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・ Milt Piepul
・ Milt Plum
・ Milt Popovich
・ Milt Ramírez
・ Milt Raskin
・ Milt Reed
・ Milt Rehnquist
・ Milt Schmidt
・ Milt Schoon
・ Milt Scott
・ Milt Shoffner
・ Milt Simington
・ Milt Smith
・ Milt Steengrafe
・ Milt Stegall
Milt Stock
・ Milt Sunde
・ Milt Thomas
・ Milt Thompson (baseball)
・ Milt Ticco
・ Milt Trost
・ Milt Turner
・ Milt Wagner
・ Milt Watson
・ Milt Welch
・ Milt Whitehead
・ Milt Wilcox
・ Milt Williams
・ Milt Wilson
・ Milt Woodard


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Milt Stock : ウィキペディア英語版
Milt Stock

Milton Joseph Stock (July 11, 1893 – July 16, 1977) was an American third baseman in Major League Baseball from 1913 through 1926. The native of Chicago, Illinois, played for the New York Giants, Philadelphia Phillies, Brooklyn Robins and St. Louis Cardinals. Over 14 MLB seasons, he played in 1,628 games and amassed 1,806 hits, with a .289 lifetime batting average and 155 stolen bases. Stock stood tall, weighed and threw and batted right-handed.
Stock is believed to be the only Major League player to get four hits in each of four consecutive games. (Rafael Furcal of the Los Angeles Dodgers was last with three consecutive four-hit games in ). Stock was seriously injured in a collision with Lou Gehrig in spring training in 1926, and retired early in season.
==Minor league manager, Major League coach==
He remained in the game, however, as a minor league manager and executive. Then, from 1944 through 1952, Stock coached in the National League for the Chicago Cubs (1944–48), Brooklyn Dodgers (1949–50) and Pittsburgh Pirates (1951–52).〔(Retrosheet )〕
His tenure as third-base coach in Brooklyn ended in controversy when Stock was blamed for sending home runner Cal Abrams with the potential winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning of the final game of the 1950 season. The Dodgers trailed the Phillies by one game in the standings and needed to win the season's last game, against Philadelphia at Ebbets Field on October 1, to force a best-of-three playoff series.
With the score tied at one in the bottom of the ninth, Abrams was on second base with none out when Duke Snider singled sharply to center field. Stock was criticized for not holding Abrams at third base on the hit. Instead, Abrams was easily thrown out at home by Phils' centerfielder Richie Ashburn, the Dodgers squandered their scoring opportunity, the game went into extra innings, and Philadelphia won the game and the National League championship in the tenth inning on a three-run home run by Dick Sisler.〔Bell, Christopher, ''Scapegoats: Baseballers Whose Careers Are Marked by One Fateful Play.'' Jefferson, N.C.: Macfarland & Co., 2002, p. 44〕
Stock settled in the Mobile, Alabama, area after playing minor league baseball there in 1913. He was the father-in-law of Eddie Stanky, the longtime MLB second baseman and manager, who played under Stock in the Cub farm system. He died in Fairhope, Alabama, at the age of 84.

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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