Rusty Staub
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The only man with 500+ hits for 4 teams, Rusty Staub had his number retired with the Expos and was inducted into the Mets Hall of Fame.
Read More >The only man with 500+ hits for 4 teams, Rusty Staub had his number retired with the Expos and was inducted into the Mets Hall of Fame.
Read More >When he retired, Dave Kingman ranked 16th all time with 442 homers and 4th on the grand slams list tied with Babe Ruth and Henry Aaron. Be sure to visit our page on Facebook.
Read More >Upon his retirement Willie Randolph ranked 5th in games played at 2B, 9th in putouts, 7th in assists, 8th in total chances, & 3rd in double plays.
Read More >The #1 pick in the 1980 draft, Darryl Strawberry was the Rookie of the Year, a three-time World Champion, and eight-time All Star.
Read More >An All Star each of his first three seasons, Dwight Gooden was the Rookie of the Year, a Cy Young winner & World Series champ before turning 22.
Read More >Two-time All Star center fielder Jimmy Piersall earned a pair of Gold Gloves and tallied 1,604 career hits despite battling bipolar disorder.
Read More >Every paycheck Don Zimmer ever received was from professional baseball; in 2015 the Tampa Bay Rays retired jersey #66 in his honor.
Read More >Tommy Davis won back-to-back batting championships in 1962 & 1963 & remains the only LA Dodger to wear the crown twice.
Read More >Harry Minor played 12 years in the minors then scouted for 50 seasons before becoming the 1st scout inducted into the Mets Hall of Fame in 2013.
Read More >A college All American and two-time NCAA champion at USC, Brent Strom was the third overall pick in the 1970 first-year player draft.
Read More >"Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball…"
~Jacques Barzun, 1954