Richard Arndt, a Milwaukee Brewers groundskeeper, came up with the ball when Hank Aaron hit his 755th and final home run over the left field fence on July 20, 1976. He supposedly offered to return the ball to Aaron under the condition that he could hand it over in person, but this request was denied. Arndt was subsequently fired for refusing to surrender the baseball. In 1999 he auctioned it with a starting price of 850,000 dollars but cancelled the auction due to low bids. Andrew Knuth of Connecticut later bought the ball for 650,000 dollars and now keeps it in a "very safe place," according to Knuth.
Hank Aaron hit his 715th home run in Alanta, Georgia. The name of the stadium at that time is tough as they have changed it I believe 3 times since 1965. I will have to go with Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium.
Aaron hit the first of his 755 home runs on April 15, 1954, two days after his major-league debut. He hit the homer off St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Vic Raschi, who earlier in the game yielded Aaron's first-ever hit, a single.
The two pitchers that gave up home runs to both Aaron and Bonds are Rick Reuschel and Frank Tanana.
Aaron hit his first home run off of Vic Raschi of the St. Louis Cardinals on April 23, 1954.
Bonds hit his first home run on June 4, 1986 off of Craig McMurtry of the Atlanta Braves.
in desitinsed
Dan Bankhead was the first African-American pitcher to play in a major league game.
Al Leiter was the first pitcher to defeat all 30 Major League teams.
Greg Maddux was a Major League Baseball pitcher. He was the first major league pitcher to win the Cy Young Award four years in a row. He was nicknamed "Mad Dog" and "The Professor".
Pitcher
Greg Maddux was a Major League Baseball pitcher. He was the first major league pitcher to win the Cy Young Award four years in a row. He was nicknamed "Mad Dog" and "The Professor".
Lou Gehrig hit his first major league home run off of Boston Red Sox pitcher Bill Piercy. It was on September 27, 1923 at Fenway Park.
Major league pitcher
No. Hank Aaron is a retired Major League Baseball hall of famer.
The first Japanese pitcher in MLB history was Masanori Murkami who played from 1964 to 1965 for the San Francisco Giants
Hank Aaron made his Major League Debut on April 13, 1954. Hank went 0 for 5 but did not strikeout.
the pitcher is the player that throws the ball to the batter in the games. Most of the time the pitcher stays the same (major league) but sometimes the pitcher changes (youth league).