Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. 18 de out. de 2020 · El 17 de octubre de 1964, el día que reapareció el Magallanes, perdieron ante el Industriales. Al día siguiente le ganaron al Caracas, algo que no sucedía desde 1956 cuando desaparecieron como franquicia, y en la jornada siguiente volvieron a ganarle al Valencia. Después ocurrió la catástrofe de Sparky. La Nave Turca perdió la brújula.

  2. Sparky Anderson (22 Feb 1934 - 4 Nov 2010) was a baseball manager, born as George Lee Anderson in Bridgewater, South Dakota. [1] He managed the Cincinnati Reds and the Detroit Tigers . He was voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2000.

  3. 7 de nov. de 2010 · A Manager Who Stuck to His Guns and Fired Away. To everyone in baseball he was Sparky Anderson; hardly anybody called him George. But as a manager, he was not just a spark. He was a bonfire who ...

  4. SPARKY ANDERSON - MLB HOF - 1996 UPPER DECK CHECKLIST CARD # 480 BIG RED MACHINE #480 [eBay] $2.00. Report It. 2024-01-17. Time Warp shows photos of completed sales. >Subscribe ($6/month) to see photos. OK. 1996 Upper Deck #480 Managerial Salute Checklist Sparky Anderson #480 [eBay] $3.00.

  5. 24 de fev. de 2014 · As revealed in the 1998 book, They Call Me Sparky (Sparky Anderson with Dan Ewald, Sleeping Bear Press) this is how it all came down. Just a few days before the big announcement, the Tigers were playing in Anaheim when Campbell ran into Sparky in the media lunchroom where he introduced the former manager to Tiger television broadcaster George Kell.

  6. 11 de jun. de 2018 · We lost Sparky back in 2010. But his words live on and his legacy still lives on in Detroit. Here are 14 quotes from the Hall of Fame manager. “I only had a high school education and believe me, I had to cheat to get that.”. Born George Lee Anderson to a lower middle class family, Sparky was never much for school.

  7. Sparky Anderson, born George Lee Anderson on February 22, 1934, was a legendary American baseball player and manager. Widely regarded as one of the greatest baseball minds of all time, Anderson had an extraordinary career spanning over four decades in the Major League Baseball (MLB).