Extensive Definition
Harmon Clayton Killebrew (; born June 29, 1936 in Payette,
Idaho) is a
former major
league baseball
player and member of the
Hall of Fame. He was famous for his ability to hit home runs,
primarily during the 1960s.
Killebrew was an all-state quarterback at Payette
High School when Washington
Senators scout Ossie Bluege
saw him playing in an impromptu baseball game in 1954. After seeing
Killebrew's raw power, Bluege reported back to the Senators who
immediately signed him to a $30,000 contract. Because of his large
bonus, Killebrew was a bonus baby.
Because of the Bonus Rule, he was immediately added to the big
league roster in 1954,
though not yet having reached his eighteenth birthday. He played
only small parts for five seasons, bouncing back and forth between
the Double-A Chattanooga
Lookouts and Washington. While Killebrew was in Chattanooga,
he became the only player to hit a home run over the 471-foot deep
center field wall at Engel
Stadium. He finally made it into the regular lineup in 1959,
and hit 42 homers. The Senators moved to the Twin Cities and became
the Minnesota
Twins in 1961.
Killebrew was a stocky 5 ft 11 in, 210 pounds (95
kg) hitter with a short, compact swing that generated tremendous
power. Killebrew became one of the American
League's most feared power hitters of the 1960s, belting 40
homers in a season eight times. In 1965
he helped the Twins reach the World
Series, where they lost to the Los
Angeles Dodgers. Killebrew had his finest season in 1969,
hitting 49 home runs, driving in 140 runs, and winning the
MVP Award. Killebrew led the league in home runs six times, in
RBI three times, and was named to eleven All Star teams. As a
result, he was nicknamed "Killer" - a portmanteau linking the
first 5 letters of his last name with his legendary hitting
ability.
On June 3, 1967,
Killebrew blasted the longest home run ever hit at the Twins'
Metropolitan
Stadium, a shot that landed in the second deck of the
bleachers, and four years later on August 10,
1971, he hit
his 500th career home run, also at The
Met.
Despite his "Killer" nickname and his powerful
style of play, Killebrew was in fact a quiet, kind man who was not
much given to the partying lifestyle enjoyed by his peers. Asked
once what he liked to do for fun, Killebrew replied, "Well, I like
to wash dishes, I guess." Killebrew was baptized a member of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in 1968. His wife
was a lifelong member.
Injuries reduced his effectiveness in the early
1970s, and
after a one-year stint with the Kansas
City Royals in 1975,
he chose to retire. Killebrew hit 573 home runs in his career
(ninth best all time, most by an American
League right-hander, and second in the AL only to Babe Ruth, as
of 2005) and
drove in 1,584 runs. He was elected to the Baseball
Hall of Fame in 1984, the first
Minnesota Twin to be so honored. The street along the south side of
the enormous Mall of
America, the former site of the Metropolitan
Stadium ("The Met"), has been named "Killebrew Drive" in honor
of Harmon Killebrew. His uniform number 3 was the first to be
retired by the Twins, and is only one of five Twins to have their
jersey retired — Tony Oliva,
Rod
Carew, Kent Hrbek and
Kirby
Puckett are the others. He is, by a wide margin, the all-time
home run leader among players born in the state of Idaho. "If Harmon
Killebrew isn't the league's best player, I've never seen one. He's
one of the greatest of all time." (quote by Reggie
Jackson)
Following his retirement, Killebrew was a
broadcaster for the Minnesota Twins from 1976-78 and 1984-88, and
for the Oakland
A's from 1979-82. Killebrew also became a successful
entrepreneur in insurance, financial planning, and car sales. In
1990 he
retired from business to pursue endorsement and charity work,
especially in the fields of preventive and palliative health care
charities and international causes. Killebrew currently resides in
Scottsdale,
Arizona, where he chairs the Harmon Killebrew Foundation
http://www.harmonkillebrewfoundation.org
In 1999, he was ranked
69th on
The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players,
and was nominated as a finalist for the Major
League Baseball All-Century Team.
With former Idaho congressman
Ralph
Harding, Killebrew founded the Danny
Thompson Memorial Golf Tournament in 1977. Played annually
in late August in Sun
Valley, Idaho, it has donated more than $8.6 million to
leukemia and cancer research. http://www.dannythompsonmemorial.com
Thompson was a Twins teammate who continued his major
league career while suffering from leukemia; he died in December
1976
at the age of 29.
Trivia
- Common Folklore suggests that the silhouette of Harmon Killebrew swinging a bat is the official logo of Major League Baseball. However, MLB.com states the following: "The MLB logo: No one player has ever been identified as the model of the 1969 Major League Baseball batter logo".
- On the list of lowest batting averages for league RBI champions, Killebrew holds both the number one spot and the number three spot. In 1962, he won the RBI title while batting just .243 – the lowest ever for an RBI champion — and, in 1971, he again led the league in RBI but hit only .254 — the third-lowest ever.
- As non-pitchers, only Killebrew, Gary Carter, Bill Mazeroski, Ray Schalk, and Rabbit Maranville have been elected into the Hall of Fame while never once batting .300 (over a full season) in their careers.
- One seat from Metropolitan Stadium was placed in the Mall of America at the exact location (including elevation) it occupied in the stadium, to commemorate a 520-foot home run hit by Killebrew on June 3, 1967.
- Killebrew never hit 50 home runs in a single season, but he did hit 49 homers in a season twice (1964, 1969).
- Once hit a home run in batting practice before a game that knocked the back off a seat.
- In 1969, the season in which Rod Carew stole home plate seven times, Killebrew was at the plate for one of the steals. Killebrew missed the take sign from his third-base coach, was unaware that Carew was stealing home, and swung and missed. This prompted a local Minneapolis sportswriter to quip, "There goes Rod Carew, lined to left by Killebrew!"
- He once appeared in an episode of Step by Step playing himself.
- He hit the most home runs for any player in the 1960s
See also
- List of baseball players who went directly to the major leagues
- MLB players who have hit 30 or more home runs before the All-Star break
- List of Major League Baseball Home Run Records
- 500 home run club
- Top 500 home run hitters of all time
- List of major league players with 2,000 hits
- List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 runs
- List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 RBI
- List of Major League Baseball RBI champions
- List of Major League Baseball home run champions
- Major League Baseball hitters with three home runs in one game
- Major League Baseball titles leaders
External links
killebrew in Spanish: Harmon Killebrew
killebrew in French: Harmon Killebrew
killebrew in Japanese: ハーモン・キルブルー
killebrew in Finnish: Harmon
Killebrew