Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4912910> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 82 of
82
with 100 triples per page.
- Q4912910 subject Q6563482.
- Q4912910 subject Q7388367.
- Q4912910 subject Q7388739.
- Q4912910 subject Q7946885.
- Q4912910 subject Q8243608.
- Q4912910 subject Q8287615.
- Q4912910 subject Q8291013.
- Q4912910 subject Q8316559.
- Q4912910 subject Q8468447.
- Q4912910 subject Q8663104.
- Q4912910 subject Q8702414.
- Q4912910 subject Q9707746.
- Q4912910 abstract "William Loes (December 13, 1929 – July 15, 2010) was an American right-handed pitcher who spent eleven seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) with the Brooklyn Dodgers (1950, 1952–1956), Baltimore Orioles (1956–1959) and San Francisco Giants (1960–1961). He appeared in three World Series with the Dodgers, including the only one won by the franchise when it was based in Brooklyn in 1955.In an 11-season career, Loes posted an 80–63 record with 645 strikeouts and a 3.89 ERA in 1190.1 innings pitched. He made the American League All-Star team in 1957.The book Carl Erskine's Tales from the Dodgers Dugout: Extra Innings (2004) includes short stories from former Dodger pitcher and teammate Carl Erskine. Loes is prominent in many of these stories.Among Major League Baseball's video archives is a television broadcast of the sixth game of the 1952 World Series, of which Loes was one of the starting pitchers. During the game, announcer Red Barber states that Loes was the son of Greek immigrants who had changed his last name. Further, says Barber, Loes would not tell Barber what his original last name was because, according to Loes, Barber would be unable to pronounce, spell or remember that name.Loes distinguished himself in several ways in the 1952 World Series. When asked how the Dodgers would fare, he predicted the Yankees would win in seven, but was misquoted as saying the Yankees would win in six. During the sixth game, he became the first pitcher in World Series history to commit a balk. In the seventh inning, he was starting his windup when the ball dropped from his hand. "Too much spit on it", he said later. Then a grounder hit by Yankee pitcher Vic Raschi bounced off his leg for a single, allowing a run to score. Afterward, he said he lost the ground ball in the sun.Loes holds a unique distinction, having witnessed, as a player involved in the game, four players hitting four home runs in a game. When Brooklyn's Gil Hodges hit four home runs in a game in 1950 he had just been called up to the Dodgers; when the Braves' Joe Adcock hit four against Brooklyn in 1954, Loes was still with the Dodgers; when Cleveland's Rocky Colavito hit four against Baltimore in 1959, Loes was with the Orioles; and when Willie Mays hit four home runs in 1961 against the Braves, Loes was a teammate on the Giants.Loes also famously said that he didn't want to be a 20-game winner, "because then I'd be expected to do it every year." His career high in wins came in 1953, when he went 14–8 for the pennant-winning Dodgers.".
- Q4912910 birthDate "1929-12-13".
- Q4912910 birthPlace Q1190597.
- Q4912910 deathDate "2010-07-15".
- Q4912910 deathPlace Q18575.
- Q4912910 debutTeam Q5869184.
- Q4912910 position Q1048902.
- Q4912910 thumbnail Billy_Loes_1953.jpg?width=300.
- Q4912910 wikiPageExternalLink player.php?p=loesbi01.
- Q4912910 wikiPageExternalLink 2010-08-01_anecdotes_abound_of_late_eccentric_brooklyn_dodgers_righty_billy_loes_who_passed.html.
- Q4912910 wikiPageExternalLink 28loes.html?scp=1&sq=billy%20loes&st=cse.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q1048902.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q1069698.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q1145091.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q1154763.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q1163715.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q1190597.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q1202506.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q15991290.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q18419.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q18575.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q2364101.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q265538.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q308966.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q3108759.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q3179960.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q3422661.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q5040106.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q5040109.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q515894.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q561852.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q5869184.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q650816.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q6563482.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q7388367.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q7388739.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q7924881.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q7946885.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q8192188.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q8243608.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q8287615.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q8291013.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q8316559.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q8468447.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q8663104.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q8702414.
- Q4912910 wikiPageWikiLink Q9707746.
- Q4912910 birthDate "1929-12-13".
- Q4912910 birthPlace Q1190597.
- Q4912910 deathDate "2010-07-15".
- Q4912910 deathPlace Q18575.
- Q4912910 debutteam "Brooklyn Dodgers".
- Q4912910 name "Billy Loes".
- Q4912910 position Q1048902.
- Q4912910 type Person.
- Q4912910 type Agent.
- Q4912910 type Athlete.
- Q4912910 type BaseballPlayer.
- Q4912910 type Person.
- Q4912910 type Agent.
- Q4912910 type NaturalPerson.
- Q4912910 type Thing.
- Q4912910 type Q10871364.
- Q4912910 type Q215627.
- Q4912910 type Q5.
- Q4912910 type Person.
- Q4912910 comment "William Loes (December 13, 1929 – July 15, 2010) was an American right-handed pitcher who spent eleven seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) with the Brooklyn Dodgers (1950, 1952–1956), Baltimore Orioles (1956–1959) and San Francisco Giants (1960–1961).".
- Q4912910 label "Billy Loes".
- Q4912910 depiction Billy_Loes_1953.jpg.
- Q4912910 name "Billy Loes".