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Bret Ryan Hemphill (born December 17, 1971) is an American former professional baseball player who played one season for the Anaheim Angels of Major League Baseball (MLB). He also played 11 seasons in the minor leagues in the Angels' organization.
Camp was born in Trion, Georgia.He pitched for the Atlanta Braves for nine seasons between 1976 and 1985. [1]He was best known for hitting a game-tying 18th-inning home run in a game that began on July 4, 1985, and ended on July 5, against the New York Mets with two outs and an 0–2 count off Tom Gorman; this was the only home run of his twelve-season pro career (including nine in the majors).
Football, baseball, and track athlete at Notre Dame, Major League Baseball player, and collegiate football coach [265] Buck Shaw: 1922 Tackle at Notre Dame and College Football Hall of Fame coach [266] Emil Sitko: 1950 All-American, College Football Hall of Fame running back at Notre Dame and in the NFL [267] Bob Skoglund: 1947
Dec. 7—Baseball Hall of Famer George Brett — a minority partner in Brett Sports, which includes the Spokane Indians and Spokane Chiefs — was profiled in an MLB Network Presents documentary ...
George Brett watched the Kansas City Royals prepare to face the New York Yankees and remembered the combustible clashes of the 1970s. Brett slid late into Graig Nettles in 1977's Game 5 of the ...
Rick Camp with the Braves c. 1983. The Mets, however, grabbed an 11–10 lead in the 18th on a Lenny Dykstra sacrifice fly. [22] In the bottom of the 18th, Braves pitcher Rick Camp was batting against Tom Gorman and proceeded to hit the 0–2 pitch for a home run over the left field wall. [23]
Chiefs general manager Brett Veach shares insight into extra teaching Patrick Mahomes does off the field with receivers at training camp.
The following is a list of players, both past and current, who appeared in at least one game for the Cleveland American League franchise known as the Blues (1901), Bronchos (1902), Naps (1903–14), Indians (1915–2021), and Guardians (2022–present).