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・ Jake La Botz
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・ Jake Lehmann
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Jake Flowers
・ Jake Fogelnest
・ Jake Foley
・ Jake Forbes
・ Jake Ford
・ Jake Forster-Caskey
・ Jake Foster
・ Jake Fox
・ Jake Freeman
・ Jake Freeze
・ Jake Friend
・ Jake Froese
・ Jake Gaither
・ Jake Gaither Gymnasium
・ Jake Gannon


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Jake Flowers : ウィキペディア英語版
Jake Flowers

D'Arcy Raymond "Jake" Flowers (March 16, 1902 – December 27, 1962) was an American professional baseball player, coach and manager. Primarily a second baseman and shortstop, he appeared in 583 Major League games over ten seasons between and for the St. Louis Cardinals, Brooklyn Robins/Dodgers and Cincinnati Reds. The native of Cambridge, Maryland, attended Washington College, where he played football and basketball in addition to baseball.〔(Washington College web site )〕 He batted and threw right-handed and was listed at tall and .
Essentially a reserve infielder, Flowers played in over 100 games only once: in , for the Robins. He also had his finest offensive season for Brooklyn during the lively-ball season, when Flowers batted .320 and reached career highs in doubles (18) and runs batted in (50) in only 86 games played. During his two terms with the Cardinals he was a member of two world championship teams, in 1926 and 1931, collecting one hit and one base on balls in 15 World Series plate appearances. During his regular-season big-league career, Flowers batted .256; his 433 hits included 75 doubles, 18 triples and 16 home runs.
After his professional playing career ended in 1936, Flowers returned to the Eastern Shore of Maryland and turned to managing. In his first season, 1937, he won ''The Sporting News inaugural Minor League Manager of the Year Award. His Salisbury Indians won the Class D Eastern Shore League regular-season pennant with a 59–37 win-loss record, then prevailed over the Centreville Colts in the league playoffs for the undisputed league championship. Salisbury roared off to a 21–5 record during the season's early weeks, but when an ineligible player was discovered on the Indians' roster, the team was forced to forfeit all 21 wins.〔(Eastern Shore Baseball Foundation Hall of Fame website )〕 Undeterred, Flowers' club then won 59 of its last 70 games without the banned player to finish 3 games ahead of the second-place Easton Browns. Had the 21 early-season wins not been forfeited, Salisbury would have compiled a winning percentage of .833, good for 135 wins during a 162-game season.
After three seasons in the Eastern Shore League, Flowers returned to the Majors to coach under two former Cardinal teammates: Frankie Frisch with the Pittsburgh Pirates (1940–45) and Billy Southworth with the Boston Braves (1946). Flowers then was general manager of the Braves' top farm system affiliate, the Milwaukee Brewers of the American Association, from 1947–50 and a Cleveland Indians coach in 1951–52. He later scouted for the Baltimore Orioles. He suffered a fatal heart attack at age 60 in Clearwater, Florida.
Jake Flowers is a member of the Washington College〔 and Eastern Shore Baseball Foundation〔 halls of fame.
==See also==

*Salisbury Indians

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Jake Flowers」の詳細全文を読む



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