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・ Fred Wampler (Indiana)
・ Fred Wander
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・ Fred Ward
・ Fred Ward (rugby league)
・ Fred Ward Memorial Show
・ Fred Waring
・ Fred Warmbold
・ Fred Warner (baseball)
・ Fred Warngård
・ Fred Warren
・ Fred Washington (defensive tackle)
・ Fred Washington (offensive tackle)
・ Fred Wasmer
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Fred Waters
・ Fred Waters (American football)
・ Fred Watson
・ Fred Watson (footballer)
・ Fred Watts
・ Fred Way
・ Fred Weary
・ Fred Weary (defensive back)
・ Fred Weary (offensive lineman)
・ Fred Webber
・ Fred Weber
・ Fred Webster
・ Fred Webster (Australian footballer)
・ Fred Webster (boxer)
・ Fred Webster (cricketer, born 1897)


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Fred Waters : ウィキペディア英語版
Fred Waters

Fred Warren Waters (February 2, 1927 – August 28, 1989) was an American professional baseball player, manager, scout and coach. The left-handed pitcher appeared in 25 Major League games for the – Pittsburgh Pirates. Born in Benton, Mississippi, Waters attended the University of Southern Mississippi. He stood tall and weighed .
Apart from his trials with the Pirates, Waters had a 13-season (1949–1958; 1960–1962) pitching career in minor league baseball. He was first signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers, then acquired by the Milwaukee Braves in April 1953, spending most of that season with the Lincoln Chiefs of the Class A Western League. Then, on December 26, 1953, he was traded to Pittsburgh along with third baseman Sid Gordon, outfielder Sam Jethroe, pitcher Max Surkont, fellow minor leaguers Curt Raydon and Larry Lasalle, and $100,000 for third baseman Danny O'Connell. This is the only six-for-one trade in Major League history and was surpassed only by the seven-for-one deal that sent Vida Blue from the Oakland Athletics to the San Francisco Giants in 1978.〔(Danny O'Connell traded for 6 players ), The Baseball Page〕
Waters appeared in two games in relief for the Pirates at the end of the 1955 season, then worked in 23 games for the Pirates over the last three months of 1956 after his recall from the Open-Classification Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast League. Both of his MLB victories came in starting roles. His first big-league triumph came on July 26, when he went seven shutout innings against the Chicago Cubs, allowing only four singles and three bases on balls. Howie Pollet relieved Waters in the eighth inning with two runners on base, and preserved the 4–0 shutout win.〔(1956-7-26 box score from Retrosheet )〕
Over his 25 Major League games and 56 innings pitched, Waters allowed 55 hits and compiled a strong 2.89 career earned run average. However, he issued 32 bases on balls, with only 14 strikeouts.
Waters appeared in only seven minor league games in 1958 and sat out the 1959 season completely. He became a high school baseball coach in Pensacola, Florida.〔Brown, Scott, ''Baseball in Pensacola.'' Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press, 2013, page 119〕 But in 1960, at age 33, he returned to baseball as a pitcher-coach for the Class D Pensacola Angels of the Alabama–Florida League. In three seasons with Pensacola's professional franchise, he appeared in 73 games, largely as a starting pitcher, and compiled a 41–13 record and a sparkling 2.04 earned run average.
In 1964, Waters became a manager and coach in the farm system of the Minnesota Twins, while continuing his high school coaching duties in Pensacola.〔 During Waters' 22 seasons as a manager, all of them in short-season leagues (Rookie and Short Season-A levels), his teams went 681–664 (.505).
Waters retired from managing after the 1986 season, and died in Pensacola three years later at the age of 62.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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