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John Harry Scolinos (March 28, 1918 – November 7, 2009) was an American football and baseball coach. He was the head baseball coach at Pepperdine University from 1946 to 1960 and at California State Polytechnic University Pomona from 1962 to 1991, compiling career college baseball record of 1,070–954–13.
The team was led by fifth-year head coach John Scolinos. For the 1959 season, the Waves moved home games back to Sentinel Field on the campus of Inglewood High School in Inglewood, California. They had previously played at Sentinel Field in 1946, 1947, and 1949. Pepperdine finished the season with a record of 2–5–1.
Coach Tenure Record Pct. Wade Ruby 1939 8–10 .444 Benny Lefebvre: 1940–1941; 1962 27–33 .450 Morris Ruby 1942 4–8 .333 Shan Deniston: 1944 2–10 .167 Clarence Shaffer 1945 9–4 .692 John Scolinos: 1946–1960 263–219 .546 Walter Glass 1961 12–19 .387 Gary Marks 1963–1967 75–96 .439 Gail Hopkins: 1968 9–28 .243 Wayne Wright ...
The 1957 Pepperdine Waves football team represented George Pepperdine College [note 1] as an independent during the 1957 college football season.The team was led by third-year head coach John Scolinos and played home games at El Camino Stadium on the campus of El Camino College in Torrance, California.
Gavin lived at the Home Plate Farm site, and this incident is supposed to have presaged the Red Sox winning the World Series later in 2004, thus ending the Curse of the Bambino. The Red Sox won the game 10-7 while the New York Yankees lost 22–0 to the Cleveland Indians on the same night.
Scolinos is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: John Scolinos (1918–2009), American baseball and football coach; Tasia Scolinos (born 1972), ...
The sculpture weighs 800 pounds, and stands in the centerfield plaza of Dodger Stadium. It depicts Robinson stealing home plate, an act described by Cadet as "both real and symbolic; it required focused determination, courage and precise timing—synergistic qualities that were also present when the color barrier was finally broken in Major League Baseball, heralding a new era."
He made 328 plate appearances during the 1997 season, splitting his time fairly evenly between first, third, and designated hitter. He batted .303 with four home runs, and later re-signed with the A's on November 12, 1997. [15] While Magadan received far less playing time in 1998, he still emerged with a .321 batting average.