George Crowe - Place of Birth, Date of Birth, Age, Wiki, Facts, Net Worth, Birthday, Biography and Family

George Crowe, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Family, Facts, Age, Net Worth, Biography and More in FamedBorn.com


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Mar 22, 1921 Whiteland, Indiana, United States Died on 18 Jan 2011 (aged 89)

American MLB player

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About George Crowe

  • George Daniel Crowe (March 22, 1921 – January 18, 2011) was a Major League first baseman and brief professional basketball player.
  • He attended Franklin High School in Franklin, Indiana, graduated from Indiana Central College (now the University of Indianapolis) in 1943 and played baseball and basketball.
  • He was the first Indiana "Mr.
  • Basketball".
  • He was a first baseman with a nine-year career from 1952–1953, 1955–1961 and played for the Boston Braves, Milwaukee Braves, Cincinnati Redlegs and St.
  • Louis Cardinals (all of the National League).
  • Crowe hit 31 home runs in 1957, filling in most of the season for the injured Ted Kluszewski. Crowe also played with the Negro National League's (Rochester) New York Black Yankees in 1948, and played professional basketball for the barnstorming New York Renaissance Big Five (aka "Rens").
  • In 1947 Crowe played basketball for the integrated Los Angeles Red Devils, a team that also included future Brooklyn Dodger Jackie Robinson.
  • In 1950, Crowe played baseball for the Hartford Chiefs, a minor league team in the Eastern League.
  • He also played winter ball with the Cangrejeros de Santurce (Santurce Crabbers) of the Puerto Rico Professional Baseball League in the 1954-55 season where as a teammate of Willie Mays, Roberto Clemente, Buster Clarkson and Bob Thurman, Crowe formed part of the Escuadron Del Panico (Panic Squadron) which led the Crabbers to the league championship and eventually to win the Caribbean World Series.
  • He was elected to the National League All-Star team in 1958, although Crowe was not used in the All-Star Game.
  • Coincidentally, the year before, fans of his team — the Cincinnati Redlegs (as the Reds were called at the time) — had been involved in a ballot stuffing campaign to put all of the team's regulars in the starting lineup.
  • Ed Bailey, Johnny Temple, Roy McMillan, Don Hoak, Frank Robinson, Gus Bell and Wally Post had been "voted" into the lineup, but Crowe was beaten out in the final vote tally by future Cardinal teammate Stan Musial.
  • Crowe set a record (later broken by Jerry Lynch and subsequently by Cliff Johnson) for most pinch-hit home runs in major league baseball history with 14. When he switched fielding positions from first base to second base against the Chicago Cubs on the 14th of June, 1958, he completed a double play wearing his oversize "mitt".
  • This led to a rule change that if a first baseman went to field at second or third base, they had to replace their "mitt" with a fielder's glove.In 702 games over 9 seasons, Crowe posted a .270 batting average (467-for-1727) with 215 runs, 81 home runs and 299 RBI.
  • He recorded a .990 fielding percentage as a first baseman. He was the younger brother of Ray Crowe, who was the head coach of the Crispus Attucks High School teams that won two consecutive State titles in 1954-55 and 1955–56, led by Oscar Robertson.

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