Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. All-Star ( 1980) World Series champion ( 1981) Kenneth Francis Landreaux (born December 22, 1954) is an American former professional baseball center fielder. He played in Major League Baseball for the California Angels, Minnesota Twins, and Los Angeles Dodgers from 1977 through 1987.

  2. 22 dic 2010 · Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Ken Landreaux. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com.

    • December 22, 1954
  3. Ken Landreaux Bio. Fullname: Kenneth Francis Landreaux; Born: 12/22/1954 in Los Angeles, CA; Draft: 1976, California Angels, Round: 1, Overall Pick: 6; College: Arizona State; Debut: 9/11/1977

  4. Ken Landreaux baseball stats with batting stats, pitching stats and fielding stats, along with uniform numbers, salaries, quotes, career stats and biographical data presented by Baseball Almanac.

    • Kenneth Francis Landreaux
    • 12-22-1954 (Capricorn)
    • Los Angeles, California
    • K.T. or Ken
  5. Home. Our Stories. #CardCorner: 1981 Topps Ken Landreaux. Written by: Craig Muder. In the spring of 1980 – when counting statistics still ruled the baseball world – Twins outfielder Ken Landreaux became the talk of the nation with a 31-game hitting streak. It remains one of just 24 in-season streaks of that length or longer in the game’s history.

    • Ken Landreaux1
    • Ken Landreaux2
    • Ken Landreaux3
    • Ken Landreaux4
    • Ken Landreaux5
  6. 22 dic 2022 · Ken Landreaux. Kenneth Francis Landreaux. Bats Left, Throws Right. Height 5' 10", Weight 165 lb. School Arizona State University. High School Dominguez High School. Debut September 11, 1977. Final Game October 4, 1987. Born December 22, 1954 in Los Angeles, CA USA. BR page. Biographical Information[ edit]

  7. HR. 91. RBI. 479. OPS. .718. Complete career MLB stats for the Baltimore Orioles Right Fielder Ken Landreaux on ESPN. Includes games played, hits and home runs per MLB season.