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No other player among the Big Red Machine's lineup of superstars can claim greater individual impact on how the game has been played since, even now.
Triple-digit starter Hunter Greene is finally pitching like the ace the Cincinnati Reds have envisioned since giving him that $53 million deal in '23.
BOB RYAN Baseball Hall of Fame only has one unanimous selection. What’s the deal with that?
Koufax only pitched in the Majors for 12 seasons and didn’t truly find his form until the last six of those. He suited up for the last time before his 31st birthday. Yet Koufax’s peak performance was ...
On November 18, 1966, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Sandy Koufax announced his retirement from baseball despite being just 30 years old. Koufax was coming off the best season of his career, but ...
From 1961-1966, Koufax went 129-47 with a 2.19 ERA and 1,713 strikeouts in 1,632.2 innings pitched. During that six-year stretch, Koufax reached double digits in complete games each season.
If you retire Mays’ number, then you must retire Hank Aaron’s number. And if you retire Aaron’s number, Roberto Clemente is deserving. Jackie Robinson’s number, 42, deserves to stand alone.
Pitcher Sandy Koufax was the epitome of a late bloomer, not hitting his peak until his seventh season. But when it came to the baseball Hall of Fame, he was a man in a hurry. On Aug. 7, 1972 – a ...
Koufax fanned 15 New Yorkers while his mates, led by catcher John Roseboro, clubbed Whitey Ford early and sent the Dodgers off in front, 5-2. This was Sandy's day before 69,000 at Yankee Stadium ...
Dodgers ace Sandy Koufax struck out a record 15 Yankees in Game 1 of the 1963 World Series, part of a remarkable season after which he was voted the NL MVP and Cy Young Award winner, as well as ...
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