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  1. Eddie Mathews. Bateo / Lanz. Edwin Lee "Eddie" Mathews (13 de octubre de 1931 - 18 de febrero de 2001) fue un jugador de béisbol de Estados Unidos que actuó como tercera base en Grandes Ligas. Está considerado como uno de los mejores tercera base de todos los tiempos. 1 Fue elegido como miembro del Salón de la Fama en 1978.

  2. Eddie Mathews played 17 seasons for the Braves, Tigers and Astros. He had a .271 batting average, 2,315 hits, 512 homers, 1,453 RBIs and 1,509 runs scored. He won 2 World Series.

  3. 19 de fev. de 2001 · Eddie Mathews Obituary. Appeared in The New York Times on February 19, 2001 / Obituaries / Eddie Mathews Eddie Mathews Obituary: Eddie Mathews, the Braves’ Hall of Fame third baseman who hit 512 home runs and teamed with Hank Aaron to form the most productive power-hitting combination in baseball history, died yesterday at a hospital in San Diego.

  4. 21 de mai. de 2020 · Eddie Mathews hit 47 home runs in 1953, a National League record for third basemen that would stand until Mike Schmidt hit 48 in 1980. SetNumber: X3628 The Braves’ first young superstar in Milwaukee, Eddie Mathews would later be eclipsed by the player he’d hit in front of for more than a decade, but he was far more than Hank Aaron’s valet.

  5. Edwin Lee "Eddie" Mathews (October 13 1931 – February 18 2001) was a Hall of Fame third baseman in Major League Baseball and is widely regarded as one of the greatest, if not the greatest, third baseman to play the game.[citation needed] Born in Texarkana, Texas, Eddie Mathews was six years old when his family moved to Santa Barbara, California where he developed into a star high school ...

  6. Eddie Mathews played 17 seasons for the Braves, Tigers and Astros. He had a .271 batting average, 2,315 hits, 512 home runs, 1,453 RBIs and 1,509 runs scored. He won 2 World Series.

  7. Mathews’ 17-year big league career was spent mostly with the Braves – and he was the only player ever to suit up for the franchise in Boston, Milwaukee and Atlanta. He also graced the cover of the first issue of Sports Illustrated in 1954.