Our African American Baseball Gifts For Boys
are 6 inches long including a 3 inch long, gold cord hanger loop. The African American People Ornaments have a young Africa American boy hitting a baseball. The boy is wearing a youth baseball uniform. These Sports Ornaments uniform includes a red baseball helmet, white jersey with red sleeves, and red around the collar, white pants with a red stripe down the legs, a black belt, blue baseball shoes and white socks with a black stripe. Select to see a complete listing of our Christmas Decorations Ideas.
Sandy Koufax.
Sanford “Sandy” Braun Koufax was born December 30, 1935 in Brooklyn, New York. He is a former left handed pitcher in Major League Baseball who played his entire career for the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers from 1955 –1966.
He is best known for his string of six amazing seasons from 1961 to 1966, before arthritis ended his career at the age of 31. A notoriously difficult pitcher to hit against, he was the first major leaguer to pitch more than three no hitters, the first to allow fewer than 7 hits per 9 innings pitched over his career and the first to strikeout more than 9 batters per 9 innings pitched in his career. Among National League pitchers with at least 2000 innings pitched who have debuted since 1913, he owns both the highest career winning percentage, .655 and the lowest career earned run average, 2.76; his 2396 career strikeouts ranked 7th in major league history upon his retirement and trailed only Warren Spahn’s total of 2583 among left handers. Retiring virtually at the peak of his career, Koufax later became the youngest person ever elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame at the age of 36.
Most left handed pitchers throw, to some degree, with a three quarter or sidearm motion, Koufax threw with a pronounced over the top arm action. This may have increased his velocity but reduced the lateral movement on his pitches, especially movement away from left handed hitters. Most of the velocity, however, came from his deceptively strong legs and back, combined with a high kicking wind up and long forward stretch toward the plate. Throughout his career he relied on two pitches: his four seam fastball had a rising motion due to under spin and appeared to move very late; the overhand curveball, spun with the middle finger, dropped vertically due to his arm action. He also occasionally threw a changeup and a forkball.
At the beginning of his career, he worked with coaches to eliminate his tendency to tip pitches or give away which pitch was coming, due to variations in his wind up. Late in his career and especially as his arm problems continued, this variation, usually in the position he held his hands at the top of the wind up, was even more pronounced and good hitters were rarely unsure what pitch was coming. It usually did not matter.
Career Highlights.
- Second in career no hitters with 4.
- One of 17 pitchers to throw a perfect game in 1965.
- Set single season record with 382 strikeouts in 1965, now second behind Nolan Ryan’s 383 in 1973.
- Led National League in ERA 5 times.
- Led National League in strikeouts 6 times.
- Led National League in shutouts 3 times.
- Led National League in wins 3 times.
- 0.95 ERA in 4 World Series.
- 6 All Star appearances.
- NL MVP Award in 1963.
- NL Cy Young Award 3 times in 1963, 1965 and 1966.
- World Series MVP 2 times in 1963 and 1965.





