funfact.wiki
AboutGuidelinesTermsPrivacyContact

Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Dizzy Dean, a Baseball Hall of Fame inductee who retired ... | funfact.wiki | funfact.wiki
Dizzy Dean, a Baseball Hall of Fame inductee who retired at 31, became a commentator known for relentlessly criticizing players. His team eventually put him on the mound to prove his words. At 37, six years after retirement, Dean pitched four scoreless innings.
  • Major League Baseball
  • Baseball Hall of Fame
  • Dizzy Dean
  • Baseball
  • Sport
0
DiscussionHistory

Related Cards

In 1951, Eddie Gaedel, just 109cm tall, appeared in a Major League Baseball game. His strike zone was only 3.8cm high, making strikes nearly impossible. He walked on four pitches and was replaced immediately. His career on-base percentage: a perfect 1.000.
  • Major League Baseball
  • Baseball
0
In the javelin throw, a spinning technique — rotating like a discus thrower — once produced a 112m throw by a 49-year-old athlete, far exceeding the current world record of 98.48m. The technique was banned because 90% of throws landed outside the field.
  • Sport
  • Javelin throw
  • Track and Field
0
In 1994, West Ham United fan Steve Davies was heckling his team's striker from the stands, yelling 'I could do better.' When the striker got injured, coach Harry Redknapp pulled Davies from the crowd and put him on the pitch. Davies scored and led the team to victory.
  • West Ham United
  • Football
  • Sport
0
Over 80% of elite middle-distance track and field athletes take baking soda as a performance supplement. The IOC acknowledges its efficacy but cannot ban a substance detectable after simply eating cake. Recently, hydrogel capsules have solved its notorious side effect — diarrhea.
  • Athletics
  • Baking soda
  • IOC
  • Hydrogel
  • Sport
  • Doping
0
At the 1912 Stockholm Olympics, marathon runner Shizo Kanakuri collapsed from heat and fell asleep in a local home. He quietly returned to Japan, listed as missing. In 1967, at 76, he returned to finish. Official time: 54 years, 246 days, 5 hours, 32 minutes, 20.3 seconds.
  • Olympics
  • Marathon
  • Sport
0