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Lou Camilli : ウィキペディア英語版
Lou Camilli

Louis Steven Camilli (born September 24, 1946 in El Paso, Texas) is a former Major League Baseball infielder who played for four seasons for the Cleveland Indians.
Camilli played college baseball at Texas A&M University, under coach Tom Chandler,〔Carter, Bo, and Mike McKenzie. ''Tales from Aggieland'', Sports Publishing LLC, 2002, p. 127. ISBN 1-58261-331-1〕 where he was an all-conference selection in both 1966 and 1967.〔"All-Conference Aggies", 2009 Texas A&M Baseball Media Guide, p. 126.〕 In August 1966, he was one of 19 college baseball players named to represent the United States in the World Amateur Tournament. He also played summer ball with the Rapid City Chiefs, a Rapid City, South Dakota team in the Basin League.〔Shoemaker, Darrell. "(Hills players filled Basin League lineups )", The Rapid City Journal, August 18, 2003.〕 He was then selected by the Indians in the 3rd round of the 1967 MLB Draft.
Camilli began his professional career with the 1967 Class-A Reno Silver Sox, where he hit .303 in 62 games. He was promoted to the Double-A Waterbury Indians in 1968 and made his Major League debut on August 9, 1969 at third base against the Kansas City Royals. He was hitless in four at-bats in the game. In 13 games with the Indians in 1969, he had 14 at-bats and failed to record a hit. He spent most of 1970 also with Waterbury before receiving a late season call-up. He also failed to record a hit in 15 at-bats that season.
Camilli recorded his first Major League hit with a single to center field against Vida Blue of the Oakland Athletics on April 30, 1971.
In four seasons from 1969-1972 with the Indians he played in 107 games, had 151 at-bats, 22 hits and a .146 batting average. He was used mostly as a utility infielder, a role that he embraced. The Indians never finished higher than fifth during Camilli's time with the team, leading him to quip, "They ought to change our name to the Cleveland Light Company. We don't have anything but utility men."〔Dickson, Paul. ''The new Dickson baseball dictionary'', Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1999, p. 524. ISBN 0-15-600580-8〕
Camilli's professional baseball career ended after he hit .281 in 134 games for the 1973 Oklahoma City 89ers. A profile of Camilli is included in the book "Portrait of a Franchise: An Intimate Look at Cleveland Indians Baseball During the Rockin' Sixties" by Doug Kurkul.
==External links==

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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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