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- Mickey Mantle - Wikipedia
Though not a flashy fielder, Mantle was an overall solid center fielder, especially considering he did not play the position until after he had reached the Major Leagues
- Mickey Mantle Takes Center Field in 1952 | Yankees Encyclopedia
Mickey Mantle moved to center field after DiMaggio's retirement and hit 311 with 23 home runs in 1952, beginning baseball's most iconic positional succession
- Mickey Mantle Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status More . . .
Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference com
- Mickey Mantle biography: 7 Surprising Secrets Behind His Baseball Greatness
What position did Mickey Mantle play? Mantle primarily played center field for the New York Yankees, but he also logged games at right field and first base during his career
- Mickey Mantle, as He Actually Was - Sports Central
Sure, he could run a fly ball down with the best (he saved Don Larsen's World Series perfect game with just such a running stab), but he finished his career 10 fielding runs below his league average in center field — and only once was good for 10 or more above it (In 1955 )
- 10 Reasons Your Grandfather Was Right About Mickey Mantle Being the . . .
He tracked down fly balls in Death Valley—that vast expanse of center field that swallowed lesser players’ careers—and made catches that had fans wondering if the laws of physics applied to him
- Mickey Mantles famous 600-foot homer at USC may have been debunked
It actually took place on this day, 67 years ago Mantle hit two long balls that game -- hoping to take the center-field job from an aging Joe DiMaggio -- and the first was said to have gone somewhere between 550-660 feet
- Mickey Mantle Bio And Facts - baseballstandard. com
Mickey Mantle was a professional American baseball player for the New York Yankees He played center field for the majority of his career, as well as first base, and played all 18 of his career seasons with the Yankees (1951-1968)
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