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For many years, Pie Traynor was considered the greatest of all third basemen. In 1969, as part of baseball's centennial celebration, he was named the greatest third baseman in baseball history ...
The 1925 World Champion Pittsburgh Pirates had a third baseman named Harold "Pie" Traynor. During his major league career, which spanned the years 1920-35, Traynor batted .320, averaged 5 home ...
One helluva thrift-store find: The old bat was in a bin in a Pittsburgh-area Goodwill and soon Grant Hartley learned it once belonged to a Hall of Famer.
Harley was intrigued as he studied the bat, which had a name on the barrel: Harold "Pie" Traynor. Turns out, as the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports , the bat belonged to that ...
Yet Traynor ranks 12th in Wins Above Replacement among Hall of Fame third basemen at 38.7, behind the likes of John "Home Run" Baker (who had 96 of them in his career from 1908-1922), Jimmy ...
So said Pie Traynor to Jimmy Jordan of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in 1958. To say Williams could hit is like saying Caruso could sing. For his career, all with the Boston Red Sox, Williams hit ...
Ah, a day to celebrate the many fantastic pies out there — lemon meringue, banana crème, strawberry rhubarb, or even pepperoni — as well as, say, Baseball Hall of Famer Pie Traynor (who spent ...
While digging through bins of items, Grant Hartley found a very old-looking baseball bat. As it turned out, it was used and belonged to Pirates Hall of Fame third baseman Harold "Pie" Traynor ...
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