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  2. Sep 15, 2023 · On Friday, MLB celebrated the 22nd annual Roberto Clemente Day, honoring the legacy of one of baseball’s greatest players and humanitarians nearly 51 years after his tragic passing.

  3. Roberto Clemente Day was established by Major League Baseball to honor the legacy of the Hall of Famer and 15-time All-Star who died in a plane crash on New Year's Eve 1972 while attempting to deliver supplies to earthquake victims in Nicaragua.

  4. Sep 16, 2024 · September 16th, 2024. Jim Lachimia. The 23rd annual Roberto Clemente Day was being celebrated throughout Major League Baseball on Sunday, but the love, respect and appreciation for the Hall of Fame outfielder’s life and career is more grand in Pittsburgh than anywhere else.

    • Jim Lachimia
    • Ace Javelin Thrower
    • Clemente Was A Dodger?
    • Best Rule 5 Pick Ever
    • His First Uniform Number
    • 21 Is Special
    • Inside-the-park Grand Slam
    • 1960 World Series Heroics
    • Exclusive All-Around Company
    • Consistent Production
    • Unstoppable For 48 Hours

    Clemente's arm was the stuff of legend, but how did it get so good? Perhaps from throwing the javelin in high school, which he once tossed 190 feet, according to one account in Bruce Markusen'sbiography.

    Though he never played for the team, Clemente was initially signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers for $5,000 and a $10,000 bonus. The Milwaukee Braves offered more money, but Clemente had already committed to Brooklyn.

    Because Clemente was signed for more than $4,000 and spent all of 1954 with Triple-A Montreal, he was deemed a "bonus baby," which left him eligible for what's now called the Rule 5 draft. Brooklyn thought it could hide Clemente in the minors for a year while developing him, but the Pirates spied his talent and drafted him away that winter - which ...

    It's hard to believe, but Clemente played the first month of his big-league career wearing No. 13. Outfielder Earl Smith had No. 21, but he was released in April after only five games. Once he was gone, Clemente grabbed No. 21, and never took it off.

    Clemente was a proud family man, and had a special reason for wearing No. 21: His full name - Roberto Clemente Walker - was 21 letters long.

    On July 25, 1956, Clemente made jaws drop. With the Pirates trailing the Cubs 8-5 in the ninth inning at Forbes Field, the 21-year-old took Jim Brosnan's first pitch deep into left field, where it took a strange bounce. Hank Foiles, Bill Virdon, and Dick Cole scored easily, and Clemente followed them to circle the bases for the first and only insid...

    Clemente hit safely in all seven games of the Pirates' remarkable World Series win over the Yankees, and kept their eighth-inning rally going in Game 7 by legging out an RBI single. Without his heroics, Bill Mazeroski might not have gotten the chance to hit his famous series-ending homer.

    Clemente is one of just four players to possess at least 10 Gold Gloves and a .300 career average. The others? Willie Mays, Ichiro Suzuki, and fellow Puerto Rican Roberto Alomar.

    Though he dealt with numerous injuries throughout his career, Clemente's consistency became his trademark. From 1960-1972 he hit at least .300 every season except 1967, while keeping his on-base percentage above .350 in each year.

    For two days in 1970, the Los Angeles Dodgers simply couldn't get Clemente out. He set a since-tied Pirates record by recording 10 hits over two consecutive games, going 5-for-7 in a 16-inning game on Aug. 22, then 5-for-6 with four runs scored on Aug. 23.

    • Simon Sharkey-Gotlieb
  5. Roberto Enrique Clemente Walker (Spanish pronunciation: [roˈβeɾto enˈrike kleˈmente (ɣ)walˈkeɾ]; [ a ] August 18, 1934December 31, 1972) was a Puerto Rican professional baseball player who played 18 seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Pittsburgh Pirates, primarily as a right fielder.

  6. Sep 15, 2024 · Off of the diamond, Clemente is one of the greatest humanitarian figures to ever grace the sport. Because of that, MLB honors his legacy on Sept. 15 with Roberto Clemente Day.

  7. Every September, Roberto Clemente Day is celebrated around the baseball world. His storied name is synonymous with moral excellence, compassion and charitable work. Whether it was in his adopted home of Pittsburgh, his native soil Puerto Rico, or even the largest country in Central America, Nicaragua, the fans and followers have never forgotten ...