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  1. Alan Trammell. Position: Manager. Born: February 21, 1958 in Garden Grove, CA. High School: Kearny HS (San Diego, CA) Hall of Fame: Inducted as Player in 2018. (Voted by Modern Baseball Era Committee) Full Name: Alan Stuart Trammell. View Player Info from the B-R Bullpen. View Player Bio from the SABR BioProject.

  2. WHO IS Alan Trammell? One-half of the greatest double play duo in baseball history. Played with second baseman Lou Whitaker for 19 seasons. Trammell was Most Valuable Player of the 1984 World Series. Should have won the American League MVP award in 1987.

  3. At just 19-and-a-half years old, Trammell was the youngest player in the Majors. Similar to a year before, he struggled with the initial transition to a higher level. He played in 19 games, hitting just .186. However, this quiet beginning would mark the start of a long and prosperous career with the Tigers.

  4. For his career, Alan Trammell totaled 2,365 hits, 412 doubles and a .285 career batting average and hit .300-or-better in seven seasons. (Lou Sauritch/National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum) Jack Morris topped the 200-inning mark in 11 seasons and notched 175 complete games, the most of any pitcher whose career started after 1976.

  5. Alan Stuart Trammell (né le 21 février 1958 à Garden Grove, Californie, États-Unis) est un joueur d' arrêt-court étoile qui joue dans les Ligues majeures de baseball de 1977 à 1996 . Le 10 décembre 2017, il est élu au Temple de la renommée du baseball et sera intronisé lors d'une cérémonie à Cooperstown le 29 juillet 2018 1 .

  6. 23 de jul. de 2018 · Alan Trammell was Detroit Tigers' heartbeat for 20 years: Here's how. Alan Trammell sat in a plane, scribbling notes, working on the most important speech of his life — the one he will give ...

  7. The greatest shortstop in Detroit Tigers team history, Alan Trammell was drafted 26th overall in the 1976 June Amateur Draft out of San Diego’s Kearny High School, a second-round selection. Nicknamed “Tram,” he debuted in Detroit on September 9, 1977, the same day as second baseman Lou Whitaker, the first of an American League record 1,918 games played together as teammates.