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doubled to give
Cleveland a lead they would never relinquish; Cleveland would win, 6–3, ruining Bass' major league debut. Most of Bass' start (from the fourth inning onwards) can still be heard today, as part of the
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277:. He also managed the local amateur baseball team to four city championships and the World's Amateur Championship at Youngstown, Ohio in 1944.) After the war, he pitched for and managed Class D clubs in
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hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the seventh, giving the Nats a 2–0 lead. But Bass fell apart in the eighth, giving up singles to
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in Ohio, where he was named to the All-Buckeye baseball teams during his junior and senior years. He signed with the
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It would be Bass' only game in the majors. Already 33 years old, he would return to
Chattanooga, then enlist in
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Bass grew up in rural
Tennessee, in the small town of Rogersville. A tall, right-handed pitcher, Bass attended
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tapes, making it one of the oldest baseball play-by-play broadcasts still extant.
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September 21, 1939, for the Washington
Senators
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September 21, 1939, for the Washington
Senators
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battled through six scoreless innings, before
Washington's
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in 1939, Bass got the call to the majors, starting for the
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206:by 1932 and pitched parts of six seasons with the
291:All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
317:Career statistics and player information from
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377:Louisville Colonels (minor league) players
198:organization, and made his pro debut with
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180:(July 7, 1906 – February 3, 1989) was a
352:Washington Senators (1901–1960) players
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311:Society for American Baseball Research
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16:American baseball player (1906-1989)
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257:with a pitch to load the bases,
372:Miami RedHawks baseball players
362:Baseball players from Tennessee
357:Major League Baseball pitchers
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327:Baseball Reference (Minors)
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309:Profile of Dick Bass at
202:in 1930; he wound up in
226:on September 21, 1939.
296:Bass died in 1989, in
56:Rogersville, Tennessee
182:Major League Baseball
283:Kingsport, Tennessee
279:Gainesville, Florida
220:Southern Association
216:Chattanooga Lookouts
212:American Association
178:Richard William Bass
298:Graceville, Florida
224:Washington Senators
208:Louisville Colonels
196:St. Louis Cardinals
163:Washington Senators
106:Last MLB appearance
72:Graceville, Florida
319:Baseball Reference
287:Fort Wayne Daisies
264:WJSV broadcast day
132:Earned run average
231:Cleveland Indians
200:Shawnee, Oklahoma
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253:. After hitting
192:Miami University
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65:February 3, 1989
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239:Charlie Gelbert
122:Win–loss record
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69:(aged 82)
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67:(1989-02-03)
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53:July 7, 1906
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347:1989 deaths
342:1906 births
259:Ken Keltner
247:Ben Chapman
336:Categories
325:, or
321:, or
251:Odell Hall
204:Louisville
142:Strikeouts
49:1906-07-07
323:Fangraphs
235:Al Milnar
96:MLB debut
28:Dick Bass
289:of the
218:of the
210:of the
185:pitcher
81:Batted:
36:Pitcher
275:Dayton
87:Threw:
155:Teams
89:Right
83:Right
63:Died:
44:Born:
281:and
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167:1939
136:6.75
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