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Tony Cloninger

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Win–loss record
  
113–97

Role
  
Baseball player

Name
  
Tony Cloninger

Strikeouts
  
1,120

Earned run average
  
4.07


Tony Cloninger httpssabrorgsitesdefaultfilesimagesClonin


Tony cloninger sets rbi record for pitchers


Tony Lee Cloninger (born August 13, 1940), is a former Major League Baseball starting pitcher who played for the Milwaukee and Atlanta Braves (1961–68), the Cincinnati Reds (1968–71), and the St. Louis Cardinals (1972). He batted and threw right-handed.

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Tony Cloninger This day in Braves history Tony Cloningers two grand slams

Playing career

Tony Cloninger Tony Cloninger 1959 The Sprouting News

A power pitcher, Cloninger compiled a career 113–97 record with 1,120 strikeouts and a 4.07 ERA in 1,76723 innings pitched. He enjoyed his best year for the 1965 Braves, with career highs in wins (24), strikeouts (211), ERA (3.29), complete games (16), innings (279) and games started (40).

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Regarded as a tough fireball pitcher, Cloninger also was a dangerous power hitter. He compiled a career batting average of .192, with 67 RBIs and 11 home runs, including five in the 1966 season. On July 3, 1966, in the Braves' 17–3 win over the Giants at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, Cloninger helped his team's cause with two grand slams and nine RBIs. Cloninger became the first player in the National League, and the only pitcher to date, to hit two grand slams in the same game.

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Cloninger finished his career pitching with Cincinnati and St. Louis.

Coaching career

Tony Cloninger Former Atlanta Brave Tony Cloninger has grand memories of 50 years

After retiring, he served as a bullpen coach for the New York Yankees (1992–2001), where he was a member of five American League champions and four World Series champion teams, and pitching coach for the Boston Red Sox (2002 through early 2003). He was forced to step down from the latter post when he underwent successful treatment for bladder cancer, which had been diagnosed in spring training. In 2015, Cloninger began his twelfth consecutive season as a player development consultant for the Red Sox.


Tony Cloninger Tony Cloninger Wikipedia

References

Tony Cloninger Wikipedia