Mickey Vernon

Baseball Player

Mickey Vernon was born in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, United States on April 22nd, 1918 and is the Baseball Player. At the age of 90, Mickey Vernon biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
April 22, 1918
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, United States
Death Date
Sep 24, 2008 (age 90)
Zodiac Sign
Taurus
Profession
Baseball Player
Mickey Vernon Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

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Mickey Vernon Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Mickey Vernon Life

James Barton "Mickey" Vernon (April 22, 1918 – September 24, 2008), the Washington Senators (1939–51, 1958), the Milwaukee Braves (1959), and the Pittsburgh Pirates (1960).

He was also the first manager in the history of the Senators' expansion (now the Texas Rangers), and he spent from 1961 to 1963 as a coach for four MLB franchises from 1960 to 1982. He played for first base in 1960, earning the major league record for career double plays (2,044).

He holds the American League (AL) record for career games (2,227), putouts (19,754), assists (1,444), and total odds (21,408).

Vernon, a lanky, was 6 foot 2 inches (1.88 m) tall (170 pounds (77 kg); he batted and threw left-handed.

Early life

Mickey Vernon was born in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, and attended Villanova University before making his major league debut on July 8, 1939. He was Gay Vernon's father.

He served in the United States Navy during World War II, missing the 1944 and 1945 seasons. In 1945, Doby and Vernon worked on Ulithi in the South Pacific, and Goodman and Vernon encouraged Doby to become a major league baseball player; the Cleveland Indians became the first African-American to break the color line in the American League.

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Mickey Vernon Career

Baseball career

Vernon played for 14 full major league seasons (400 at bats or more) in his 20-year career. He wound up batting over .335 twice, over .300 five times, and over .290 nine times. He was a two-time American League batting champion. In 1946, his .353 batting mark eclipsed Ted Williams' .342 by 11 points. Then, in 1953, Vernon's .337 average denied Cleveland's Al Rosen (.336) the Triple Crown by just one one-thousandth of a point. The following year, 1954, Vernon had a career-high 20 home runs, 97 RBIs, and 14 triples. He led the AL with 33 doubles and 67 extra-base hits. He also had 294 total bases, which was second in the AL, behind Minnie Miñoso.

Over time, Vernon became one of the best-liked ballplayers, mainly through his unique personality and charismatic, but quiet, style. On September 1, 1960, after a season spent as the Pittsburgh Pirates' first-base coach, Vernon was placed on the active list when MLB rosters expanded to 40 men. He appeared in nine regular-season games as a pinch hitter for Pittsburgh, notching an RBI single and an intentional walk in his nine plate appearances to become one of only 29 players in baseball history to have appeared in a major league game in four decades. By his final game played, on September 27, 1960, he was, at 42, the oldest player in the National League by almost a year, and one of the most popular figures in the game.

He appeared in 2,409 MLB games without playing in the postseason, third most in history behind Ernie Banks and Luke Appling. Notably, on September 25, 1960, during Vernon's time on the active list, the Pirates clinched the NL pennant; but he was not on the Pirate playing roster for the 1960 World Series, resuming his full-time coaching duties. He earned a World Series ring when the Bucs triumphed in seven games over the New York Yankees.

Vernon posted a career .286 batting average with 172 home runs and 1,311 RBIs in 2,409 games. The left-hander averaged 88 RBIs a year, and had 11 seasons with 80 or more, 3 with 90 or more. He scored 1,196 runs with 137 stolen bases and a .359 on-base percentage. His career slugging percentage was .428, with a career high of .518 in 1953. He compiled 2,495 hits, with 490 doubles and 120 triples, in 8,731 at bats. He had 3,741 career total bases, with his career high coming in 1953 (315).

Satchel Paige once said, "If I had a two run lead, and the bases were loaded in the ninth inning, and Mickey Vernon was up...I'd walk him and pitch to the next hitter." Ned Garver recalled that in Vernon's finest seasons, "He'd hit the ball wherever it was pitched. He was difficult to pitch to in those seasons."

Vernon's career as a coach and manager began during his 1960 stint on the staff of his longtime friend, Pirates' skipper Danny Murtaugh.

The following year, in 1961, he returned to Washington when he was named manager of the expansion Senators in their first year of existence. Inheriting the name and home field of the 1901–1960 Washington franchise, now the Minnesota Twins, the expansion Senators were hastily constructed with an undercapitalized ownership, an MLB roster of castoff players, and an almost-nonexistent farm system. In Vernon's two full seasons at the helm, 1961 and 1962, the Senators lost a combined 201 games. They were 14–26 and last in the ten-team American League when Vernon was fired on May 21, 1963. He finished with a career record of 135–227, a .373 winning percentage.

Vernon remained in the game into the 1980s as a major league coach for the Pirates (returning there for a second term in 1964), St. Louis Cardinals (1965), Montreal Expos (1977–78) and Yankees (1982). He also managed at the Triple-A and Double-A levels of the minor leagues, and served as a roving batting instructor for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Kansas City Royals and Yankees before retiring from baseball.

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