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  1. Cal Ripken Jr. was selected by the Orioles in the second round of the 1978 Amateur Draft. The Boston Red Sox were originally slated to have this pick, but they relinquished it by selecting pitcher Dick Drago in the re-entry draft. Ripken was the fourth player picked by Baltimore that year.

  2. Bateo / Lanz. Calvin Edwin Ripken, Jr. ( * 24 de agosto de 1960, Havre de Grace, Maryland) es un beisbolista retirado estadounidense y uno de los mejores shortstops en la historia de las Grandes Ligas. Su mayor hazaña fue el haber logrado el mayor número de juegos consecutivos (2,632) en el año 1995, cuando rompió el récord de Lou Gehrig.

  3. One of the true legends of baseball, Cal Ripken, Jr. began his professional baseball career in 1978, made it to the majors in 1981, and quickly set a new standard for shortstops. Big, strong, and durable, he displayed power at the plate, grace in the field, and unrivaled perseverance. He earned AL Rookie of the Year honors in 1982, won the MVP ...

  4. Cal Ripken Jr.'s iconic #8 was retired by the Baltimore Orioles on On October 6, 2001. It was the the sixth number retired by the franchise, joining Frank Robinson (1972), Brooks Robinson (1977), Earl Weaver (1982), Jim Palmer (1985) and Eddie Murray (1998).

  5. 6 de set. de 2022 · An oral history of a record that may never be broken. 27 years ago today, Cal Ripken Jr. played his 2,131st consecutive game, breaking Lou Gehrig’s unbreakable 56-year-old record to become baseball’s new Iron Man. The Orioles’ 4-2 win over the Angels that night was a generational event, a celebration of one of its most beloved figures.

  6. Calvin « Cal » Edwin Ripken, Jr. (né le 24 août 1960 à Havre de Grace, Maryland, États-Unis) est un ancien arrêt-court et joueur de troisième but dans la Ligue majeure de baseball. Il a joué toute sa carrière, de 1981 à 2001, avec les Orioles de Baltimore. Il est le fils de Cal Ripken, Sr., lui-même entraîneur des Orioles et le ...

  7. Cal Ripken Jr. retired as one of the greatest shortstops in the history of Major League Baseball. His 19 All-Star selections, World Series championship, and two MVP Awards are impressive, but he will always be known for his incredible consecutive game streak, a record that will almost certainly never be broken.