Dutch Romberger

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dutch_Romberger an entity of type: Thing

Allen Isaiah "Dutch" Romberger (May 26, 1927 – May 26, 1983) was an American professional baseball player. The right-handed pitcher had a 13-season career (1948–59; 1961) in minor league baseball, but made only ten appearances in the Major Leagues for the 1954 Philadelphia Athletics. He was listed as 6 feet (1.83 m) tall and 185 pounds (84 kg). Romberger was a successful minor league pitcher, compiling a 111–72 win-loss record (.607) in 462 games, all but 23 of them for the Athletics' organization. He died on his 56th birthday in Weikert, Pennsylvania. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dutch Romberger
rdf:langString Dutch Romberger
rdf:langString Dutch Romberger
xsd:date 1983-05-26
xsd:date 1927-05-26
xsd:integer 30888054
xsd:integer 1121554544
xsd:integer 1
xsd:double 11.49
rdf:langString Strikeouts
xsd:integer 6
xsd:integer 12
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString Right
rdf:langString r/rombedu01
xsd:date 1927-05-26
xsd:date 1983-05-26
xsd:gMonthDay --08-01
rdf:langString *Philadelphia Athletics
rdf:langString Allen Isaiah "Dutch" Romberger (May 26, 1927 – May 26, 1983) was an American professional baseball player. The right-handed pitcher had a 13-season career (1948–59; 1961) in minor league baseball, but made only ten appearances in the Major Leagues for the 1954 Philadelphia Athletics. He was listed as 6 feet (1.83 m) tall and 185 pounds (84 kg). A native of Klingerstown, Pennsylvania, Romberger signed with the Athletics in 1948. He split 1954, his seventh pro season, between the Triple-A Ottawa Athletics and the big-league squad, playing its 54th and last season in Philadelphia. All of his ten appearances came in relief, and he was ineffective, allowing 28 hits, three home runs and 12 bases on balls in 122⁄3 innings pitched, with six strikeouts. However, he earned his only MLB victory on June 19 at Briggs Stadium. Called into the game in the seventh inning with Philadelphia trailing 4–0, Romberger set down the Detroit Tigers in order. Then, in the top of the eighth, the Athletics tallied five runs and came away with a 5–4 win. Romberger was a successful minor league pitcher, compiling a 111–72 win-loss record (.607) in 462 games, all but 23 of them for the Athletics' organization. He died on his 56th birthday in Weikert, Pennsylvania.
rdf:langString Right
rdf:langString romber001all
xsd:gMonthDay --05-31
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString Philadelphia Athletics
xsd:integer 1954
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString Philadelphia Athletics
xsd:integer 1954
xsd:integer 121421
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3577

data from the linked data cloud