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Terry Pendleton : ウィキペディア英語版
Terry Pendleton

Terry Lee Pendleton (born July 16, 1960) is a former third baseman in Major League Baseball, and a former hitting coach and current first base coach of the Atlanta Braves. He played primarily for the St. Louis Cardinals and Atlanta Braves, but he also spent time with the Florida Marlins, Cincinnati Reds, and Kansas City Royals. During his fifteen-year career, he went to the World Series five times, yet his team never won a championship.
==Pre-Major League career==
Terry Pendleton started his baseball career as an Eastside Little League player, then moved on to play second baseman at Channel Islands High, then moved To Oxnard community college from 1979/80 . Terry played on the very first Oxnard college baseball team in1979 and helped lead the Condors to a state championship berth then earning a scholarship and on to a collegiate baseball career at Fresno State. He played the 1981 and 1982 seasons with the Bulldogs, and was a key contributor to the team's fourth consecutive conference title in the 1982 season when he set a school record with 98 hits.〔 That feat led to his recognition as an All-American. As a result, Pendleton had his jersey retired in 2007, alongside the jerseys of Tex Clevenger and Jimy Williams.〔 He was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals in the seventh round of the 1982 amateur draft, and subsequently signed with the team on June 12, 1982.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Terry Pendleton Statistics - Baseball-Reference.com )
With little haste after his signing, Pendleton's minor league campaign began with the Johnson City Cardinals and the St. Petersburg Cardinals during the 1982 season.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Terry Pendleton Statistics - The Baseball Cube )〕 Pendleton impressed the organization enough to warrant being moved up to class AA baseball with the Arkansas Travelers for the 1983 season.〔 He was selected to the league's all star team for his performance at Arkansas. Making steady progress, Pendleton was promoted to class AAA in 1984 and played for the Louisville Redbirds. After four games at second base, Pendleton was moved to third and became a third baseman, the position he would play the rest of his career.〔 The Cardinals were so impressed with Pendleton's development as a third baseman in Louisville that they traded their starting third baseman, Ken Oberkfell, to the Atlanta Braves and temporarily placed Andy Van Slyke at third base while Pendleton continued to gain experience.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Ballplayers - Terry Pendleton - BaseballLibrary.com )〕 However, when Van Slyke committed seven errors in thirty games, the Cardinals promoted Pendleton to the majors and began his major league career as the starting third baseman.〔

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