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Dom DiMaggio
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Note: A letter has been
sent on April 25, 2008 to this athlete to provide their contact and
charity information. Once we receive their response, their
information will be entered below. This has been done to
ensure that the information is correct and to protect the athlete's
privacy in case they do not want their information to be posted on
the Internet. |
Contact Information (where autograph
requests should be mailed to):
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Organization _____________________________________________
Address:
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State: _________ City:
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the donations go to __________________________________________
Signing Habits:
1) If you sign items for free,
what are the maximum number of items you will sign for free? ___________
2) Do you answer questions
sent by fans? ______________
3) Do you prefer when fans
send you their own pens/markers? ______________
4) What can fans do to make it
easier for you to sign their items?
__________________________________________________________________
Donation Charges:
| Item |
Price |
Item |
Price |
| Cards |
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Flats up to 8x10 |
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| Flats up to 16x20 |
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Baseballs/small
footballs |
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| Magazines |
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Flats larger than 16x20 |
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| Mini Helmets |
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Football/Basketball |
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| Large Helmet |
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Bats |
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| Jerseys |
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Inscriptions |
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| Other _________ |
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Other _________ |
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Who should the check/money
order be made out to: __________________________________________
Payment can be made by: Cash,
Personal Checks, Money Orders, Cashier’s Checks
Dom DiMaggio's
Message to the Fans
Biography
Dominic Paul DiMaggio (born February 12,
1917 in San Francisco, California) is a former center fielder in Major League
Baseball who played his entire career for the Boston Red Sox from 1940 to 1953.
An effective leadoff hitter, he batted .300 four times and led the American
League in runs twice and in triples and stolen bases once each. He also led the
AL in assists three times and in putouts and double plays twice each; he tied a
league record by recording 400 putouts four times, and his 1948 totals of 503
putouts and 526 total chances stood as AL records for nearly thirty years. His
1338 games in center field ranked eighth in AL history when he retired. His
34-game hitting streak in 1949 remains a Boston club record.
He was the youngest of three brothers who each became major league center
fielders: Joe was a star with the rival New York Yankees, and Vince played for
five National League teams. The youngest of nine children born to Sicilian
immigrants, Dom's small stature (5'9") and eyeglasses earned him the nickname
"The Little Professor".
After breaking into the minor leagues in 1937 with the San Francisco Seals of
the Pacific Coast League, Dom DiMaggio's contract was purchased by the Red Sox
following a 1939 season in which he batted .361; he hit .301 in his 1940 rookie
season, becoming part of a .300-hitting outfield with Ted Williams and Doc
Cramer. In both 1941 and 1942 he scored over 100 runs to finish third in the AL,
and was among the league's top ten players in doubles and steals; he was named
an All-Star both years. After missing three years serving in the Coast Guard in
World War II, he returned in 1946 with his best season yet, batting .316 to
place fifth in the league, and coming in ninth in the MVP voting as Boston won
its first pennant in 28 years. Batting third, he hit only .259 in the 1946 World
Series against the St. Louis Cardinals, but was almost a Series hero for Boston.
With two out in the eighth inning of Game 7, he doubled to drive in two runs,
tying the score 3-3; but he pulled his hamstring coming into second base, and
had to be removed for a pinch runner. The result was costly, as Harry Walker
doubled to center field in the bottom of the inning, with Enos Slaughter scoring
from first base in his famed "Mad Dash" to win the game and Series for St.
Louis; had DiMaggio remained in the game, Walker's hit might have been
catchable, or the outfielder's strong arm might have held Slaughter to third
base.
After an offensively disappointing year in 1947, DiMaggio rebounded in 1948 to
score 127 runs (second in the AL) with career highs in doubles (40), runs batted
in (87) and walks (101). His 503 putouts broke Baby Doll Jacobson's AL record of
484, set with the 1924 St. Louis Browns; his 526 total chances surpassed the
league mark of 498 shared by Sam Rice of the 1920 Washington Senators and
Jacobson. At the time, the marks ranked behind only Taylor Douthit's totals of
547 and 566 with the 1928 Cardinals in major league history; both records stood
until 1977, when Chet Lemon of the Chicago White Sox recorded 512 putouts and
536 total chances. In 1949 DiMaggio batted .307 with 126 runs, and had his
team-record 34-game hitting streak; ironically, the streak was ended on August 9
by an outstanding catch made by his brother Joe. That year he made 400 putouts
for the fourth time, tying the AL record held by Sam West of the Senators and
Browns; the mark was later tied by two other players before being broken by
Lemon in 1985.
In 1950 DiMaggio led the AL in runs (131), triples (11) and stolen bases (15)
while hitting a career-high .328. On June 30 he and Joe hit home runs while
playing against one another, becoming the fourth pair of brothers to homer in
the same game. Dom's stolen base total of 15 is the lowest stolen base total to
lead either of the Major Leagues in a single season.[1]
He again led the league in runs (113) in 1951, when he had a 27-game hitting
streak from May 12 to June 7. He retired in May 1953, after appearing in only
three games that year as a pinch hitter, with a .298 batting average, 1680 hits,
308 doubles, 87 home runs, 1046 runs and 618 RBI in 1399 games. He was selected
an All-Star seven times (1941-42, 1946, 1949-52). His career average of 2.98
chances per game remains the record for AL outfielders.
DiMaggio enjoyed a close friendship with teammates Ted Williams, Bobby Doerr,
and Johnny Pesky, which was chronicled in David Halberstam's book The Teammates.
After retiring, he became a plastics manufacturer in New England. He was
inducted into the Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame in 1995. He and his wife Emily, to
whom he has been married since 1948, have 3 children and several grandchildren.
It was once said of the brothers' talents: "Joe is the best hitter, Dom is the
best fielder, and Vince is the best singer." There was also a ditty sometimes
sung in Boston after 1946 that included the words: "Who hits the ball and makes
it go?/ Who runs the bases fast, not slow?/ Who's better than his brother Joe?
Dominic DiMaggio...."
In an article in 1976 in Esquire magazine, sportswriter Harry Stein published an
"All Time All-Star Argument Starter," consisting of five ethnic baseball teams.
Dom DiMaggio was the left fielder on Stein's Italian team.
****
Center fielder
Born: February 12, 1917 (1917-02-12) (age 91)
San Francisco, California
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 16, 1940
for the Boston Red Sox
Final game
May 9, 1953
for the Boston Red Sox
Career statistics
Batting average .298
Runs 1046
RBI 618
Teams
Boston Red Sox (1940-1953)
Career highlights and awards
7x MLB All-Star (1941, 1942, 1946, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952)
Led the AL in runs in 1950 and 1951
Led the AL in stolen bases in 1950 with 15
Led the AL in triples in 1950 with 11
****
References
1. (1992) Baseball A Doubleheader Collection of Facts, Feats, & Firsts. St.
Louis, Mo.: The Sporting News Publishing Co.. ISBN 0-88365-785-6. .
***
Source: Wikipedia.org at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dom_DiMaggio
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