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The following Major League Baseball players appeared as strikebreakers during spring training in 1995, crossing picket lines during the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike. Some had not yet been placed on a 40-man roster , and as such were not eligible to join the MLBPA at the time of the strike, while others were former MLB players who had ...
The 1995 Detroit Tigers season was the team's 95th season and the 84th season at Tiger Stadium. The Tigers finished in fourth place in the American League East with a record of 60–84 (.417). The strike-shortened 1995 season was the last for Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson and longtime second baseman Lou Whitaker , who each retired at the ...
Omar Olivares Palau (born July 6, 1967) is a Puerto Rican former right-handed starting pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the St. Louis Cardinals (1990–1994), Colorado Rockies (1995), Philadelphia Phillies (1995), Detroit Tigers (1996–97), Seattle Mariners (1997), Anaheim Angels (1998–99), Oakland Athletics (1999–2000) and Pittsburgh Pirates (2001).
Ronald Gene Rightnowar (born September 5, 1964) is an American former major league baseball player who played for one year—1995—for the Milwaukee Brewers.. Rightnowar is known for having been a replacement player who crossed picket lines during spring training in 1995 while the 1994 Major League Baseball strike was still going on.
1995 Detroit Tigers season; The Double (Seattle Mariners) ... List of Major League Baseball replacement players; 1995 Milwaukee Brewers season; 1995 Minnesota Twins ...
In his eleven seasons in Detroit, Higginson never played on a team with a winning record. [5] Ironically, the Tigers made it to the 2006 World Series , the year after Higginson retired.) He did finish among the Tigers' all-time top twenty in almost every offensive category, including games played (1,362), at-bats (4,910), hits (1,336), runs ...
The long-term plans for The Baseball Network began to crumble after the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike [29] began on August 12, 1994, [30] [31] forcing the cancellation of the rest of the 1994 regular season, the postseason, and that year's World Series, [32] [33] Both networks elected to dissolve the partnership with Major League ...
September 8, 1979, for the Detroit Tigers: Last MLB appearance; August 10, 1995, for the Detroit Tigers: MLB statistics; Batting average.268: Home runs: 255: Runs batted in: 870: Managerial record: 353–375: Winning %.485: Stats at Baseball Reference Teams; As player. Detroit Tigers (1979–1987) Los Angeles Dodgers (1988–1990) Kansas City ...