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・ George Schussel
・ George Schuster
・ George Schuster (driver)
・ George Schuster (public servant)
・ George Schutt
・ George Schuyler
・ George Scialabba
・ George Sclater-Booth, 1st Baron Basing
・ George Scoones
・ George Scorey
・ George Scot of Pitlochie
・ George Scott
・ George Scott (army officer)
・ George Scott (boxer)
・ George Scott (cricketer)
George Scott (first baseman)
・ George Scott (footballer, born 1885)
・ George Scott (footballer, born 1904)
・ George Scott (footballer, born 1944)
・ George Scott (pitcher)
・ George Scott (snooker player)
・ George Scott (wrestler)
・ George Scott Dickey
・ George Scott Graham
・ George Scott House
・ George Scott III
・ George Scott Railton
・ George Scott Register
・ George Scott Robertson
・ George Scott Wallace


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George Scott (first baseman) : ウィキペディア英語版
George Scott (first baseman)

George Charles Scott, Jr. (March 23, 1944 – July 28, 2013) was a first baseman in Major League Baseball for the Boston Red Sox (1966–71, 1977–79), Milwaukee Brewers (1972–76), Kansas City Royals (1979) and New York Yankees (1979). He batted and threw right-handed.
==Early years==
Scott was born March 23, 1944, in Greenville, Mississippi, as the youngest of three children. His father, a cotton farm laborer, died when George Jr. was two years old, and young George was picking cotton by age nine. "That's all we knew," he said. "The reason you did that, all of that money was turned over to your parents to make ends meet. Nothing can be worse than getting up at four in the morning waiting for a truck to pick you up to go pick and chop cotton from six or seven in the morning until five or six in the afternoon."
Scott played Little League baseball in his spare time but was temporarily ejected from the team for being "too good," having hit two or three home runs per game in one six-game stretch. At Coleman High School in Greenville he excelled in baseball, football and basketball, quarterbacking the football team and leading his football and basketball teams to state championships. He chose baseball as a career "to make my living. I got tired of watching my mom struggle (three jobs ). I didn't have the mind that I could go to college and see my mother struggle for another four or five years."
Major league scout Ed Scott (no relation to George) of Mobile, Alabama, who had signed Hank Aaron to his first major league contract, discovered George Scott and signed him as an amateur free agent straight out of high school on May 28, 1962, for $8,000. Eventually promoted to the Boston Red Sox' new Pittsfield Red Sox farm team of the Double-A Eastern League in 1965, Scott became the Eastern League triple crown winner that year, leading the league in home runs, RBIs, and batting average. He became a Red Sox major-league rookie in 1966 as a third baseman, and played all 162 games that season, the last Red Sox rookie to do so.〔

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