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・ Hugh Davies (artist)
・ Hugh Davies (botanist)
・ Hugh Capet
・ Hugh Carey
・ Hugh Carey (soldier)
・ Hugh Carless
・ Hugh Carleton
・ Hugh Carleton, 1st Viscount Carleton
・ Hugh Carr
・ Hugh Carroll Frazer
・ Hugh Carruthers
・ Hugh Carter
・ Hugh Carthy
・ Hugh Cartwright
・ Hugh Casey
Hugh Casey (baseball)
・ Hugh Casey (politician)
・ Hugh Cassidy
・ Hugh Casson
・ Hugh Cathcart Thompson
・ Hugh Cavendish, Baron Cavendish of Furness
・ Hugh Cayley
・ Hugh Cecil
・ Hugh Cecil, 1st Baron Quickswood
・ Hugh Chamberlen
・ Hugh Chamberlen the younger
・ Hugh Champion de Crespigny
・ Hugh Charles
・ Hugh Charles Boyle
・ Hugh Chatham Memorial Hospital, (former)


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Hugh Casey (baseball) : ウィキペディア英語版
Hugh Casey (baseball)

Hugh Thomas "Fireman" Casey (October 14, 1913 – July 3, 1951) was a Major League Baseball pitcher. He played for the Chicago Cubs (1935), the Brooklyn Dodgers (1939–42 and 1946–48), the Pittsburgh Pirates (1949), and the New York Yankees (1949).
==Professional career==
Casey began his professional baseball career with the Atlanta Crackers of the Southern Association, at the age of 18.〔("Hugh Casey Minor League Statistics & History" ). ''baseball-reference.com''. Retrieved 2010-10-19.〕 After going 13–14 for Memphis in 1938, he was drafted by the Dodgers. He pitched effectively for the next four seasons, but his career is best known for a wild pitch that he threw in the ninth inning of Game 4 in the 1941 World Series, which precipitated a Yankee rally. Catcher Mickey Owen thought that the pitch was a spitball; Casey always swore it wasn't. Brooklyn lost the game and, eventually, the series. Casey went 0–2.
In January 1943, Casey entered the Navy. He was discharged in December 1945. Upon his return to Brooklyn, he had two good seasons in 1946 and 1947. In 1947, he led the National League in saves for the second time. He pitched well in that year's World Series as well, going 2–0 with a save, but the Dodgers lost in seven games.
Like many of the colorful Dodger players during that era, Casey had his share of adventure. One story recounts a time that he sparred with writer Ernest Hemingway in Hemingway's house.〔Golenbock, Peter. ''Bums: An Oral History of the Brooklyn Dodgers''.〕
Casey's major league career ended in 1949. He went 10–4 for his old team, the Crackers, in 1950; Atlanta won the pennant.

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