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  1. 23. Juli 2023 · COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. -- At turns funny and sentimental, Fred McGriff formally accepted baseball immortality on Sunday. In his induction speech for the National Baseball Hall of Fame, McGriff thanked the dozens upon dozens of people who helped him along the way while drawing connections to many Hall of Famers seated

  2. 24. Juli 2023 · Fred McGriff, elected unanimously by the Contemporary Baseball Era Players Committee, and Scott Rolen, making it on his sixth try, were inducted Sunday into the Baseball Hall of Fame. McGriff, a Tampa native and original Devil Rays first baseman, played for six teams during his 19-year major-league career, including two stops with the Rays.

  3. Fred McGriff grew up four blocks from Al Lopez Field, the longtime spring training home of the Cincinnati Reds, which gave him a lot of exposure to major-league baseball at an early age. “I can’t remember going to my first game,” he once said. “I mean, I was always at a. baseball game. I lived at ballgames.

  4. 23. Juli 2023 · Watch the legendary Fred "Crime Dog" McGriff give his National Baseball Hall of Fame induction speech. Don't forget to subscribe! https://www.youtube.com/mlb...

    • 23 Min.
    • 20,6K
    • MLB
  5. 4. Dez. 2022 · McGriff elected unanimously to Hall on Contemporary Era ballot. December 4th, 2022. Anthony Castrovince. @ castrovince. SAN DIEGO -- “The Crime Dog” finally had his day. In Fred McGriff’s first second chance at the National Baseball Hall of Fame voting process, the Contemporary Baseball Era Players Committee did what the Baseball Writers ...

  6. The Crime Dog answered the call from Cooperstown. The lanky Fred McGriff, a sweet swinging lefty slugger who totaled nearly 500 home runs in a legendary career, was the lone player elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday, Dec. 4. One of eight candidates the 16-member Contemporary Baseball Players Committee considered, McGriff ...

  7. 6. Dez. 2022 · Fred McGriff was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday by the Contemporary Era Committee. Nicknamed the "Crime Dog," he spent five seasons with the Toronto Blue Jays and hit 493 homers ...