I did not want to muddle the tourney thread with this post so thought I would start a separate thread.
Arlington has not had a amateur baseball team in years, but the Arlington Sun did have a front page story about Everett Jensen who is one of the four inductees for this year. He will be inducted on Sept 12 in Chamberlain SD. His amateur career includes 416 wins.
Everett is no longer living having past on in 1985. The story did say his son Larry still lives in Arlington. Everett started playing at the age 17 in 1941, the year I was born, for CenterPoint, a team out of Hurley SD. He served his country in World War 11 and then came back and played for the Irene Cardinals for about 9 years. When at Irene he won 262 games and lost 88, and appeared in six state tournaments.
He then moved to Arlington and pitched a complete game of 19 innings at the age of 35 against Oldham in which they won 5-4. The article does not say this but apparently all of the 4 runs scored by Oldham were the result of unearned runs and field errors. Five weeks later he threw a perfect game against league champion Lake Norden, in a 4-0 score. He struck out 11 of the 27 men he faced.
Also he was not a bad hitter, and batted about .333 for his career.
Now here is a Sports Max story, and I suspect Mike is already working on that.
Arlington has not had a amateur baseball team in years, but the Arlington Sun did have a front page story about Everett Jensen who is one of the four inductees for this year. He will be inducted on Sept 12 in Chamberlain SD. His amateur career includes 416 wins.
Everett is no longer living having past on in 1985. The story did say his son Larry still lives in Arlington. Everett started playing at the age 17 in 1941, the year I was born, for CenterPoint, a team out of Hurley SD. He served his country in World War 11 and then came back and played for the Irene Cardinals for about 9 years. When at Irene he won 262 games and lost 88, and appeared in six state tournaments.
He then moved to Arlington and pitched a complete game of 19 innings at the age of 35 against Oldham in which they won 5-4. The article does not say this but apparently all of the 4 runs scored by Oldham were the result of unearned runs and field errors. Five weeks later he threw a perfect game against league champion Lake Norden, in a 4-0 score. He struck out 11 of the 27 men he faced.
Also he was not a bad hitter, and batted about .333 for his career.
Now here is a Sports Max story, and I suspect Mike is already working on that.
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