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Mr. Tiger, not only
because he played in
more games as a Tiger
than anyone else and hit
more home runs than any
Tiger, but also because
he gave his Detroit
teammates and fans his
classiest best in
baseball skill,
leadership, and
determination each
inning he played...Book
Al Kaline for Your Event
Kaline was born into
a sports-minded family
that included a father
and two uncles who
played semi-pro
baseball. Though smaller
than most boys his age
and somewhat shy, he
became a top-notch
player by sheer practice
and playing time. He
enrolled in several
organized leagues each
season, being
transported from field
to field by family
members. Young Al
possessed a great arm,
developed solid hitting
skills, and had great
infielder quickness.
Scout
Ed Katalinas signed
Kaline ($35,000 bonus)
right off the Baltimore
sandlots and Al never
played one inning in the
minor leagues. On
June 25, 1953, his
first game, he played
right field for the
first time in his life.
He was used sparingly by
Manager
Fred Hutchinson,
usually as a pinch
runner. His first homer
came off Dave Hoskins
(Cleveland) and he
singled off
Satchel Paige before
that first season ended.
In his rookie year of
1954 Kaline hit a modest
.276 with four HR and
was part of an outfield
corps that included
Don Lund,
Bob Nieman,
Bill Tuttle and
highly touted
Jim Delsing. By 1959
all of these phenom
outfielders were gone in
favor of
Charlie Maxwell,
Harvey Kuenn, and
Kaline. Kaline's second
career homer in 1954 was
a grand slam, making him
the second youngest ever
to have hit one. (Eddie
Onslow of the
1912 Tigers was the
youngest until Boston's
Tony Conigliaro
moved him back in 1964.)
Red Sox legend
Ted Williams told
Kaline to build his
wrist strength up over
the winter by squeezing
baseballs as hard as he
could. Though the
slender rookie's glove
was never in doubt, his
power was. Those doubts
were laid to rest early
in 1955 as Kaline hit in
23 of his first 24
games, including seven
home runs - three at
Kansas City in one game
(his only three-homer
game), two in one
inning. Ending at .340,
27 HR, 102 RBI, and 121
runs, he was the
youngest AL batting
champ, shading the
immortal
Ty Cobb for the
honor. It was the only
time he would amass 200
hits in a season. He
finished second in MVP
voting, just 17 points
behind
Yogi Berra.
Kaline made playing
right field into an art
form. He won 10
Gold Gloves in 11
years (1957-59, 61-67).
All comparisons to his
glove work eventually
fellelson short because
he was so graceful and
quick. Never a wasted
motion, never a wrong
decision. Kaline has
said, "When I first came
up to the Tigers I was
scared stiff, but I had
desire. Desire is
something you must have
to make it in the
majors. I was never
satisfied with just
average." Though he was
not spectacular, he was
as close to perfect as a
player could be. All of
his baseball skills were
impeccably honed:
hitting for power and
average, speed,
throwing, and fielding
judgment.
Always a Detroit
hero, Al Kaline joined
the Tiger broadcasting
crew after his
retirement from the
field.
>>> Book
Al Kaline for Your Event
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