Al Kaline

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Al Kaline
Al Kaline 1957.jpg
Kaline in 1957
Right fielder
Born: (1934-12-19)December 19, 1934
Baltimore, Maryland
Died: Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Bloomfield Hills, Michigan
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
June 25, 1953, for the Detroit Tigers
Last MLB appearance
October 2, 1974, for the Detroit Tigers
MLB statistics
Batting average .297
Hits 3,007
Home runs 399
Runs batted in 1,583
Teams
Career highlights and awards
Member of the National
Empty Star.svg Empty Star.svg Empty Star.svg Baseball Hall of Fame Empty Star.svg Empty Star.svg Empty Star.svg
Inducted 1980
Vote 88.3% (first ballot)

Albert William Kaline (/ˈkln/; December 19, 1934 – April 6, 2020), nicknamed "Mr. Tiger", was an American professional baseball right fielder who played 22 seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Detroit Tigers.[1] For most of his career, Kaline played in the outfield, mainly as a right fielder where he won ten Gold Glove Awards and was known for his strong throwing arm.[2] He was selected to 18 All-Star Games, including selections each year between 1955 and 1967. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1980.[1][3]

Near the end of his career, Kaline also played as first baseman and, in his last season, was the Tigers' designated hitter. He retired soon after reaching the 3,000 hit milestone. Immediately after retiring from playing, he became the Tigers' TV color commentator, a position he held until 2002. Kaline worked for the Tigers as a front office official until his death in 2020.[4]

Early life

Kaline was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland. His family was poor. Several of his relatives played semi-professional baseball, but no one in the family had graduated from high school. When he was eight years old, Kaline developed osteomyelitis and had a segment of bone removed from his left foot. The surgery left him with scarring and permanent deformity, but he was an outstanding pitcher in youth baseball.[5] Kaline had learned to throw a fastball, changeup and curveball by the age of nine.[6]

Kaline attended Baltimore's Southern High School, where he starred in basketball and also played football until he sustained a cheek injury. When he tried out for the baseball team, there was no room on the pitching staff so Kaline moved to the outfield.[6] He earned all-state honors in baseball all four years.[5] Kaline said that he was a poor student but that he was well liked by his teachers. He said that his teachers passed him and that they believed he would become a baseball player.[7]

MLB career

Early days

Kaline in 1957

Kaline bypassed Minor League Baseball and joined the Tigers directly from high school as an 18-year-old "bonus baby" signee, receiving $35,000 ($309,558 in today's dollars) to sign with the team.[8][9] The Detroit scout who had tracked him through high school, Ed Katalinas, said "To me he was the prospect that a scout creates in his mind and then prays that someone will come along to fit the pattern."[10]

He made his major league debut on June 25, 1953 in Philadelphia as a late-inning replacement for outfielder Jim Delsing. Kaline wore number 25 during his rookie campaign, but asked teammate Pat Mullin for his No. 6 after the 1953 season ended. Kaline wore the number for the rest of his major league playing career.[11]

In 1955, at age 20, Kaline ended the season with a .340 batting average, becoming the youngest player ever to win the American League (AL) batting title. No 20-year-old major league player had won a batting title since Ty Cobb in 1907. During the 1955 season, Kaline became the 13th man in major league history to hit two home runs in the same inning, became the youngest to hit three home runs in one game, and finished the year with 200 hits, 27 home runs and 102 runs batted in (RBIs).[1][12] He also finished second to Yogi Berra in the American League's 1955 Most Valuable Player Award voting.[13] He was selected to the Major League Baseball All-Star Game, the first in a string of consecutive All-Star selections that lasted through 1967.[1]

Kaline followed in 1956 with a .314 batting average with 27 home runs and 128 RBIs.[1] He led the league in outfield assists with 18 in 1956[14] and again in 1958 with 23.[15] Kaline was out for several games in 1958 after he was hit by a pitch. He missed several games in 1959 after he was hit by a thrown ball and sustained a fracture in his cheekbone. Kaline had been knocked out from the blow and initial speculation was that he could miss six weeks of the season.[16]

Middle career

In 1961, Kaline hit .324 to finish second in the AL batting race (behind teammate Norm Cash). The Tigers won 101 games, to date the third-highest win total in team history, but still finished eight games behind a New York Yankees team that was led by the home run heroics of Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle. Kaline began the 1962 season hitting .345 with 13 home runs and 38 RBIs in 35 games. On May 26 of that season, he sustained a broken collarbone while making a game-ending catch on a ball hit by New York's Elston Howard. He missed 57 games due to the injury and Detroit was unable to seriously compete for a pennant due to his absence. When healthy Kaline was great in 1962, hitting 29 home runs and driving in 94 runs in only 100 games.[17]

By late March 1963, Kaline said that he felt good and he was hitting .373 in 53 spring training at-bats.[17] In the 1963 regular season, Kaline hit .312 with 27 home runs and 101 RBIs, finishing second to Elston Howard in the American League's Most Valuable Player Award voting.[1][18] Kaline experienced pain in his left foot, the one that had been affected by osteomyelitis as a child, throughout the 1964 season. His batting average dropped to .293 that season. Kaline tried to ignore the pain, but he saw physicians who thought he was suffering from gout and administered injections.[19]

Still in pain the following season, Kaline saw an orthopedic surgeon who prescribed corrective shoes. "I feel so much better than I did before, that it's ridiculous", Kaline said by June 1965.[19] Sportswriter Milton Gross described Kaline's deformed foot, saying, "The pinky and middle finger don't touch the ground. The fourth toe is stretched. The second and third are shortened. The first and third toes overlap the second and the fourth is beginning to overlap the big toe, which has begun to bend to the left. It is hard to believe, but for all of his career with the Tigers while he has been called the perfect player, Kaline has bordered on being a cripple."[19]

In the summer of 1967, the normally calm Kaline broke a bone in his hand when he struck a baseball bat against a bat rack.[20] Kaline missed a month of play. When he returned, the Tigers were in a four-team pennant race, but the team finished a game out of first place.[21] Kaline missed two months of the 1968 season with a broken arm, but he returned to the lineup when Tiger manager Mayo Smith benched shortstop Ray Oyler and sent center fielder Mickey Stanley to play shortstop to make room for Kaline in the outfield.[22] ESPN later called Smith's move one of the ten greatest coaching decisions of the century.[23] In the 1968 World Series, the St. Louis Cardinals won three of the first four games of the series and were leading Game 5 by a score of 3–2 in the seventh inning, when Kaline hit a bases loaded single to drive in two runs.[24] The Tigers won that game, and the two games following it, for their first world championship since 1945. In his only World Series appearance, Kaline hit .379 with two home runs and eight RBIs in seven games.[25] For their victory, Kaline and his teammates each received bonus checks of $10,000 (at a time when Kaline's salary was "about 70,000").[26]

Final seasons

In 1970, Kaline was nearly a victim of a freak accident on the baseball field. In a game at Milwaukee's County Stadium against the on May 30, against the Milwaukee Brewers, Kaline collided with center fielder Jim Northrup as they both pursued a fly ball. Kaline fell to the warning track injured. Alertly, left fielder Willie Horton rushed over and quickly recognized that Kaline was turning blue. Horton reached in and cleared Kaline's airway, saving his life.[27][28]

After hitting .294 in 1971, Kaline became the first Tiger to sign a $100,000 ($584,306 in today's dollars) contract. He had turned down a pay raise from $95,000 to $100,000 the previous year, saying he did not feel like he deserved it after hitting .278 with 21 home runs in 1970.[29][30] Detroit contended all season for the 1972 pennant, trailing the Red Sox by a half-game before a series against them to end the regular season.[31] Kaline batted eight times in two games, registering five hits and three runs scored.[32] Detroit won those first two games and clinched the AL East pennant.[33][34] They lost the 1972 American League Championship Series to the Oakland Athletics that year after Reggie Jackson stole home in the final game of the series.[35] In March 1973, Kaline won the Roberto Clemente Award in recognition of the honor he brought to baseball on and off the field.[36]

On September 24, 1974, Kaline became the 12th player in MLB history to reach the 3,000 hit milestone, when he hit a double off the Orioles' Dave McNally.[37][38][39] After reaching the milestone, Kaline announced that he would retire.[21] "I'm glad it's over. I really am. I don't think I'll miss it. I may miss spring training", Kaline said after his last game on October 3.[40] Kaline finished his career with 3,007 hits (25th on the all-time list), 498 doubles, 75 triples, 399 home runs (a Tigers record and 43rd on the all-time list), 1,622 runs scored, 1,277 bases on balls, and 1,582 RBIs.[1] He batted over .300 nine times in his career to finish with a lifetime batting average of .297 and hit 25-or-more home runs seven times in his career.[1] Kaline also holds Tiger career records for games played (2,834), walks (1,277), and sacrifice flies (104).[41] Defensively, he finished his career with an overall .987 fielding percentage.[1]

Honors

Kaline DET.png
Al Kaline's number 6 was retired by the Detroit Tigers in 1980.

Kaline was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1980, becoming the tenth player in history to be inducted in his first year of eligibility.[3][42] He was named on 340 of the 385 ballots (88.3%) cast by sportswriters. Kaline and Duke Snider were the only candidates elected by the sportswriters in 1980. Kaline later said, "I really never thought I would choose an individual thing that happened just to me over a team thing like the World Series. But I would have to say this is the biggest thing that has ever happened to me."[43]

Kaline was honored by the Tigers as the first of their players to have his uniform number (6) retired.[44] Versatile and well-rounded, he won ten Gold Glove Awards (1957–59 and 1961–67) for excellence in the field and appeared in the All-Star game 15 times (1955–67, 1971, 1974).[1][45] In 1998, Kaline ranked Number 76 on The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players,[46] and was nominated as a finalist for the Major League Baseball All-Century Team.[47][48]

Cherry Street, which ran behind the left-field stands at Tiger Stadium, was renamed Kaline Drive in his honor in 1970.[22] On September 27, 1999, when Detroit played its last game at Tiger Stadium against the Kansas City Royals, Kaline was invited to appear in uniform and present the last lineup card to the umpires. He did so along with George Brett, the Kansas City Royals' great and eventual Hall of Famer.[49]

Kaline was regarded as a well-rounded player by his contemporaries. Baltimore Orioles third baseman Brooks Robinson said of him, "There have been a lot of great defensive players. The fella who could do everything is Al Kaline. He was just the epitome of what a great outfielder is all about – great speed, catches the ball and throws the ball well."[3] Manager Billy Martin once said, "I have always referred to Al Kaline as 'Mister Perfection'. He does it all – hitting, fielding, running, throwing – and he does it with that extra touch of brilliancy that marks him as a super ballplayer... Al fits in anywhere, at any position in the lineup and any spot in the batting order."[50]

Post-playing career

File:Al Kaline 1995.jpg
Kaline in 1995

After his playing career, Kaline lived in the Detroit area, and he remained active within the Tigers organization, serving first as a color commentator on the team's television broadcasts (1975–2002) mostly with play by play announcer and former Tiger and fellow Hall of Famer George Kell, and then later as a consultant to the team.[22] Starting in 2003, Kaline served as a special assistant to Tigers President/CEO/General Manager Dave Dombrowski,[22] and his duties included coaching/mentoring outfielders during spring training.[51] Former Tigers teammate Willie Horton also holds this position, and the two threw out the first pitch of the 2006 World Series at Comerica Park.[22] Kaline continued in his assistant role until his death in 2020. His 67 years with one team was one of the longest tenures in MLB history.[52]

Because of his lengthy career and longtime association with the Tigers organization, Kaline's nickname was "Mr. Tiger."[53] Kaline's grandson Colin Kaline was selected by the Tigers in the 25th round of the 2007 MLB draft. He did not sign, choosing to play baseball at Florida Southern College.[54] The team drafted him again in the 2011 MLB draft, this time in the 26th round. He played in the low minor leagues with the Detroit organization in 2011–12.[55]

Personal life

Kaline married his high school sweetheart, Madge Louise Hamilton, in 1954. He had two sons, Mark Albert Kaline (b. August 21, 1957) and Michael Keith Kaline (b. 1962).[56] Michael played college baseball at Miami University and is the father of Colin Kaline, who had a short Minor League career and was a college coach.[57][58]

Kaline died in his home in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, on April 6, 2020; the cause of death was not reported.[59]

See also

References

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  7. Hawkins, p. 18.
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  10. https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/a141b60c
  11. Hawkins, p. 53.
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  43. Hawkins, pp. 239-240.
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  47. Al Kaline at The Sporting News 100 Greatest Baseball Players Archived February 27, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
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  50. Hawkins, p. 225.
  51. Gage, Tom. "Tigers 'lifer' Al Kaline stays in background but still commands attention." Detroit News, February 23, 2011. [1][dead link]
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  54. Hawkins, p. 248.
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External links

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