"Clemente gives equal credit to javelin throwing and his mother for his unmatched arm, the most deadly since of the Dodgers was gunning down unwary baserunners. It was also his mother who once threatened to burn Robertoâs bat as punishment because he was so preoccupied with baseball at times that he wouldnât eat his black beans and rice. But she didnât burn it, after all, an act of compassion for which the pitchersâ union never will forgive her, and Roberto eventually became a $100,000-a-year slugger â perhaps the best hitter in the game today. captured the American Leagueâs triple crown last season and the lifetime averages of Aaron (.317) and Oliva (.318) topped Clementeâs .310 career mark. But for sheer consistency since this decade began, none has even approached Clementeâs accomplishments. Clemente won batting championships in 1961-64-65 and looks like a shoo-in again at the rate he is going. He is the only player in either league who has hit above .300 every year since 1960. His seasonal marks of .314, .351, .312, .320, .339, .329 and .317 average out at .326. Aaron batted above .300 in five of the last seven campaigns while averaging .301. While topping .300 in four of the last seven seasons, Robinson averaged a modest .290 for that span. The only lifetime .300 hitters in the American League are Oliva (.318), Mickey Mantle (.305), (.304) and Robinson (.304), and they arenât remotely close to Clemente for consistent base hit production since he shifted into high gear seven years ago. Clemente, a compact 175-pounder who can go the late one better by hitting with both feet in the bucket, gives no indication of slowing down, although he will be 33 on Aug. 18. Not, that is, unless his mother impulsively uses his Louisville Slugger for kindling wood. And thatâs not about to happen when her son earns as much money as the President of the United States."
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Baptists from the United StatesPresidential Medal of Freedom recipientsUnited States MarinesPeople from San Juan
Original Language: English
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Sources
Frank Finch: âClemente Says He Is Numero Uno,â The Los Angeles Times (Sunday, June 4, 1967), p. B1
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Roberto_Clemente
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Roberto Clemente
baseball player
1934 â 1972 ¡ United States
Roberto Enrique Clemente Walker (August 18, 1934 â December 31, 1972) was a Puerto Rican Major League baseball player from 1955 through 1972, exclusively with the Pittsburgh Pirates. A posthumous inductee to the National Baseball Hall of Fame (following his fatal plane crash on December 31, 1972, en route to deliver aid to earthquake victims in Nicaragua), Clemente became both the first Latin American and the first C
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