KEN HARRELSON


'Kenneth Smith Harrelson' (born September 4, 1941 in Woodruff, South Carolina), nicknamed '"The Hawk"' due to his distinctive profile, is a former first baseman and outfielder in Major League Baseball who currently serves as a television broadcast announcer for the Chicago White Sox.

Contents
Early life
Playing career
General manager and broadcaster
See also
References
External links

Early life


Ken Harrelson was born on September 4, 1941 in Woodruff, South Carolina. Hawk and his family moved from Woodruff to Savannah, Georgia when he was in fifth grade. As a child Harrelson was interested in basketball and he hoped to pursue a basketball scholarship from Kentucky. Ken Harrelson
He played golf, baseball, football and basketball at Benedictine Military School in Savannah, Georgia.

Playing career


Ken Harrelson on the cover of ''Sports Illustrated'', 1968-09-02.

Throwing and batting right-handed, Harrelson played for four teams: the Kansas City Athletics (1963-66, 1967), Washington Senators (1966-67), Boston Red Sox (1967-69), and Cleveland Indians (1969-71). In his nine-season career, Harrelson was a .239 hitter with 131 home runs and 421 RBI in 900 games.
His time with the Athletics ended abruptly in 1967 when Harrelson angrily denounced team owner Charlie Finley following the dismissal of manager Alvin Dark. Saying that Finley was "a menace to baseball," Harrelson was released and ended up signing a lucrative deal with the Boston Red Sox, who were in contention to win their first pennant since 1946.
Harrelson is often credited with inventing the batting glove by wearing a golf glove while at bat with the A's; however, Peter Morris' book ''A Game Of Inches'' says the batting glove may have been used as early as 1901 by Hughie Jennings, and were definitely used by Lefty O'Doul and Johnny Frederick of the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1932, and later by Bobby Thomson in the 1950s. Morris does credit Harrelson with reintroducing the batting glove in the 1960s.
Brought in to replace the injured Tony Conigliaro, Harrelson helped the team win the pennant, but watched the team drop a close World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games. However, in 1968, he had his finest season, making the American League All-Star team and leading the American League in runs batted in with 109.
On April 19, 1969, Harrelson was traded to the Indians, a move that shocked him and led him to briefly retire. Following conversations with commissioner Bowie Kuhn and a contract adjustment by Cleveland, Harrelson reported to the team, finishing the year with 30 home runs. He also used his local celebrity to briefly host a half-hour program entitled, "The Hawk's Nest" on local CBS affiliate, WJW-TV.
During spring training the following year, Harrelson suffered a broken leg while sliding into second base during a March 19 exhibition game against the Oakland Athletics. The injury kept him on the sidelines for much of the season. When Indian rookie Chris Chambliss took control of the first base position in 1971, Harrelson decided to retire to pursue a professional golf career.

General manager and broadcaster



After his time on the links brought minimal compensation over the next few years, Harrelson turned to a broadcasting career, beginning in 1975 with the Red Sox. Ken "Hawk" Harrelson He became highly popular, especially after being teamed with veteran play-by-play man Ned Martin, but, after being publicly critical of player personnel decisions made by Boston co-owner Haywood Sullivan, Harrelson was fired at the close of the 1981 season.
Harrelson served as a Chicago White Sox announcer from 1982 to 1985 and briefly left broadcasting during the 1986 season to become the White Sox's General Manager. Many people questioned his work ethic as a GM because he was often found on the golf course instead of in the office. During that one season, Harrelson fired field manager Tony LaRussa, who was soon hired by the Oakland Athletics and traded Bobby Bonilla to the Pittsburgh Pirates.
During the 1987–1988 season he was the play-by-play man for New York Yankees games on SportsChannel New York.
In 1994, Hawk served as a broadcaster for the short-lived Baseball Network.
Since 1990, he has served as the main play-by-play announcer for the White Sox television broadcasts, and has become known as one of the ultimate "homer" (home-town enthusiast) broadcasters. Harrelson is known for his often used catchphrases such as, "He gone!" or "Grab some bench!" after a strikeout of an opposing player, "Sacks packed with Sox," when the bases are loaded, and referring to the White Sox as "the good guys" (based on the team's mid-90's slogan ''Good Guys Wear Black''). He is best known for his home run call, which for the White Sox is an enthusiastic cry while the ball is in flight, "You can put it on the booooard... YES!", with Jackson joining him on the "YES". Not to play any favorites, when an opponent homers, Harrelson will state, matter-of-factly, "Put it on the board." The expression "He gone!" connects with the similar CB-radio expression, which Harrelson cited directly when wrapping up the Sox victory parade in 2005: "''We'' gone!"
Harrelson coined many nicknames for popular Sox players, including "Black Jack" McDowell, Carlos "El Caballo" Lee, Lance "One Dog" Johnson, Frank "The Big Hurt" Thomas, Craig "Little Hurt" Grebeck, "Big Bad" Bobby Jenks, Sammy "The Panther" Sosa and Herbert "the Milkman" Perry.

See also



Top 500 home run hitters of all time

List of Major League Baseball RBI champions

Major League Baseball hitters with three home runs in one game

References



★ The New Dickson Baseball Dictionary, Harvest Books (February 15, 1999) ISBN 978-0156005807

External links





Baseball Library - profile and chronology

WGN-TV writeup

Full list of Catch Phrases

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