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Harry Elliott (baseball)
・ Harry Elliott (cricketer)
・ Harry Ellis
・ Harry Ellis (disambiguation)
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・ Harry Elmore Hurd
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・ Harry Ely (baseball)


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Harry Elliott (baseball) : ウィキペディア英語版
Harry Elliott (baseball)
Harry Lewis Elliott (December 30, 1923 – August 9, 2013) was an American professional baseball player who appeared in 92 games in Major League Baseball for the and St. Louis Cardinals. A , outfielder, Elliott threw and batted right-handed.
==Early life==

Elliott was born in San Francisco, California. As a youth, his family moved to Watertown, Minnesota. He played piano professionally from the age of 15, playing Big Band music until the mid-1990s. Elliott graduated from Watertown High School in 1942. He was a standout athlete, lettering two years each in football, basketball and baseball and earned All-Conference and All-District honors. Elliott then attended the University of Minnesota where he was a member of Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity, earning three varsity letters in both football and baseball. In 1949, he was their first athlete to earn first-team Big Ten honors in the sport of baseball. He then spent a short time teaching in Austin, Minnesota.
Elliott started playing professional baseball at the relatively advanced age of 27 and put up prodigious batting numbers in his early seasons in minor league baseball. He batted .391 with 221 hits for the 1951 Alexandria Aces of the Class D Evangeline League, notched 204 hits one year later in the Double-A Texas League with the Shreveport Sports, and in 1954 batted .350 with 224 hits, 42 doubles, 15 home runs and 110 runs batted in in 168 games for the San Diego Padres of the Open Classification Pacific Coast League.〔(Harry Elliott minor league statistics from Baseball Reference )〕 In his seven-year minor league career, Elliott batted .326 lifetime.〔
Acquired by the Cardinals in December 1952, he was batting .321 for their Houston Buffaloes farm club in 1953 when he was called up for the final two months of the Major League season with the Redbirds. Although he struck out against Brooklyn Dodgers left-hander Preacher Roe in his debut on August 1,〔(1953-8-1 box score from Retrosheet )〕 Elliott gained a measure of revenge against Roe exactly one month later, with three hits in four at bats, including his first MLB home run.〔(1953-9-1 box score from Retrosheet )〕
Elliott spent the entire 1954 season in the Pacific Coast League — then vying for possible Major League status as an "Open" (one level above Triple-A) circuit — and was named a PCL all-star because of his stellar season with San Diego. Reacquired by the Cardinals, he spent the entire 1955 season on their roster, appearing in 29 games in the field and in more than 40 games as a pinch hitter. He had two of his best games against Chicago Cubs southpaw Paul Minner, with three hits on May 30〔(1955-5-30(1) box score from Retrosheet )〕 and two more, including his second and final Major League home run, off Minner on September 19.〔(1955-9-19 box score from Retrosheet )〕 Elliott was featured on the cover of ''Sports Illustrated'' magazine in March of 1956.
All told, Elliott collected 45 hits, including ten doubles and one triple in the majors. He retired from professional baseball after the 1958 season.

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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