join the Zephyrs in Tacoma on Monday.
**
Forrest "Frosty" Kennedy, a minor league slugger who was one of 11 baseball players to hit 60 home runs in a season, has died. He was 72.


Kennedy died Friday night of a heart attack in Covina, the Pasadena Star-News, reported Saturday.

Kennedy hit 60 home runs in a 144-game season while playing for Plainview, Texas, in the Class-B Southwestern League of 1956. He hit his 60th homer in his final at-bat on the final day of the season. He hit .327 that season, with 184 runs batted in, and scored 151 runs
He averaged .342 during a 10-year minor league career that began in 1948. He hit over .400 the next season , and again in 1953 at Plainview.

In recent years, he was the owner and operator of the BMX bicycle track at Whittier Narrows.


A standout in football and baseball at El Monte High , Kennedy served three years in the Navy. Later, Kennedy played semipro baseball and softball, and signed a contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

He was a member of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) Minor League Hall of Fame, and his photo and statistics are displayed in the Babe Ruth Wing at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y. He never played in the major leagues.

He is survived by a son, William, and a brother, Florren.

Services were pending.
**

Eddie Murray again had his No. 33 retired by the Baltimore Orioles, only this time they did it right.


Murray had his number previously retired by the team, but it was after he was traded from the Orioles to the Dodgers in 1988 and without a proper ceremony. Sunday, the future Hall of Fame entrant was surrounded by former teammates and friends as the Orioles rewarded him with a 1998 Corvette convertible.

Murray, now a bench coach with the Orioles, played 12 1/2 of his 21 major league seasons with Baltimore. He was traded after the 1988 season but returned in July 1996 in a trade with the Cleveland Indians.

He hit his 500th career homer on Sept. 6 of that season against Detroit, becoming one of only three players with 500 homers and 3,000 hits. Murray, 42, was always a popular player within the clubhouse, but he rarely granted interviews and regularly shunned the press.

Murray ended the ceremony with the words: "You talk about lost for words. All I can say is I love you. Let's get on with the ballgame."

He then got onto the back of the car and was driven around the stadium as the crowd chanted, "Eddie! Eddie!"
*
 The above articles ran in the 'Los Angeles Times' on June 8, 1998

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

HOME RUN STANDINGS, FINIAL FOR 2011

2011 Home Title Gos to Jose Bautista. He was my preseason pick to win the title.  Here are the Finial standings.  Only players with 35 or more home runs are listed.  Remember that minor leagues play a maximum of 144 games and MLB play 162 games.


HR....GL....PLAYER....................TEAM...LEAGUE/DIV.


43......0.....J. BAUTISTA.............TOR......AMERICAN/MLB

41......0.....C. GRANDERSON....NYY.....AMERICAN/MLB

39.....0.....M. KEMP....................LAD....NATIONAL/MLB

39........0.....J. GUZMAN...............VER......MEXICAN/AAA

39......0.....M. TEIXEIRA............NYY....AMERICAN/MLB
38....0......P. FIELDER...............MIL....NATIONAL/MLB

38.......0......L. TERRERO.............MEX....MEXICAN/AAA

38.......0......B. LAHAIR................IOW.....PACIFIC COAST/AAA







37......0.....A. PUJOLS.................STL......NATIONAL/MLB



37.....0.....M. REYNOLDS.........BAL.....NATIONAL/MLB



36....0......D. UGGLA..................ATL....NATIONAL/MLB

2011 National and American League Home Run leaders

Jose Bautista plays for the Toronto Blue Jays of the MLB American League
Stats:  AVG: .302   HR: 43    RBI: 103    BB: 132    SO: 111    SB: 9


Matt Kemp plays for the Los Angeles Dodgers of the MLB National League
Stats:  AVG: .324    HR: 39    RBI: 126    BB: 74    SO: 159    SB: 11


Fielder belted his 36th, 37th and 38th home runs, and all were clutch, the first a solo shot that tied the game and the others two-run blasts that gave the Brewers leads to overcome a shaky pitching performance by Randy Wolf. The decisive blow came in the seventh inning, when Fielder connected against Pirates reliever Jared Hughes to snap a 4-4 tie.


"The guy can hit homers," Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. "And he swings with bad intentions."



Prince Fielder



All teams have only one game left.

only players with 35 or more home runs listed.


HR....GL....PLAYER....................TEAM...LEAGUE/DIV.

43......1.....J. BAUTISTA.............TOR......AMERICAN/MLB

41......1.....C. GRANDERSON....NYY.....AMERICAN/MLB

39........0.....J. GUZMAN...............VER......MEXICAN/AAA

38....1......P. FIELDER...............MIL....NATIONAL/MLB


38.....1.....M. KEMP....................LAD....NATIONAL/MLB

38.......0......L. TERRERO.............MEX....MEXICAN/AAA

38.......0......B. LAHAIR................IOW.....PACIFIC COAST/AAA

37......1.....M. TEIXEIRA............NYY....AMERICAN/MLB

37......1.....A. PUJOLS.................STL......NATIONAL/MLB

37.....1.....M. REYNOLDS.........BAL.....NATIONAL/MLB

35....1......D. UGGLA..................ATL....NATIONAL/MLB



 

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

A look back to 1998

August 31, 1998


One For The X-files

In a season of inalienable glory, Roswell's Joe Bauman hit 72 homers

Keith Olbermann



Forrest (frosty) Kennedy died three months ago, without so much as a moment of silence at any ballpark in the country. That was a shame, because on Sept. 6, 1956, Kennedy, then a 30-year-old first baseman for the Plainview ( Texas) Ponies of the Class B Southwestern League, blasted his 60th home run of the season, against the San Angelo Colts. Kennedy was the last of three sluggers to hit 60 in '56. Dick Stuart of the Lincoln Chiefs of the Class A Western League, who would later destroy major league pitching—both as a batter and as Dr. Strangeglove at first base—and Ken Guettler of the Shreveport (La.) Sports of the Double A Texas League had both reached 60 in August. Guettler would finish with 62 homers and Stuart with 66, including 23 during a 28-game binge at midseason.


All of this underscores the fact that the monster homer season once wasn't such a rarity, at least not in the minors. In 1930 Joe Hauser socked 63 homers for the Double A Baltimore Orioles, then of the International League, and three years later he hit 69 for the Double A Minneapolis Millers of the American Association. Between his 31st and 35th birthdays Hauser averaged 53 homers a season.

The fascinating thing about these forgotten sluggers is that the American professional record for home runs in a season has virtually always been held by a minor leaguer. When Babe Ruth hit 54 for the 1920 Yankees, he surpassed Perry Werden's mark of 45 for the Minneapolis Miners of the Western League in 1895. Ruth extended the record to 59 in 1921, but a future teammate, second baseman Tony Lazzeri, answered with 60 for the Double A Salt Lake City Bees of the Pacific Coast League in '25. Before Ruth matched Lazzeri in '27, Moose Clabaugh of the Tyler Trojans of the Class D East Texas League hit 62 in '26.

Hauser and others would eventually surpass Clabaugh and Ruth. Bob Crues hit 69 for the AmariGold Sox of the Class C West Texas-New Mexico League in 1948 (driving in 254 runs—take that Juan Gonzalez!), and Bob Lennon belted 64 for the Nashville Vols of the Double A Southern Association in 1954. But the king of home run hitters remains an obscure man named Joe Bauman who played for the Roswell (N.Mex.) Rockets. In '54 Bauman became the only one of the hundreds of thousands of men who have played professional baseball in the U.S to hit as many as 70 homers in one season. All the standard disclaimers apply: It was "just the minors," the Roswell Rockets' Park Field stood 3,573 feet above sea level, and most of the stadiums in the Class C (a step above Class D, then the lowest classification in the minors) Longhorn League were laid out to give hitters the advantage of the Southwest's fairly constant 15-to 20-mph winds. On the other hand, by '54 most minor league games were being played at night under feeble lights that favored the pitchers. The lefthanded-batting Bauman also had to contend with a 329-foot rightfield corner in Roswell. Most convincingly, the 6'5", 235-pound Bauman hit his 72 homers in 138 games, a rate that would have produced 85 of them in a 162-game schedule.

Bauman, who like Crues, Guettler and Kennedy never spent a day in the majors, didn't dwell on his achievements. The ball that he hit for his 72nd tater was on display at a Roswell museum, and when asked about it later in life, he'd explain, "I've never been over there, and I haven't seen it."

Wait a minute. The museum is in Roswell, N.Mex.? Near the site of the alleged UFO crash in 1947? You don't suppose....


Printed in SPORTS ILLUSTRATED on Aug. 31, 1998







1

A look back to 1998

Despite 60 Homers, Mark Mcgwire Is On The Bottom Rung Among Some Sluggers Of Yesteryear.

Major Feats By Minor-leaguers

September 07, 1998
By Michael Rosenberg, Tribune Staff Writer.

The media frenzy around Mark McGwire is reaching a crescendo, and it's hard to figure why. All this fuss, and McGwire isn't even close to Joe Bauman's record.

That's not to say McGwire can't catch Bauman. If the St. Louis Cardinals slugger has a hot September, he might surpass Bauman's historic mark of 72 homers. But really, even that would have to go into the record book with some kind of asterisk, for McGwire has 162 games to slug 72, while Bauman did it in just 138 games.

Of course, most of you older fans already knew that, having spent that magical summer of 1954 following Bauman's Roswell (N.M.) Rockets through the Class C Longhorn League.

McGwire may not reach Bauman, but he can continue his climb up the all-time list. Having hit No. 60, he has caught Forrest "Frosty" Kennedy (Plainview, Southwestern League, 1956), Tony Lazzeri (Salt Lake City, Pacific Coast League, 1925) and Babe Ruth (New York, American League, 1927). Then he'll try to pass someone named Roger Maris, also of New York of the American League, who hit 61 in 1961.

After that come the really big boppers: Ken Guettler of Shreveport in 1956 and Moose Clabaugh of Tyler (Texas) in 1926 at 62, followed by Joe Hauser of Baltimore of the International League, who hit 63 in 1930. Then come Bob Lennon (Nashville, 1954) at 64 and Dick Stuart (Lincoln, 1956) at 66.

Finally, McGwire will be staring down Bob Crues (Amarillo, 1948) and Hauser again (Minneapolis, 1933), both of whom hit 69.

If McGwire catches Crues and Hauser, then--and only then--can he start thinking about Joe Bauman.

Like McGwire, Bauman felt the pressure of his chase. He hit No. 69 with five games left in the season, then hit a dry spell. When he woke up on the morning of a final-day double-header, Bauman was still tied with Hauser and Crues.

In his first at-bat of the double-header, Bauman pulled one down the right-field line to make the record his own.

"It created quite a stir," recalled Bauman, now 76 and still living in Roswell. "I was glad it was over."

Like many of today's sluggers, Bauman received extra money for every home run. But the method of payment was rather unconventional.

"The fans would just poke it in the chicken wire in the fence, and you would go around and pick it up," Bauman said. "I'd make $40, $50, maybe up to $100, sometimes more. The night I broke the record I got $800 or $900."

Backed by that kind of loot, Bauman could do what he really wanted to--get out of baseball. He retired a year and a half after breaking the record so he could work full time at his gas station and tire distributorship. Bauman had been in the Boston Braves organization earlier in his career, but he quit after he was told his salary would be cut by a third.

Bauman has no regrets about missing out on the majors.
"Best thing I ever did," he said. "I went ahead and played baseball, then I made a living."

Unlike some flying objects reportedly seen in Roswell, Bauman's 72 homers have been confirmed. The Minor League Register acknowledges them as a professional baseball record.

Bob Lennon played the part of Sammy Sosa to Bauman's McGwire that year, hitting 64 for Nashville. But that wasn't the highlight of Lennon's playing career. Lennon played 38 games in the majors, including a 3-for-21 stint with the Cubs that included his only major-league home run. Lennon, a Brooklyn native, hit a three-run shot off Sal Maglie at Ebbets Field.

"That's something I dreamed of doing as a little boy," said Lennon, 69, who lives on Long Island. "I grew up dreaming of hitting one in Ebbets Field."

Lennon played that season with an arm injury that would force him to retire. But at least he reached the majors, which is more than Bauman and three other members of the 60-homer club can say. The Baseball Encyclopedia lists a Doc Kennedy and a Snapper Kennedy, but Frosty is nowhere to be found. Guettler never made it to the majors, and neither did Crues.

Lazzeri went on to a standout career with Ruth's Yankees, and Hauser hit 79 homers in his six-year career, including 27 for the Philadelphia Athletics in 1924--second in the American League behind Ruth. Stuart took his powerful stroke to the majors and hit 228 homers over 10 seasons, including 23 for the World Series champion Pirates in 1960 and 42 for the Red Sox in 1963. But alas, "Dr. Strangeglove" was best known for his fielding misadventures. Clabaugh had 14 homerless at-bats for the 1926 Brooklyn Dodgers, and that was it.

But they all left at least a small imprint on the game with their 60-homer seasons. In some cases the imprint was larger than it appears.

In 1955, an Indianapolis outfielder was impressed enough with Lennon's power to ask him how he pulled the ball to right field so well.
"You have to get out in front and pop your wrists," Lennon said.

It's hard to know if the guy took the advice, but he did show some power after that. His name was Roger Maris.

Prited in the CHICAGO TRIBUNE on Sept. 7, 1998

Monday, September 26, 2011

Home Run Standings as of Sept. 26, 2011

only players with 35 or more home runs listed.


HR....GL....PLAYER....................TEAM...LEAGUE/DIV.

43......2.....J. BAUTISTA.............TOR......AMERICAN/MLB

41......2.....C. GRANDERSON....NYY.....AMERICAN/MLB

39........0.....J. GUZMAN...............VER......MEXICAN/AAA

38.....2.....M. KEMP....................LAD....NATIONAL/MLB
38.......0......L. TERRERO.............MEX....MEXICAN/AAA

38.......0......B. LAHAIR................IOW.....PACIFIC COAST/AAA

37......2.....M. TEIXEIRA............NYY....AMERICAN/MLB

37......2.....A. PUJOLS.................STL......NATIONAL/MLB

36.....2.....M. REYNOLDS.........BAL.....NATIONAL/MLB

35....2......D. UGGLA..................ATL....NATIONAL/MLB

35....2......P. FIELDER...............MIL....NATIONAL/MLB

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Home Run Standings as of 9/25/2011

only players with 35 or more home runs listed.


HR....GL....PLAYER....................TEAM...LEAGUE/DIV.

43......3.....J. BAUTISTA.............TOR......AMERICAN/MLB

41......3.....C. GRANDERSON....NYY.....AMERICAN/MLB

39........0.....J. GUZMAN...............VER......MEXICAN/AAA

38.......0......L. TERRERO.............MEX....MEXICAN/AAA

38.......0......B. LAHAIR................IOW.....PACIFIC COAST/AAA

37......3.....M. TEIXEIRA............NYY....AMERICAN/MLB

37......3.....A. PUJOLS.................STL......NATIONAL/MLB

37.....3.....M. KEMP....................LAD....NATIONAL/MLB

36.....3.....M. REYNOLDS.........BAL.....NATIONAL/MLB

35....3......D. UGGLA..................ATL....NATIONAL/MLB

35....3......P. FIELDER...............MIL....NATIONAL/MLB

2011 Home Run League Leaders of Class A

McKenzie Corey Dickerson
plays for the Asheville Tourists of the South Atlantic League
Parent Club:  Colorado
Stats:  Avg. 282    HR: 32    RBI: 87    SB: 9

Yazy Arbelo
plays for the South Bend Silver Hawks of the Midwest League.
Parent Club: Arizona
Stats:  AVG: 247    HR: 31    RBI: 95    SB: 1

Home Run Standings as of 9/25/2011

With four game left to play Jose Bautista two HR lead over C. Granderson.  Granderson and Teixeire will play in a double hitter today, the NYY have five games left.  Congrats to J. Guzman of the Triple-A Mexican League for winning the MiLB Home Run Title.

only players with 35 or more home runs listed.


HR....GL....PLAYER....................TEAM...LEAGUE/DIV.
43......4.....J. BAUTISTA.............TOR......AMERICAN/MLB
41......5.....C. GRANDERSON....NYY.....AMERICAN/MLB

39........0.....J. GUZMAN...............VER......MEXICAN/AAA
38.......0......L. TERRERO.............MEX....MEXICAN/AAA

38.......0......B. LAHAIR................IOW.....PACIFIC COAST/AAA
37......5.....M. TEIXEIRA............NYY....AMERICAN/MLB

37......4.....A. PUJOLS.................STL......NATIONAL/MLB
37.....5.....M. KEMP....................LAD....NATIONAL/MLB

36.....4.....M. REYNOLDS.........BAL.....NATIONAL/MLB
35....4......D. UGGLA..................ATL....NATIONAL/MLB

35....4......P. FIELDER...............MIL....NATIONAL/MLB

Saturday, September 24, 2011

HOME RUN STANDINGS AS OF 9/24/2011

only players with 35 or more home runs listed.

HR....GL....PLAYER....................TEAM...LEAGUE/DIV.


42......5.....J. BAUTISTA.............TOR......AMERICAN/MLB

41......6.....C. GRANDERSON....NYY.....AMERICAN/MLB

39........0.....J. GUZMAN...............VER......MEXICAN/AAA

38.......0......L. TERRERO.............MEX....MEXICAN/AAA

38.......0......B. LAHAIR................IOW.....PACIFIC COAST/AAA

37......6.....M. TEIXEIRA............NYY....AMERICAN/MLB

37......5.....A. PUJOLS.................STL......NATIONAL/MLB

37.....6.....M. KEMP....................LAD....NATIONAL/MLB

36......5.....M. REYNOLDS.........BAL.....NATIONAL/MLB

35....5......D. UGGLA..................ATL....NATIONAL/MLB
 
35....5......P. FIELDER...............MIL....NATIONAL/MLB

Friday, September 23, 2011

Today we will post the HR leaders from the Class A Advanced League.

Michael B. Choice plays for the Stockton Ports of the California League.
Parent Club:  Oakland
Stats:  Avg.: 285   HR: 30    RBI: 82   SB: 9

Ian Whitney Gac plays for the Winston-Salem Dash of the Carolina League.
Parent Club: Chi White Sox
Stats:  AVG: .279   HR: 33  RBI: 96  SO: 0

Bradley Edward Glenn plays for the Dunedin Blue Jays of the Florida State League.
Parent Club:  Toronto
Stats:  AVG:  .263    HR: 26  RBI: 80  SB: 0