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A drum major in the military is the individual leading a military band or a field unit (corps of drums, fanfare band, pipe band or drum and bugle corps). It is an appointment, not a military rank. Military drum majors utilize a ceremonial mace for giving commands while marching.
Like many original sabermetric concepts, the idea of a defensive spectrum was first introduced by Bill James in his Baseball Abstract series of books during the 1980s. [2] The basic premise of the spectrum is that positions on the right side of the spectrum are more difficult than the positions on the left side.
A Tambour-Major of the French Imperial Guard (historical reenactment). The position of drum major originated in the British Army with the Corps of Drums in 1650. [citation needed] Military groups performed mostly duty calls and battle signals during that period, and a fife and drum corps, directed by the drum major, would use short pieces to communicate to field units.
The drum major is the highest ranked position that a member can achieve within the GBMB. The GBMB has 3 drum majors that can be recognized by their white pants, cowboy hats, gloves, and shoes (as opposed to the black articles for regular members). Drum majors are also given black visors in place of the white baseball caps for regular members.
In baseball statistics, defensive runs saved (DRS) measures the number of runs a player saved or cost his team on defense relative to an average player. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Any positive number is above average, and the best fielders typically have a DRS figure of 15 to 20 for a season. [ 3 ]
The late John Adams beat his drum to rally the Cleveland baseball team for more than 3,700 games. It landed in the baseball hall of fame this week.
The voters select the best defensive player at each position with the best player given 10 points, the second best nine points and so forth. [9] From the award's inception, the specific outfield positions have been picked individually instead of choosing three generic outfielders, [10] a practice employed by the Gold Glove Awards from 1961 to ...
The 2022 first-round pick reached the majors last year but struggled mightily. Woods-Richardson impressed as a 23-year-old in his first full big-league season, tossing 133⅔ league-average innings.