Sports
Don Baylor, Former Oriole, Dies At 68
The man who started his MLB career in Baltimore and went on to become an American League MVP has died.

AUSTIN, TEXAS — Don Baylor, the former American League MVP who began his baseball career in Baltimore, has died. Baylor reportedly lost a battle with multiple myeloma. He was 68.
Baylor, an Austin, Texas, native, hammered 338 home runs and drove in 1,276 runs in his career. He led the league in being hit by a pitch seven times, including a career-high 35 for Boston in 1986.
"Don passed from this earth with the same fierce dignity with which he played the game and lived his life," his wife, Rebecca, said in a statement, per ESPN.
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Baylor was one of the league's premier power hitters during his 19-year career, winning the AL MVP award in 1979. He was traded from the Yankees to Boston right before the 1986 season, then was traded to Minnesota in 1987. He finally won a World Series with the Twins before retiring.
Through his baseball career, he was affiliated with 14 teams, according to MLB.com. He played for the Orioles, Yankees, Red Sox, A's
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After the Orioles drafted him as a second-round pick, he began his career with the O's in 1970 and played in Baltimore for six years, the Associated Press reported.
We mourn the loss of former Oriole Don Baylor. Our thoughts are with his family. pic.twitter.com/ewkdpEDAmA
— Baltimore Orioles (@Orioles) August 7, 2017
In 1986, he helped the Red Sox make the World Series, hitting 31 home runs and 94 RBIs. His ninth-inning, two-run home run in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series to pull Boston within one of his former Angels team is one of the most important hits that no one talks about in Red Sox history. Dave Henderson's home runs later in the ninth and 11th innings overshadow it to this day. The Red Sox would lose the World Series to the Mets in crushing fashion.
After retiring, he went on to become the first manager of the Colorado Rockies and helmed the Chicago Cubs.
Don Baylor, the 1979 AL MVP and the 1995 NL Manager of the Year, passed away Monday. He was 68. https://t.co/QGypC4u4YL pic.twitter.com/MT4NBBlZ4v
— MLB (@MLB) August 7, 2017
Photo caption: Baylor (left) embracing Marty Barrett after Red Sox win ALCS. (AP Photo/Peter Southwick)
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