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Surrounded by superstars, Bert Campaneris was a key contributor to
the great Oakland teams with his
competitive spirit and superb play.
His memorable debut with the Kansas
City A's (July 23, 1964) included
two home runs, one off the first
major league pitch ever thrown to
him. Bert became only the third
player in big league history to hit
two homers in his first game. He
made headlines in one of club owner
Charlie Finley's publicity stunts in
1965. On September 9, Campaneris
played every position in a nine
inning game. He also led the A's in
hitting (.270), edged his cousin,
Jose
Cardenal,
for the league lead in steals (51),
and led the league in triples (12).
Campy became one of baseball's
all-time top base thiefs, stealing
649 bases to rank seventh all-time
on his retirement and leading the
American League
six times, including his first four
full seasons (1965-68)...Book
Bert Campaneris for Your Event
When the A's moved to Oakland in
1968, Bert led the league in hits
(177) and at-bats. Though he struck
out more than some leadoff hitters
and didn't walk much, he was a
catalyst in the Oakland attack.
Hitting from an extreme crouch, the
Cuban righthander would get on base
and disrupt pitchers. He improved
consistently on defense, leading AL
shortstops with 795 chances in 1972.
An adept bunter, he led the AL in
sacrifice bunts in 1972 (20) and
1978 (40). Despite these
credentials, Bert is most associated
with an unfortunate incident in the
1972 American League Championship
Series. In Game Two, he already had
three hits, two steals and two runs
scored as he faced Detroit hurler
Lerrin LaGrow.
When LaGrow's pitch hit Campaneris
in the ankle, Bert flung his bat at
the hurler. A near-riot ensued as
Detroit manager
Billy
Martin
charged Campaneris. The batter and
pitcher were both ejected. Bert was
suspended for the remainder of the
playoffs, reinstated for the
World
Series
(in which he was hit by pitches
three times), and suspended for the
first seven games of 1973. He was
the shortstop on TSN's
post-season AL All-Star Team in 1973
and 1974. In 1976, his 52 steals
helped the A's set an AL club record
with 341 steals. Like most of the
A's, Campaneris played out his
option, moving to the Rangers. After
a full season with Texas (1977), age
and injuries limited Bert to
part-time, utility duty. He spent
1982 in the
Mexican League.
In 1983, at the age of 41,
Campaneris returned to the big
leagues as a utility infielder with
the Yankees, playing for
Billy
Martin.
He responded with a career-high .322
batting average in 59 games and
solid defense at second and third
base.
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