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・ Mike Senica
・ Mike Senne
・ Mike Sensibaugh
・ Mike Sergeant
・ Mike Sertich
・ Mike Setefano
・ Mike Seth
・ Mike Settle
・ Mike Sexton
・ Mike Sgroi
・ Mike Shaikh
・ Mike Shanahan
・ Mike Shanahan (tight end)
・ Mike Shank
・ Mike Shannon
Mike Ryan (catcher)
・ Mike Ryan (footballer, born 1930)
・ Mike Ryan (footballer, born 1979)
・ Mike Ryan (soccer)
・ Mike Ryan (third baseman)
・ Mike Ryba
・ Mike Ryhal
・ Mike S. Miller
・ Mike S. Ryan
・ Mike S. Zafirovski
・ Mike Sabin
・ Mike Sacks
・ Mike Sadek
・ Mike Sadlo
・ Mike Saenz


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Mike Ryan (catcher) : ウィキペディア英語版
Mike Ryan (catcher)

Michael James Ryan (born November 25, 1941 in Haverhill, Massachusetts) was a Major League Baseball player, who played catcher for the Boston Red Sox (1964–67), Philadelphia Phillies (1968–73) and Pittsburgh Pirates (1974).
Of all non-pitchers since 1930 with at least 1000 at-bats, only one, Ray Oyler, has a lower batting average.
Appearing in a team-high 79 games as a catcher, Ryan helped the "Impossible Dream" Red Sox win the American League pennant. In 1967 he was the roommate of Tony Conigliaro before Conigliaro's beaning. Then in he was a reserve on the Pirates team that won the National League Eastern Division.
With the Philadelphia Phillies on May 2, 1970, Ryan and Tim McCarver both had a hand broken in a game against the San Francisco Giants.〔
〕 With their catching corps depleted, the Phillies were forced to use Jim Hutto, Del Bates, Doc Edwards, and Mike Compton at the position. Bates and Compton never played in the major leagues before or after 1970. Edwards was the Phillies bullpen coach and had last played in the majors in 1965.
After his playing career, Ryan managed and coached in the farm systems of the Pirates and Phillies from 1975 to 1979, then coached at the Major League level for the Phillies for 16 seasons, from until . He had surgery following the 1993 season on his right shoulder, the cumulative result of his years of throwing batting practice and warming-up pitchers. He worked two more seasons with ongoing pain and retired after the 1995 season. He was on the staff of three National League champions in Philadelphia, and the 1980 World Series champion, and worked for seven managers. Ryan's coaching tenure with the Phillies was the longest in franchise history until being surpassed by John Vukovich in .
He lives in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire.
==References==


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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