Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Reggie Jackson | Biography, World Series, & Facts | Britannica
      • Jackson was encouraged in sports by his father and became a star athlete at Cheltenham High School in Pennsylvania, excelling in track and football as well as baseball. He was a good pitcher as well as a hitter, batting and throwing left-handed.
      www.britannica.com › biography › Reggie-Jackson
  1. People also ask

  2. May 17, 2022 · Reggie Jackson doesn't hold the all-time home run record. He doesn't own the most World Series rings. But few players in baseball history are more closely associated with both the long ball and with clutch hitting under the brightest lights than "Mr. October."

    • Log in

      Reggie Jackson doesn't hold the all-time home run record. He...

    • Help Center

      The Official Site of Major League Baseball

  3. May 14, 2024 · Reggie Jackson, American professional baseball player whose outstanding performance in World Series games earned him the nickname ‘Mr. October.’ He won World Series with the Oakland Athletics (1972–74) and with the New York Yankees (1977–78). Learn more about Jackson’s life and career.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • He Originally Wanted to Be A Football Player.
    • He Tried Out For The College Baseball Team in His Football Uniform.
    • He Dealt with Racism in His Professional career.
    • He Celebrated His First Career Grand Slam by Giving His Team's Owner The finger.
    • He Could Have Hit A Baseball 650 feet.
    • Both Jackson and The Yankees Regretted Signing Him at first.
    • He Once Claimed He Was Misquoted For Four Pages.
    • The "Mr. October" Nickname Was Originally Sarcastic.
    • He Had His Own Candy Bar.

    Reggie Jackson's dream during his junior year at Pennsylvania's Cheltenham High School was to be a professional football player. But on Thanksgiving 1963, the running back twisted his knee. At the hospital, doctors weren't sure he would ever play again. Instead, he came back later that season, only to snap his neck while tackling someone. After fin...

    Jackson was heavily courted by colleges for his football abilities (he averaged 8.0 yards per carry and led the district in touchdowns). Both the University of Alabama and the University of Georgia were said to be willing to integratetheir football programs for him. Instead, he opted to accept a football scholarship to Arizona State University, whe...

    After his freshman season on the college baseball team, Jackson became the first African-American player for an Orioles-affiliated amateur team in Baltimore. He broke the color barrier because, according to Jackson, he "talked like a white boy" on the phone with the club before joining, and they didn't realize he was black until he showed up to pla...

    After an exemplary 1969 season with the Oakland Athletics, Jackson demanded a raise from $20,000 to $75,000. But the A's owner Charlie O. Finley held steady at $40,000, right up until 10 days before opening day, when the two settled on $45,000, plus the rent to Jackson's Oakland apartment. Jackson wasn't thrilled; he was also out of shape from miss...

    In the third inning of the 1971 All-Star Game, Jackson hit a Dock Ellis slider over the upper deck at Tiger Stadium in Detroit. It hit the transformer that was 400 feet from home plate and 90 feet off the ground. Wayne State University physicists estimated the homer would have traveled 650 feet had the transformer not gotten in the way of the moons...

    After the Yankees won the American League title but got swept by the Reds in the 1976 World Series, they looked to make off-season moves to win a championship. The team, who already had five left-handed batters in the lineup, signed Jackson to a five-year contract worth just under $3 million. During spring training, Jackson's new teammate Sparky Ly...

    Team captain Thurman Munson and Jackson initially needed to be tricked into having breakfast together by Yankees owner George Steinbrenner to play together peacefully. Robert Ward's article in Sport magazine made the relationship a lot worse early in the 1977 season, when Jackson was infamously quoted as saying, "I'm the straw that stirs the drink....

    Jackson went an unimpressive 2-for-16 in the 1977 American League Championship Series. Although accounts vary as to what exactly was said, during the World Series that year Thurman Munson dismissed Jackson’s mediocre performance up to that point by calling him "Mr. October." Jackson responded by tearing the cover off the ball for most of the Fall C...

    Before he joined the Yankees, Jackson said, "If I was playing in New York, they'd name a candy bar after me." Somewhat inspired by the line, Standard Brands’s Curtiss Candy produced the Reggie! Bar, which was in fact a circular-shaped concoction of caramel, peanuts, and milk chocolate. They were handed out to fans at the 1978 Yankee Stadium opener....

  4. Jan 4, 2012 · An excellent football player, he could run the 60-yard dash in sprinter speed, 6.3 seconds. 2 By the beginning of his sophomore year he was a starting defensive back and the defensive captain in a Top 20 program. Jackson found baseball more by accident than by intent.

  5. Oct 18, 2019 · Over his postseason career, Reggie Jackson hit for a .278 average with 18 home runs, 48 RBIs and 41 runs, making him one of the most productive players in playoff history.

  6. Jan 28, 2020 · Reggie Jackson was an athletic marvel. There were always baseball scouts sniffing around, but his best sport was football, and he was heavily recruited by schools around the country to be a...

  7. Feb 3, 2022 · Reggie, who turned 30 in 1976, still believes things would have been different if he had been with the Orioles on Opening Day. And he is adamant that he would have been quite happy to play the next five years of his career in Baltimore.