Ted Williams debuted on April 20, 1939, playing for the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park II; he played his final game on September 28, 1960, playing for the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park II.
Rickey Henderson and Ted Williams Tim Raines did too. Omar Vizquel did it as well.
Whoever told you this lied to you. Ted Williams retired at the end of the 1960 season. Assuming that the pitcher in 1960 was 16 (meaning born in 1944), he would have been 62 years old pitching in the MLB in 2006. That never happened. Unless there was a MLB pitcher that pithed to Ted Williams in a celebrity game or something like that... but never happened when they were all in the MLB
In MLB history, that is Babe Ruth at .690. Ted Williams is second at .634 and Lou Gehrig is third at .632.
Ted Williams, the left fielder who played his entire MLB career with the Boston Red Sox, passed away on July 5, 2002. Williams picked up several nicknames over the course of his career including 'The Thumper' and 'The Greatest Hitter Who Ever Lived.'
Ted Williams was married to Lee Howard... they were divorced
ted williams
No. Ted Williams did not play for the New York Yankees. Ted Williams played his entire career for the Boston Red Sox.
Ted Williams played for the Boston Red Sox between 1939-1942 and 1946-1960.
Rickey Henderson and Ted Williams Tim Raines did too. Omar Vizquel did it as well.
hit a home run
Ted Williams
Yes. Ted Williams was used as a pinch hitter, and walked during his only plate appearance.
Whoever told you this lied to you. Ted Williams retired at the end of the 1960 season. Assuming that the pitcher in 1960 was 16 (meaning born in 1944), he would have been 62 years old pitching in the MLB in 2006. That never happened. Unless there was a MLB pitcher that pithed to Ted Williams in a celebrity game or something like that... but never happened when they were all in the MLB
No. Ted Williams played his entire career with the Boston Red Sox.
Ted Williams was born August 30, 1918 in San Diego, California.
In MLB history, that is Babe Ruth at .690. Ted Williams is second at .634 and Lou Gehrig is third at .632.
Ted Williams, the left fielder who played his entire MLB career with the Boston Red Sox, passed away on July 5, 2002. Williams picked up several nicknames over the course of his career including 'The Thumper' and 'The Greatest Hitter Who Ever Lived.'