GA Russell Posted October 5, 2008 Report Posted October 5, 2008 I was in college in DC when Eddie Brinkman played for the Senators. Their last year, their manager was Ted Williams. The tv announcer was Warner Wolf. Many, many times over the years, I have heard Wolf refer to the fact that when Williams managed the Senators, he had everybody on the team batting forty points above his average. And Wolf would always cite Eddie Brinkman, who hit .260 that year instead of the .195 he would usually produce. From the LA Times: http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-...0,5054501.story <h2 style="">Ed Brinkman</h2>Tigers' shortstop set record in 1972 Ed Brinkman, 66, the quintessential "good field, no hit" major league shortstop who set a record in 1972 with 72 consecutive errorless games for the Detroit Tigers, died Tuesday in his hometown of Cincinnati, according to the Chicago White Sox. No cause of death was given, although friends said he had a heart ailment. Brinkman won a Gold Glove Award in 1972 and was named to the American League all-star team in 1973, when he played shortstop in all 162 games. He finished his 15-year major league career with a batting average of .224 and a fielding percentage of .970. He went to the Tigers after the 1970 season, when the Washington Senators sent him and several other players to Detroit for Denny McLain, the Tigers' pitching ace who had won 31 games in 1968, and others. Brinkman began with the Washington Senators in 1961. After 10 seasons with the Senators and four with the Tigers, he played briefly for the New York Yankees, St. Louis Cardinals and Texas Rangers before retiring in 1975. The White Sox hired him as an infield coach in 1983. He stayed with the team as a scout until 2000. Edwin Albert Brinkman was born Dec. 8, 1941. He was a high school pitcher on a team whose second baseman was Pete Rose. Brinkman missed much of the 1968 season while serving in the Army National Guard. A week after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Brinkman was stationed in the left-field seats on opening day in Washington. Quote
AllenLowe Posted October 5, 2008 Report Posted October 5, 2008 (edited) one of my favorite stories - I was at University of Michigan when the Tigers won some big game - can't remember what it was, maybe a World Series? It was the early 1970s - there was a shot in the Tigers clubhouse, everyody was happy, some drunk. It was "live" post-game. They stick a microphone in Brinkman's face; he says: "I'm so fuckin' happy for all the fuckin' guys." Pandemonium and the camera cuts away; next day big headline in one of the Detroit papers announces: "Brinkman apologizes to Tigers fans." one just did not do that 35 years ago - Edited October 5, 2008 by AllenLowe Quote
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