George bretts biography
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The George Brett Story
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George Brett Biography
George Howard Brett was born May 15, 1953 in Glendale, West Virginia, and grew up in El Segundo, California.The four boys in his family all played professional baseball. John and Bobby played in the minor leagues. Ken was a pitcher for the Red Sox, Brewers, Phillies, Pirates, Yankees, White Sox, California Angels, Minnesota Twins, LA Dodgers and Kansas City Royals.
George was drafted by the Kansas City Royals after he finished high school. He played in the minor leagues from 1971-1973 and was called up to the major leagues in 1974. George played at third base and first base, and he was the designated hitter for the Kansas City Royals from 1973-1993. He batted left-handed and threw right-handed. George faced his brother Ken, who was a pitcher, 20 times in his career. George got 6 hits, 2 doubles and an RBI against him. They both played for the Royals in 1980 and 1981.
George is widely considered the greatest Kansas City Royals player of all-time. He became the first player in Major League Baseball history to have 3,000 hits, 300 home runs, 600 doubles, 100 triples, 1,500 RBIs and 200 stolen bases. He made the all-star team 13 times. In 1980, he led the Major Leagues with a .390 batting average! In 1985, he led them to a World Series championship. He
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George Brett
For three decades, he was the standard by which other hitters were judged – seemingly mastering the art of hitting line drives.
In the simplest terms, George Brett was hitting royalty.
Born May 15, 1953 in Glen Dale, W.Va., Brett was the youngest of four brothers who all played pro ball, including older brother Ken Brett who pitched in the majors. Brett grew up in Southern California and was taken in the second round of the 1971 Major League Baseball draft by the Kansas City Royals.
The left-handed hitting Brett shot through the Royals’ minor league system, but after winning the big league third base job in 1974 Brett struggled. Midway through the season, Brett began an extensive tutelage program with Royals hitting instructor Charlie Lau, who taught his pupil how to keep his weight back and cover more of home plate with his swing. Brett applied the advice and finished the season batting .282 – which would be his lowest average during the next 17 seasons.
Brett hit .308 with an American League-best 195 hits in 1975, then won his first batting title the next year with a .333 average.
Then in 1980, Brett made a run at the magic .400 mark – a number that hadn’t been reached since Ted Williams hit .406 in 1941. Brett kept his average over .400 deep into the summ