- Source: Bobby Knoop
Robert Frank Knoop ( kuh-NOP; born October 18, 1938) is an American former Major League Baseball second baseman and coach. In his nine-year MLB career, he appeared in 1,153 games as a member of the Los Angeles / California Angels (1964–69), Chicago White Sox (1969–70) and Kansas City Royals (1971–72). He threw and batted right-handed, stood 6 feet 1 inch (1.85 m) tall and weighed 170 pounds (77 kg).
Biography
= Early life and career
=Knoop was born on October 18, 1938 in Sioux City, Iowa to parents Frank and Mabel Knoop. His father was a German immigrant while his mother was a descendant of Swiss and Norwegian immigrants. Frank lived to be 101. After attending Montebello High School in Montebello, California, he was signed by the Milwaukee Braves in 1956. He played for ten different minor league teams between 1956 and 1963, his best year being in 1963 with the Hawaiin Islanders of the Triple-A Pacific Coast League, where he had a .283 batting average, with 20 homeruns, 72 runs scored, 67 RBI, and a .965 fielding percentage.
= Major league player
=Nicknamed "Nureyev" by sportswriters for his exciting and acrobatic fielding plays, Knoop played a deep second base, with exceptional range and a strong arm. In another version, Knoop says the nickname derived from not only his acrobatic skills at second base, but a fabricated story he told the writers that his mother had made him take ballet lessons.
In December 1963, the Los Angels obtained him via the Rule 5 draft, by the rules of which he was required to remain on the 1964 major-league roster. He in fact played in every game that season and remained the Angels' regular second baseman for the next five and a half years (the name changing to California Angels in 1965), winning the club's MVP award four times in the span, a mark tied by Garret Anderson and Mike Trout.
He turned the double play well along with shortstop Jim Fregosi, to give the Angels outstanding keystone defense. Fregosi was his roommate and closest friend in baseball, as well as a teammate. In 1967, the pair both won the Gold Glove award at their respective positions—the second of three Gold Gloves Knoop would capture from 1966 to 1968; he was the American League's starting second baseman in the 1966 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, and went hitless in two at bats. As a hitter, he had his best season during 1966, with career-highs of 17 home runs, 72 RBI, 54 runs and 11 triples.
Knoop was sent to the White Sox in mid-1969 and then was traded to the Royals in 1971, where he also rejoined former Angels third baseman Paul Schaal. With Kansas City, he played mostly as a backup for Cookie Rojas.
In his career Knoop batted .236, with 56 home runs, 331 RBIs, 337 runs, 856 hits, 129 doubles, 29 triples, and 16 stolen bases in 1153 games. He is tied for the record of most double plays in a game by a second basemen, six, held with Alfonso Soriano and Bill Doran, which Knoop did on May 1, 1966. He is also tied for the record of most putouts in a game by a second baseman, twelve, being the most recent person to accomplish this (August 30, 1966).
= Coaching
=After retiring, Knoop worked for over 40 years as a minor league and major league coach, scout and adviser, including stints with the Chicago White Sox (1977–78, assistant coach), California Angels (1979–96 as first base and third base coach), Toronto Blue Jays (2000, as first base coach) and Colorado Rockies (2008–12, 2008 as pro scout and 2009 as senior advisor for player development), and Los Angeles Angels (2014–18 as infield coach or infield instructor). In 1997 and 1998, he was head coach at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia. In 1994 Knoop served as manager of the Angels for two games, posting a 1–1 record. In February 2019, Knoop retired from Major League Baseball, after a career that lasted 53 years.
= Honors
=He was inducted into the Angels Hall of Fame in 2013. Knoop was inducted into the Orange County, California Sports Hall of Fame in 1991.
See also
List of Major League Baseball annual triples leaders
List of Gold Glove middle infield duos
References
External links
Career statistics from Baseball Reference
Page at AngelFire
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Yorba Linda, California
- Winston 500 1987
- Bob Akin
- Daytona 24 Jam 2006
- Bobby Knoop
- Knoop
- Gold Glove Award
- Yorba Linda, California
- List of Gold Glove Award winners at second base
- Second baseman
- Los Angeles Angels
- Los Angeles Angels award winners and league leaders
- Montebello, California
- Bobby McCain