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May 26

TODAY IN BASEBALL HISTORY

Hey Folks!

Welcome to Classic Baseball Broadcasts Daily Highlights for May 26

May 26, 1962, future Hall of Famer Al Kaline fractures his collarbone while making a dramatic game-saving catch in right field. Kaline helps preserve a 2-1 victory over the New York Yankees snagging Elston Howards drive for the final out, but the Detroit Tigers’ star will miss two months with the injury.

Al Kaline is Mr. Tiger, not only because he played in more games as a Tiger than anyone else and hit more home runs than any Tiger, but also because he gave his Detroit teammates and fans his classiest best in baseball skill, leadership, and determination each inning he played.


Kaline was born into a sports-minded family that included a father and two uncles who played semi-pro baseball. Though smaller than most boys his age and somewhat shy, he became a top-notch player by sheer practice and playing time. He enrolled in several organized leagues each season, being transported from field to field by family members. Young Al possessed a great arm, developed solid hitting skills, and had great infielder quickness.

Scout Ed Katalinas signed Kaline ($35,000 bonus) right off the Baltimore sandlots and Al never played one inning in the minor leagues. On June 25, 1953, his first game, he played right field for the first time in his life. He was used sparingly by Manager Fred Hutchinson, usually as a pinch runner. His first homer came off Dave Hoskins (Cleveland) and he singled off Satchel Paige before that first season ended.

In his rookie year of 1954 Kaline hit a modest .276 with four HR and was part of an outfield corps that included Don Lund, Bob Nieman, Bill Tuttle and highly touted Jim Delsing. By 1959 all of these phenom outfielders were gone in favor of Charlie Maxwell, Harvey Kuenn, and Kaline. Kaline's second career homer in 1954 was a grand slam, making him the second youngest ever to have hit one. (Eddie Onslow of the 1912 Tigers was the youngest until Boston's Tony Conigliaro moved him back in 1964.) Red Sox legend Ted Williams told Kaline to build his wrist strength up over the winter by squeezing baseballs as hard as he could. Though the slender rookie's glove was never in doubt, his power was. Those doubts were laid to rest early in 1955 as Kaline hit in 23 of his first 24 games, including seven home runs - three at Kansas City in one game (his only three-homer game), two in one inning. Ending at .340, 27 HR, 102 RBI, and 121 runs, he was the youngest AL batting champ, shading the immortal Ty Cobb for the honor. It was the only time he would amass 200 hits in a season. He finished second in MVP voting, just 17 points behind Yogi Berra.

As a perennial All-Star, Kaline homered off Lew Burdette (1959) and Bob Buhl (1960) while hitting .324 in All-Star 16 games. In 1962 Kaline was having a fantastic year (.336, 13 HR, 38 RBI) when on May 26 he fractured his right collarbone diving for the last-out catch in a 2-1 Hank Aguirre win at New York. Two months later he reentered the race with a game-winning, two-run single in a 4-3 Aguirre win. In a mere 100 games that year he hit 29 HRs with 94 RBI. Proportionately, had he played the entire season, he would have eclipsed 30 homers and possibly 40 for the only time in his career. That injury certainly cost him the opportunity to later become the first American Leaguer to collect 400 homers and 3,000 hits in a career. Various injuries removed Kaline from some 200 games during his 15 "prime" years. In 1963 Kaline again finished second to a Yankee catcher, Elston Howard, in the MVP balloting.

After missing a third of the 1968 season, Kaline was fit into manager Mayo Smith's World Series lineup by playing centerfielder Mickey Stanley at shortstop. In the seventh inning of Game Five, the bases were full and the Tigers were down 3-2 in score and 3-1 in games. Kaline singled home two runs to win the game and ignite Detroit's comeback for the World Championship.

Kaline made playing right field into an art form. He won 10 Gold Gloves in 11 years (1957-59, 61-67). All comparisons to his glove work eventually fellelson short because he was so graceful and quick. Never a wasted motion, never a wrong decision. Kaline has said, "When I first came up to the Tigers I was scared stiff, but I had desire. Desire is something you must have to make it in the majors. I was never satisfied with just average." Though he was not spectacular, he was as close to perfect as a player could be. All of his baseball skills were impeccably honed: hitting for power and average, speed, throwing, and fielding judgment.

Always a Detroit hero, Al Kaline joined the Tiger broadcasting crew after his retirement from the field.

Here are links to check out!

  • Hall of Fame: Inducted as Player in 1980. (Voted by BBWAA on 340/385 ballots)
       View Al Kaline's Page at the Baseball Hall of Fame (plaque, photos, videos).

  • View Player Info from the B-R Bullpen

  • View Player Bio from the SABR BioProject

  • In 1999, Kaline was ranked number 76 on The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players, and was nominated as a finalist for the Major League Baseball All-Century Team. In 2020, The Athletic ranked Kaline at number 51 on its "Baseball 100" list, complied by sportswriter Joe Posnanski.

  • Cherry Street, which ran behind the left-field stands at Tiger Stadium, was renamed Kaline Drive in his honor in 1970

Al Kaline & Detroit Tiger Audio Vault

Features over 66+ games

Interview vault includes:

8+ highlights and interviews!

Quote of the day:

"I would consider it, yes sir, I would. If the Giants would offer Mays and Marichal and Cepeda for Kaline, I would have to give it some consideration." -Jim Campbell

Game of The Day:

Game of the Day — May 26, 1971 Oakland A’s vs California Angels (Catfish toes the rubber)

May 26 highlights and Historic Days!

May 26, 1953, Six years after Jackie Robinson makes his major league debut, the Cardinals sign their first black player when Fresno State College slugger Len Tucker agrees to a $3,000 professional contract. The 23 year-old speedy outfielder plays exceptionally well in the minors for Peoria, Saskatoon, and Modesto, but never gets the called up to St. Louis.

May 26, 1959, Harvey Haddix of the Pittsburgh Pirates pitched 12 perfect innings against the Milwaukee Braves, but lost the perfect game, no-hitter and the game in the 13th inning at County Stadium in Milwaukee. In a somewhat confusing ending, the Braves were first credited with a 2-0 victory, but the final was changed to 1-0 following a review by National League president Warren Giles. The Braves were two-time defending National League champions and would finish second in 1959. Their lineup featured Hall of Famers Eddie Mathews and Henry Aaron.

Listen to him tell the story on how the Braves stole his signs

May 26, 1969, At Atlanta Fulton County Stadium Hank Aaron hits his 500th career double off Nelson Briles, becoming only the third major leaguer to reach 500 doubles and home runs.

May 26 , 1972 - Dave Roberts throws a complete game against the Dodgers, a 5-3 triumph, setting a team record with six consecutive complete games by the staff. Six different Astro hurlers take part in the streak, Jerry Reuss, Tom Griffin,  Larry Dieker, Ken Forsch, and Don Wilson.  Roberts scatters five hits in this one which saw both managers ejected and Bob Watson robbed twice by the men in blue. The Stros win all 6 and are 3 and half up in the division.

May 26, 1993, a fly ball by Cleveland’s Carlos Martinez caroms off the head of Texas Rangers outfielder Jose Canseco and bounces into the stands for a home run. The unusual home run helps the Indians defeat the Rangers, 7-6 (WATCH)

May 26, 1995, Ken Griffey Jr. of the Seattle Mariners breaks his wrist while making a spectacular catch against Kevin Bass of the Baltimore Orioles. Some observers call it the greatest catch they’ve ever seen. Griffey will undergo surgery on his injured wrist and will miss the next three months of action.

May 26, 1997 --  Chicago Cubs outfielder Sammy Sosa and Pittsburgh Pirates infielder Tony Womack hit inside-the-park home runs in the 6th inning of the Cubs' 2 - 1 win. It's the first time two inside-the-park homers had been hit in the same inning in 20 years.

May 26, 2006 -- Derek Jeter, with a dribbler up the third-base line for an infield single off KC's Scott Elarton, becomes the eighth player in Yankee history to collect 2,000 career hits. The 31 year-old shortstop joins Yogi Berra, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Don Mattingly, Babe Ruth, and Bernie Williams in reaching the milestone.

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The Audio Vault - May 26: Listen here

Over Dozen Games from May 26 to enjoy!

May 26, 1959 Chicago White Sox vs Cleveland Indians

May 26, 1963 New York Mets vs St Louis Cardinals

May 26, 1967 Atlanta Braves at New York Mets

May 26, 1968 Chicago White Sox vs New York Yankees Game 2

May 26, 1971 New York Yankees vs Detroit Tigers

May 26, 1971 California Angels vs Oakland Athletics

May 26, 1978 Oakland Athletics vs Chicago White Sox

May 26, 1979 Oakland Athletics vs Milwaukee Brewers

May 26, 1982 Cleveland Indians vs Minnesota Twins

May 26, 1984 Cincinnati Reds vs Chicago Cubs

May 26, 1990 Cincinnati Reds vs Montreal Expos

Plus many more . . . .

TRIVIA

TRIVIA: Whose 295 plate appearances are the most in World Series history?

Hint: #1 As a manager, however, he lost his only two appearances in the World Series.

Hint: #2 He appeared in the movie “That Touch of Mink”.

Answer below

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 ANSWER TO TODAY’S TRIVIA

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