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Bill Dickey - Wikipedia After serving in the United States Navy during World War II, Dickey returned to the Yankees in 1946 as a player and manager He retired after the 1946 season, but returned in 1949 as a coach, in which capacity he taught Yogi Berra the finer points of catching
Bill Dickey Stats, Height, Weight, Research History - Baseball Almanac Dickey was 21 years old when he broke into the major leagues on August 15, 1928, with the New York Yankees Bill Dickey stats, height, weight, career totals, schools, positions, and more historical research are in the Baseball Almanac
Bill Dickey - Baseball Hall of Fame An 11-time All-Star and seven-time World Series champion, Dickey reached double digits in home runs nine times, the 100 RBI mark four times and batted better than 300 11 times
Bill Dickey | Hall of Fame, Yankees, Catcher | Britannica Bill Dickey was a professional baseball player who caught for the New York Yankees (1928–43 and 1946) of the American League Dickey spanned two eras in Yankee history, playing at the end of Babe Ruth’s career and during the careers of legends Lou Gehrig and Joe DiMaggio
Bill Dickey Stats, Age, Position, Height, Weight, Fantasy News Fullname: William Malcolm Dickey Born: 6 06 1907 in Bastrop, LA High School: Searcy, Searcy, AR Debut: 8 15 1928 Hall of Fame: 1954 Died: 11 12 1993 Relationship (s): brother of George Dickey
Bill Dickey - BR Bullpen - Baseball-Reference. com The brother of George Dickey, catcher Bill Dickey was a mainstay behind the plate for the New York Yankees for almost two decades During that time, he made the All-Star team eleven times Dickey entered the U S Navy on March 15, 1944 and served at the Navy Hospital Area in Hawaii
Bill Dickey Stats Facts – This Day In Baseball Bill Dickey ended his career with 202 home runs, 1,209 runs batted in, 930 runs scored, and a 313 batting average In addition to surpassing 20 homers and 100 runs batted in four times each, he scored more than 90 runs twice and batted over 300 a total of 11 times
Dickey, Bill - Encyclopedia of Arkansas William Malcolm (Bill) Dickey is considered by baseball historians to be one of the best catchers in baseball history Dickey played and later coached for the New York Yankees during that club’s dominance from the late 1920s to the early 1960s
Bill Dickey - Wikiwand Dickey entered the United States Navy on March 15, 1944, as he was categorized in Class 1-A, meaning fit for service, by the Selective Service System He served at the Navy Hospital Area in Hawaii