Steve Carlton is a former major league baseball player and Hall of Fame member.
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| - Steve Carlton
- Steve Carlton
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| - Steve Carlton is a former major league baseball player and Hall of Fame member.
- Steve Norman Carlton (* 22. Dezember 1944 in Miami, Florida) ist ein ehemaliger US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler in der Major League Baseball. Sein Spitzname ist Lefty.
- Steven Norman Carlton (born December 22, 1944 in Miami, Florida) is an American former Professional baseball pitcher who played Major League Baseball, from 1965 to 1988, who retired as one of the most successful pitchers to ever play the game. He was affectionately known to Philadelphia fans as "Lefty." He played for the St. Louis Cardinals, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago White Sox, San Francisco Giants, Cleveland Indians and Minnesota Twins.
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| - US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler
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| - 1972(xsd:integer)
- 1977(xsd:integer)
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abstract
| - Steve Carlton is a former major league baseball player and Hall of Fame member.
- Steve Norman Carlton (* 22. Dezember 1944 in Miami, Florida) ist ein ehemaliger US-amerikanischer Baseballspieler in der Major League Baseball. Sein Spitzname ist Lefty.
- Steven Norman Carlton (born December 22, 1944 in Miami, Florida) is an American former Professional baseball pitcher who played Major League Baseball, from 1965 to 1988, who retired as one of the most successful pitchers to ever play the game. He was affectionately known to Philadelphia fans as "Lefty." He played for the St. Louis Cardinals, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago White Sox, San Francisco Giants, Cleveland Indians and Minnesota Twins. Carlton has the second-most lifetime strikeouts of any left-handed pitcher (4th overall), and the second-most lifetime wins of any left-handed pitcher (11th overall). He was the first pitcher to win four Cy Young Awards in a career. He held the lifetime strikeout record several times between 1982 and 1984, before his contemporary Nolan Ryan passed him for good. One of his most remarkable records was accounting for nearly half (46%) of his team's wins, when he won 27 games for the last-place 1972 Phillies.
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