The Palm Beach Post

THIS DATE IN BASEBALL

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June 10

1921 — Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees became baseball’s career home run leader by hitting his 120th off Cleveland’s Jim Bagby in the third inning. The Indians took the game 8-6. 1944 — Joe Nuxhall, at 15 years, 10 months and 11 days, became the youngest player in major league history when he pitched two-thirds of an inning for the Cincinnati Reds in an 18-0 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals. 1959 — Rocky Colavito of Cleveland hit four consecutiv­e home runs at Baltimore’s Memorial Stadium, a tough home run park. Billy Martin and Minnie Minoso also homered in the Indians’ 11-8 victory. 1966 — Cleveland’s Sonny Siebert threw the only nohitter of the year, with the Indians beating the Washington Senators 2-0. 1972 — Hank Aaron’s grand slam pushed the Atlanta Braves to a 15-3 rout over the Philadelph­ia Phillies. It was Aaron’s 649th home run, moving him ahead of Willie Mays into second place on the career home run list. It was also his 14th grand slam, tying Gil Hodges’ NL record. 1997 — Kevin Brown threw a no-hitter and kept himself from a perfect game by hitting a batter in the eighth inning, leading the Florida Marlins over the San Francisco Giants 9-0. 2000 — Darin Erstad hit a double in the Anaheim Angels’ 10-3 win over Arizona to give him a major league-leading 100 hits in 61 games. He became the fastest to reach the 100-hit mark since Heinie Manush did it in 60 games for the 1934 Washington Senators. 2005 — Baltimore’s 4-3 win over Cincinnati marked the first time that three 500homer players appeared in the same game — the Orioles’ Sammy Sosa (580) and Rafael Palmeiro (559), and the Reds’ Ken Griffey, who hit a solo shot in the eighth inning for No. 511. 2006 — Reggie Sanders became the fifth player in major league history with 300 homers and 300 stolen bases when he hit a two-run shot in Kansas City’s 9-5 loss to Tampa Bay. Sanders homered off Chad Harville in the ninth to reach the milestone joining Barry Bonds, Willie Mays, Andre Dawson and Bobby Bonds. 2011 — Tony La Russa managed his 5,000th game when his St. Louis Cardinals lost to the Milwaukee Brewers 8-0. La Russa also managed the White Sox and Athletics. Only Connie Mack managed more games, with 7,755 over 53 years. 2012 — Frankie Vanderka threw a three-hitter, Travis Jankowski had four hits and Stony Brook advaned to the College World Series with a 7-2 victory over LSU. Stony Brook became only the second team to open the tournament as a No. 4 seed in the regional round and advance to the World Series. The first was Fresno State during its 2008 run to a national title.

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