I guess it doesn't help to say that Al Downing was the pitcher.
And Braves reliever Tom House recovered the ball?? Jk
OFC
I guess it doesn't help to say that Al Downing was the pitcher.
I can thank all those video replays of Aaron's historic 715th home run for this one and the call from the great Vin Scully.All correct names associated with the historic #715. The left fielder is still not mentioned yet. He is a guy who is fresh in many many sports fans minds, and has been talked about here.
No lie! I am surprised that Steve Bartman is not any relation to him given the NLCS Game Six foul ball and the chaos that followed.Billy Buck it is. The guy was a part of many all time plays. BILLIEBALL is up.
Who are you, Alex Trebek?Continuing with the baseball theme....three players have hit two home runs in one inning twice during their career...name two of three...
Continuing with the baseball theme....three players have hit two home runs in one inning twice during their career...name two of three...
He’s saying that 3 players have hit 2 home runs in an inning on 2 different occasions in their career. Not just accomplishing the feat once.Edwin Encarnacion did it earlier this year and I know it put him on that list of doing it twice. A-Rod has done it twice. Of course Fernando Tatis is an answer too. Jeff King in the 90s did it. — That’s at least 4 players that I know of and I don’t know much about baseball. I could be wrong but are you sure there’s only 4?
He’s saying that 3 players have hit 2 home runs in an inning on 2 different occasions in their career. Not just accomplishing the feat once.
Ok I looked it up. (I was wrong about Tatis, he has only done it once. I was Right about EE, A Rod, King) - There’s 5 players though
Encarnacion
A Rod
Jeff King
Andre Dawson
Willie McCovey
You are up BeerPoisoning! You got all five. Got in a hurry trying to get a question in before I left for my stepson’s Kindergarten awards ceremony that I forgot about ARod and Edwin
that's correct BP Phillies have been around since 1883!
Just a couple of side-notes to the previous question... The Phillies were originally the Quakers; they didn't become the Phillies until 1890.
The Cincinnati Reds have held that nickname since 1890, as well. Except they were the Redlegs from 1954-1958. The continuity of the name was broken up for 5 seasons.
The Pittsburgh Alleghenys became the Pirates in 1891. They've held that name ever since.
I ended up researching it after I replied to Devilz and you were accurate. There’s a little technicality involved but the Phillies are recognized as having the same name/city for the longest tenure.I remembered the question from an old trivia pursuit game,so I'm not 100% sure of the accuracy