There may be more than one answer to this question, however one man who has achieved this unusual unique feat is Daniel Vettori of New Zealand. He has played:
After all batting positions have batted one time through the lineup, you go through every batting position another time. For example, after the 9th batting position has hit, the first batting position comes to bat again, followed by the rest of the batting positions in order.
David McCarty
Shane Halter
Well i don't really think there is any. If there isn't any, then the nearest is a player called Jim McKeever. He played football for Derry. He played in every position except for Wing back and goal keeper. Most remembered for being a half forward or a midfielder.
The ideal mechanical advantage of the can opener is calculated as the ratio of the output force to the input force. In this case, it would be 60 newtons (output force) divided by 20 newtons (input force), which equals 3. This means that for every 1 newton of input force applied, the opener can exert 3 newtons of force on the can.
Quarterback... Just like every other NFL quarterback. Played for Virginia Tech
Two, and that's only if you count "Designated Hitter" as a position. Every single fielding play Jeter has had in his career has been while at the shortstop position.
Ollie Lang has been and played nearly mosy every position. Most notabley, would be his playing in the snake. 9/10 you'll see ollie playing here.
Yes, he played as an emergency striker due to injuries. Over his career he has actually played every position (even goalkeeper, when Van der Dar was injured)
It changes position because every year is different and because every other planet changes position and sometimes the sun does too
The NFL's official website features a database of every player in every professional football team in the United States. You can search the database by name, team, or position played.
Your batting average would be .333