Ted Williams, one of the most fabulous figures who ever swung a bat, ended his brilliant, stormy and spectacular baseball career at Fenway Park yesterday by blasting the 521st home run of his life ...
Ted admitted that No. 400 gave him one of the biggest thrills he has ever had in baseball. It was comparable to his game-winning homer in the All-Star game in Detroit 15 years ago. Williams ...
You can almost hear Ted Williams cursing his fate—Just my goddam ... the U.S. entered WWII and baseball never seemed more trifling. The following year Williams enlisted. He played the '42 ...
A rare souvenir postcard picturing Hank Aaron as a rookie with the Indianapolis Clowns of the Negro Leagues sold for nearly $200,000 at a baseball ... also included Ted Williams' 1946 AL MVP ...
No .406 average. No Terrible Ted. Williams had a lifetime batting average of .344. Who is baseball's greatest hitter? That debate will never have a clear winner. But Williams probably produced ...
the differences are why Ted Williams is an iconic figure, and Barry Bonds a great baseball player. There is, of course, always time to change all of this, but therein lies the last lesson of all.