Your IP: 38.107.179.220 United States Near: United States

Lookup IP Information

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next

Below is the list of all allocated IP address in 14.179.0.0 - 14.179.255.255 network range, sorted by latency.

Tony Cloninger Pitcher Born: August 13, 1940 (1940-08-13) (age 70) Cherryville, North Carolina Batted: Right Threw: Right  MLB debut June 15, 1961 for the Milwaukee Braves Last MLB appearance July 22, 1972 for the St. Louis Cardinals Career statistics Win-Loss record     113-97 Earned run average     4.07 Strikeouts     1120 Teams Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1961-1968) Cincinnati Reds (1968-1971) St. Louis Cardinals (1972) Tony Lee Cloninger (born August 13, 1940 in Cherryville, North Carolina), is a former Major League Baseball starting pitcher who played for the Milwaukee and Atlanta Braves (1961–68), the Cincinnati Reds (1968–71), and the St. Louis Cardinals (1972). He batted and threw right-handed. A power pitcher, Cloninger compiled a career 113-97 record with 1,120 strikeouts and a 4.07 ERA in 1,767.2 innings pitched. He enjoyed his best year for the 1965 Braves, with career highs in wins (24), strikeouts (211), ERA (3.29), complete games (16), innings (279) and games started (40). Regarded as a tough fireball pitcher, Cloninger also was a dangerous power hitter. He compiled a career batting average of .192, with 67 RBI and 11 home runs, including five in the 1966 season. On July 3, 1966, in a Braves 17-3 win over the Giants at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, Cloninger helped his team's cause with two grand slams, driving in a total of nine runs, the ninth coming on a run-scoring single. Cloninger became the first player in the National League, and only pitcher to date, to hit two grand slams in the same game, also setting a major league record for pitchers with his nine RBI.[1] Cloninger finished his career pitching with Cincinnati and St. Louis. After retiring, he served as a bullpen coach for the New York Yankees (1992–2001, where he was a member of five American League champions and four World Series champions) and pitching coach for the Boston Red Sox (2002 through early 2003). He was forced to step down from the latter post when he underwent successful treatment for bladder cancer, which had been diagnosed in spring training.[2] In 2010, Cloninger began his seventh consecutive season as a player development consultant for the Red Sox. See also List of Major League Baseball leaders in career wins Batters with two grand slams in the same baseball game Baseball record holders External links Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference, or The Baseball Cube Baseball Library profile References ^ Remington, Alex. "Cards' Chris Carpenter Hits Grand Slam in Postseason Tuneup". Yahoo! Sports. October 1, 2009. ^ Whisnant, Gabe, '"Cloninger Reflects on Tenure with Steinbrenner's Yankees," The Shelby Star, July 16, 2010 Preceded by Ralph Treuel Boston Red Sox Pitching Coach 2002-2003 Succeeded by Dave Wallace v · d · eNew York Yankees 1996 World Series Champions 2 Derek Jeter | 11 Dwight Gooden | 12 Wade Boggs | 13 Jim Leyritz | 17 Kenny Rogers | 18 Mariano Duncan | 19 Luis Sojo | 21 Paul O'Neill | 22 Jimmy Key | 24 Tino Martinez | 25 Joe Girardi | 26 Andy Fox | 27 Graeme Lloyd | 28 Rubén Rivera | 31 Tim Raines | 33 Charlie Hayes | 35 John Wetteland (World Series MVP) | 36 David Cone | 39 Darryl Strawberry | 41 Brian Boehringer | 42 Mariano Rivera | 43 Jeff Nelson | 45 Cecil Fielder | 46 Andy Pettitte | 51 Bernie Williams | 52 David Weathers | 57 Ramiro Mendoza Manager 6 Joe Torre | Bench Coach 48 Don Zimmer | Pitching Coach 34 Mel Stottlemyre | First Base Coach 53 José Cardenal | Hitting Coach 49 Chris Chambliss | Third Base Coach 30 Willie Randolph | Bullpen Coach 40 Tony Cloninger Regular season • American League Division Series • American League Championship Series Persondata Name Cloninger, Tony Alternative names Short description Date of birth August 13, 1940 Place of birth Cherryville, North Carolina Date of death Place of death