Hazen Shirley "Kiki" Cuyler was a Major League Baseball right fielder from 1921 until 1938. His nickname "Kiki" reportedly came from the way in which he once stuttered his own last name. He was born in Harrisville, Michigan. Cuyler broke into the big leagues in 1921 with the Pittsburgh Pirates and became a fixture in the lineup in 1924.
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- 1938-01-01 00:00:00 (xsd:date)
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- September 14
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- Hazen Shirley "Kiki" Cuyler was a Major League Baseball right fielder from 1921 until 1938. His nickname "Kiki" reportedly came from the way in which he once stuttered his own last name. He was born in Harrisville, Michigan. Cuyler broke into the big leagues in 1921 with the Pittsburgh Pirates and became a fixture in the lineup in 1924. Playing for the Pirates, Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Reds and Brooklyn Dodgers over the next decade and a half, Cuyler established a reputation as an outstanding hitter with great speed. He regularly batted .350 or higher and finished with a .321 lifetime batting average. In 1925 Cuyler combined this great hitting with 18 home runs and 102 RBI. Cuyler's Pirates won the World Series that year, the only time in his career he would be part of a championship team. In 1927, Cuyler was benched for nearly half the season because of a dispute with first-year manager Donie Bush. The Pirates went again to the World Series, but Cuyler did not play. That November, Cuyler was traded to the Chicago Cubs for Sparky Adams and Pete Scott. Cuyler led the league in stolen bases four times and finished his career with 328 steals. After his illustrious career as a player, Cuyler managed in the minor leagues, winning the Southern Association Championship in 1939 under Joe Engel and the Chattanooga Lookouts and the Washington Senators at Engel Stadium, with one of the only fan-owned franchises in the nation. He was a coach for the Cubs and Boston Red Sox during the 1940s, and was still active in the role for Boston in February 1950 when he succumbed to a heart attack at the age of 51. He died and was buried in his hometown Harrisville, Michigan. Cuyler was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1968. In 1981, Lawrence Ritter and Donald Honig included him in their book The 100 Greatest Baseball Players of All Time.
- カイカイ・カイラー は、1920年代 - 1930年代に活躍したアメリカ・メジャーリーグの選手。ポジションは右翼手。ミシガン州生まれ。右投げ右打ち。主にパイレーツとカブスで活躍した俊足巧打の外野手。ニックネームのカイカイ (Kiki) は、子供の頃、名字のカイラー (Cuyler) をどもりながら言ったのがその元だと伝えられている。
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- Hazen Shirley "Kiki" Cuyler was a Major League Baseball right fielder from 1921 until 1938. His nickname "Kiki" reportedly came from the way in which he once stuttered his own last name. He was born in Harrisville, Michigan. Cuyler broke into the big leagues in 1921 with the Pittsburgh Pirates and became a fixture in the lineup in 1924.
- カイカイ・カイラー は、1920年代 - 1930年代に活躍したアメリカ・メジャーリーグの選手。ポジションは右翼手。ミシガン州生まれ。右投げ右打ち。主にパイレーツとカブスで活躍した俊足巧打の外野手。ニックネームのカイカイ (Kiki) は、子供の頃、名字のカイラー (Cuyler) をどもりながら言ったのがその元だと伝えられている。
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