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- Q6196210 description "American baseball player".
- Q6196210 description "American baseball player".
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- Q6196210 abstract "James Louis "Jim" Kremmel (February 28, 1949 – October 12, 2012) was an American left-handed pitcher who spent two seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) with the Texas Rangers (1973) and Chicago Cubs (1974).Born in Belleville, Illinois on February 28, 1949, Kremmel was raised in nearby Columbia. He graduated from Columbia High School.He attended the University of New Mexico, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in Finance and Economics in 1971. A four-year letterman on the Lobos baseball team, he threw the only documented nine-inning no-hitter in school history in a 1–0 win over Arizona in Tucson on April 17, 1970. He had matched the school record for most strikeouts in a single game with 18 against Eastern New Mexico University less than three weeks earlier on March 30, 1970. His 356 career strikeouts are still a school record. Named the All-Western Athletic Conference pitcher in 1969 and 1970, he ended his college career with a 22–14 record.He was originally picked by the Cleveland Indians in the seventh round (146th overall) of the 1970 MLB Draft, but chose not to sign. Selected ninth overall by the Washington Senators in the secondary phase of the January Free Agent Amateur Draft in 1971, he signed with the ballclub four months later on May 24. He is tied with Duane Ward (1982) for the second-highest draft pick of players hailing from New Mexico, behind shortstop Alex Bregman, who was selected with the second pick in the first round of the 2015 MLB Draft.He was traded by the Rangers to the St. Louis Cardinals for Don Durham on July 16, 1973. Kremmel was dealt twice after the conclusion of the 1973 season. He first went to the Chicago White Sox for Dennis O'Toole on October 26. He was then sent to the crosstown Cubs on December 18 to complete a transaction from a week earlier on December 11 which had sent Ron Santo to the White Sox for Steve Stone, Steve Swisher and Ken Frailing.Kremmel died at age 63 in Spokane, Washington on October 12, 2012.".
- Q6196210 birthDate "1948-02-28".
- Q6196210 birthDate "1949-02-28".
- Q6196210 birthPlace Q79892.
- Q6196210 birthYear "1948".
- Q6196210 deathDate "2012-10-12".
- Q6196210 deathPlace Q187805.
- Q6196210 deathYear "2012".
- Q6196210 debutTeam Q329816.
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- Q6196210 birthDate "1949-02-28".
- Q6196210 birthPlace Q79892.
- Q6196210 dateOfBirth "1948-02-28".
- Q6196210 dateOfDeath "2012-10-12".
- Q6196210 deathDate "2012-10-12".
- Q6196210 deathPlace Q187805.
- Q6196210 debutteam Q329816.
- Q6196210 name "Jim Kremmel".
- Q6196210 name "Kremmel, Jim".
- Q6196210 placeOfBirth Q79892.
- Q6196210 placeOfDeath Q187805.
- Q6196210 position Q1048902.
- Q6196210 shortDescription "American baseball player".
- Q6196210 type Person.
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- Q6196210 type Athlete.
- Q6196210 type BaseballPlayer.
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- Q6196210 comment "James Louis "Jim" Kremmel (February 28, 1949 – October 12, 2012) was an American left-handed pitcher who spent two seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) with the Texas Rangers (1973) and Chicago Cubs (1974).Born in Belleville, Illinois on February 28, 1949, Kremmel was raised in nearby Columbia. He graduated from Columbia High School.He attended the University of New Mexico, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in Finance and Economics in 1971.".
- Q6196210 label "Jim Kremmel".
- Q6196210 givenName "Jim".
- Q6196210 name "Jim Kremmel".
- Q6196210 name "Kremmel, Jim".
- Q6196210 surname "Kremmel".