RIP Tommy Holmes

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  • metrotheme
    Registered User
    • Apr 2007
    • 1259

    RIP Tommy Holmes

    RIP - Tommy Holmes, 91. I met him on two occasions and he was a really gracious former player.

    Tommy Holmes, an outfielder for the Boston Braves and Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1940s and 1950s, died Monday. He was 91.


    BOCA RATON, Fla. -- Tommy Holmes, who hit in 37 consecutive games in 1945 to set a modern National League record that stood until it was broken by Pete Rose, died Monday. He was 91.



    Tommy Holmes had a .302 batting average, 88 home runs and 581 RBIs in 11 years in the majors.

    Holmes died of natural causes at an assisted living facility, daughter Patricia Stone said.

    Holmes' hitting streak came while he played for the Boston Braves and is the ninth longest in major-league history. Rose hit in 44 in a row in 1978, the post-1900 NL mark.

    In 11 years in the majors with the Braves and Brooklyn Dodgers, Holmes had a .302 batting average, 88 home runs and 581 RBIs. From 1973 to 2003, he worked for the New York Mets as director of amateur baseball relations.

    "Tommy Holmes was one of our sport's truest gentlemen," said Jeff Wilpon, chief operating officer of the Mets. "His passion for the game and up-and-coming players, along with his 30-year association with our franchise, was unsurpassed."

    Stone said her father loved baseball and watched games until the end of his life.

    "When he played baseball, there would be days he'd leave early and he'd pass children playing and he'd stop to play with them," she said.

    Besides his daughter, Holmes is survived by his wife of 67 years, the former Lillian Petterson; a son, Tommy Holmes Jr.; two sisters; two grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.

    Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press
    Baseball Happenings
    - Linking baseball's past, present and future.
    http://baseballhappenings.blogspot.com
  • philliesfiend55
    Registered User
    • Nov 2006
    • 6031

    #2
    MLB should have given more attention to Holmes' Passing.

    Tommy Holmes hit over .300 lifetime, made several All-star teams, won one batting title and for over 30 years held the National League record for hitting safely in consecutive games. However news of his death was not even posted on mlb.com - the official website of the major leagues. I don't understand why Holmes' career wasn't shown more respect and why his passing hasn't been reported as a bigger story.

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