- Ralph Kiner
Infobox MLB retired
name=Ralph Kiner
position=Outfielder
bats=Right
throws=Right
birthdate=birth date and age|1922|10|27
city-state|Santa Rita|New Mexico
debutdate=April 12
debutyear=by|1946
debutteam=Pittsburgh Pirates
finaldate=September 25
finalyear=by|1955
finalteam=Cleveland Indians
stat1label=Batting average
stat1value=.279
stat2label=Home runs
stat2value=369
stat3label=Runs batted in
stat3value=1,105
teams=
*Pittsburgh Pirates (by|1946-by|1953)
*Chicago Cubs (by|1953-by|1954)
*Cleveland Indians (by|1955)
highlights=
* 6x All-Star selection (1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953)
* Pittsburgh Pirates #4 retired
* Led NL in home runs from 1946-1952
hofdate=by|1975
hofvote=75.41%Ralph McPherran Kiner (born
October 27 ,1922 ) is an American formerMajor League Baseball player and currentannouncer . Though constant injuries forced his retirement from the game after only ten seasons, Kiner's tremendous slugging output during his short career outpaced nearly all of hisNational League contemporaries between the years 1946 and 1954. He was elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame in by|1975Playing career
Kiner was born in
Santa Rita, New Mexico , and grew up inAlhambra, California . He made his major league debut onApril 16 , by|1946 with thePittsburgh Pirates . In by|1947, he gained notice for hitting 51 home runs. Many of Kiner's homers were hit into a shortened left-field and left-center-field porch atForbes Field , originally built forHank Greenberg , and known in the press as "Greenberg Gardens"; the porch was retained for Kiner and redubbed by the media as "Kiner's Korner".("Lost Ballparks",Lawrence Ritter , Penguin Books, 1992, p.66-67) Kiner would later use "Kiner's Korner" as the title of his post-game TV show in New York. [http://www.baseball-almanac.com/quotes/quokiner.shtml]In by|1949, Kiner topped his by|1947 total with 54 home runs, falling just two short of
Hack Wilson 'sNational League record. It was the highest total in the major leagues from by|1939 to by|1960, and the highest National League total from by|1931 to by|1997. It made Kiner the first National League player with two fifty-plus seasons. Kiner also matched his peak of 127 RBIs. From by|1947 to by|1951, Kiner topped 40 home runs and 100 RBIs each season. His string of seasons leading the league inhome runs reached seven in by|1952, when he hit 37. This was also the last of a record six consecutive seasons in which he led Major League Baseball in home runs, all under the guidance of managerBilly Meyer and Pirate greatHonus Wagner . He was selected to participate in the All-Star Game in six straight seasons, by|1948 to by|1953. [http://www.baseball-reference.com/k/kinerra01.shtml] He holds (by himself) the major league record of eight home runs in four consecutive multi-homer games, a mark that he set in September, 1947.A quote variously attributed to Kiner himself, as well as to teammates talking about Kiner, was "Home run hitters drive
Cadillac s and singles hitters driveFord s." [http://bioproj.sabr.org/bioproj.cfm?a=v&v=a&bid=1066&pid=7516] Footage of Kiner hitting a homer in Forbes Field can be seen in the 1951 film, "Angels in the Outfield".Fact|date=July 2008On
June 4 , by|1953, Kiner was sent to theChicago Cubs as part of a ten player trade. This was largely due to continued salary disputes with Pirate general managerBranch Rickey , who reportedly told Kiner, "We finished last with you, we can finish last without you." (This may be an all-purpose baseball quote, as a similar comment was reportedly made byCasey Stengel in reference to a possible trade ofVan Lingle Mungo - "The Gospel According to Casey", p.6)Kiner played the rest of the 1953 season and all of by|1954 with the Cubs, and finished his career with the
Cleveland Indians in by|1955; a back injury forced him out of baseball at that point. He retired at the age of 32. At the end of his ten seasons, he had amassed 369 home runs and 1019runs batted in to go along with a career .279batting average .Kiner was not known for speed. In contrast to radio's "
Quiz Kids " or the 1950Philadelphia Phillies "Whiz Kids ", according to Chicago columnistMike Royko the 1950s Cubs had an outfield "that was so slow they were known as theQuicksand Kids."Hank Sauer playedleft field ,Frank Baumholtz playedcenter field , and Kiner split his time between left, center andright field . ("One More Time: The Best of Mike Royko", University of Chicago, 1999, p.29-31)Broadcasting career
In by|1961, Kiner made his way into the broadcast booth with the
Chicago White Sox . The next year, Kiner, along withLindsey Nelson and Bob Murphy, started announcing the games of the expansionNew York Mets onWOR-TV in New York. The trio rotated announcing duties on the Mets' radio broadcasts, as well. Among Kiner's jobs on WOR-TV was to host a post-game show known as "Kiner's Korner ".Kiner was known for his occasional
malapropisms , usually connected with getting people's names wrong, such as calling broadcasting partnerTim McCarver as "Tim MacArthur". He even once called himself "Ralph Korner". [http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1119482/index.htm]
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