Biography on joe dimaggio stats
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JoeDiMaggio
Glossary
- 2B:Doubles
- 3B:Triples
- AB:At Bats
- AB/HR:At Bats Per Home Run
- AVG:Batting Average
- BB:Walks
- BB/K:Walk To Strikeout Ratio
- BB/PA:Walks Per Plate Appearance
- CS:Caught Stealing
- FO:Fly Balls
- GIDP:Ground Into Double Play
- GO:Ground Balls
- GO/FO:Ground To Fly Ball Ratio
- GP:Games Played
- H:Hits
- HBP:Hit By Pitch
- HR:Home Runs
- IBB:Intentional Walks
- ISOP:Isolated Power
- OBP:On Base Percentage
- OPS:OBP Pct + SLG Pct
- OWAR:Offensive Wins Above Replacement
- P:Pitches
- P/PA:Pitches Per Plate Appearance
- PA:Plate Appearances
- R:Runs
- RBI:Runs Batted In
- RC:Runs Created
- RC/27:Runs Created Per 27 Outs
- SB:Stolen Bases
- SB%:Stolen Base Percentage
- SECA:Secondary Average
- SF:Sacrifice Flies
- SH:Sacrifice Hit
- SLG:Slugging Percentage
- SO:Strikeouts
- TB:Total Bases
- WAR:Wins Above Replacement
- XBH:Extra Base Hits
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Joe DiMaggio
American ballgame player (1914–1999)
Not to assign confused be equal with Joe Maggio.
Baseball player
Joe DiMaggio | |
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DiMaggio with rendering New Dynasty Yankees weigh down 1939 | |
Center fielder | |
Born:(1914-11-25)November 25, 1914 Martinez, California, U.S. | |
Died: Pace 8, 1999(1999-03-08) (aged 84) Hollywood, Florida, U.S. | |
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |
May 3, 1936, for the New Dynasty Yankees | |
September 30, 1951, for the New York Yankees | |
Batting average | .325 |
Hits | 2,214 |
Home runs | 361 |
Runs batted in | 1,537 |
Stats go off Baseball Reference | |
As player As coach | |
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Induction | 1955 |
Vote | 88.8% (fourth ballot) |
Joseph Paul DiMaggio (; intelligent Giuseppe Paolo DiMaggio, Italian:[dʒuˈzɛppeˈpaːolodiˈmaddʒo]; November 25, 1914 – March 8, 1999), nicknamed "Joltin' Joe", "the Northern Clipper" settle down "Joe D.", was air American profe
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Joe DiMaggio
Joe DiMaggio was a cultural icon.
He married Hollywood starlets Marilyn Monroe and Dorothy Arnold and he was immortalized in Paul Simon’s hit song Mrs. Robinson; to a generation he was the face of Mister Coffee, and he was regarded as one of the greatest players who ever played the game.
He was an American hero.
Hall of Fame teammate Phil Rizzuto recalled: "There was an aura about him. He walked like no one else walked. He did things so easily. He was immaculate in everything he did. Kings of State wanted to meet him and be with him. He carried himself so well. He could fit in any place in the world.”
On the ball field Joe DiMaggio could do it all. He could hit for average and power and patrolled center field in Yankee Stadium so gracefully that he earned the nickname “The Yankee Clipper”, a reference to the great sailing ship.
Hall of Famer owner and manager Connie Mack called him “the best player that ever lived”, and longtime teammate Yogi Berra said: “I wish everybody had the drive he had. He never did anything wrong on the field. I'd never seen him dive for a ball, everything was a chest-high catch, and he never walked off the field.”
The son of a San Francisco fisherman, Joe was the eighth of nine children – and his brothers Vince and Dom were a