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・ Héctor Lacognata
・ Héctor Ladero
・ Héctor Landazuri
・ Héctor Larios Córdova
・ Héctor Larrea
・ Héctor Lavoe
・ Héctor Lechuga
・ Héctor Libertella
・ Héctor Licudi
・ Héctor Lizárraga
・ Héctor Lucchetti
・ Héctor Luis Acevedo
・ Héctor Luis Lemus
・ Héctor Luis Palma Salazar
・ Héctor Luna
Héctor López
・ Héctor López (boxer)
・ Héctor López (disambiguation)
・ Héctor López (volleyball)
・ Héctor Macchiavello
・ Héctor Maestri
・ Héctor Magnetto
・ Héctor Maisonave
・ Héctor Mancilla
・ Héctor Manuel González
・ Héctor Manuel Moya Cessa
・ Héctor Manuel Sauceda Gamboa
・ Héctor Manzanilla
・ Héctor Marcano
・ Héctor Marchena


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Héctor López : ウィキペディア英語版
Héctor López

Héctor Headley López Swainson (born July 9, 1929 (possibly April 8, 1932)) is a former left fielder and third baseman in Major League Baseball who played for the Kansas City Athletics and New York Yankees from 1955 to 1966. He is notable as the first black manager at the AAA baseball level, as the third outfielder on the Maris/Mantle Yankees, and as the Kansas City Athletics franchise hitting streak record holder. López was on World Series Championship teams for the Yankees in 1961 and 1962. In various seasons, he finished among the top 10 American League hitters in hits, runs batted in, runs scored, doubles, triples, slugging percentage, sacrifice flies, sacrifice hits, games played, times hit by pitch and at bats. He was also known for his hustle, his clutch hitting and poor fielding.
López was the second Panamanian-born major league baseball player and continues to be one of the country's most revered world champion athletes. Although Humberto Robinson (102 games played/5 seasons) debuted in the major leagues 22 days earlier than López, López (1,450 games played/12 seasons) was the first of the 49 major leaguers born in Panama to have an extensive career.〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=August 24, 2007 )〕 He was the first Panamanian-born major leaguer to finish in the top 10 in any official statistical category (sacrifice hits, 1956); first to lead his league in any official statistic (sacrifice flies, 1958); first to play in the World Series (with the 1960 Yankees); and the first to win a World Championship (with the 1961 Yankees).
He was an infielder for the Athletics, and later was often the third outfielder on the Maris/Mantle Yankees of the early and mid-1960s. López had his most successful season in 1959, but continued to contribute effectively during the early 60s during their pennant successes. The utility player divided his career almost equally between infield and outfield positions. After retiring from baseball, he went on to become a groundbreaking manager in minor league baseball as the first to break the baseball color line as a black manager at the AAA level for the Buffalo Bisons and then served in various international managerial and coaching positions.

==Early life==
Born in Colón, Panama, López grew up in Colón and the neighboring Panama Canal Zone during a time of American military occupation of the canal zone. He held a part-time job at an American military base bowling alley. He was a high school track star whose father had been a pitcher for the Panama national baseball team. As a high school athlete, he played semipro baseball for US$100 per month in Colón. After he graduated from high school he signed to play with St. Hyacinthe of the Canadian Provincial League who also employed Clifford "Connie" Johnson.〔Moffi and Kronstadt, pp. 136–7.〕

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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