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Pete Ward earned his
way into Oregon
sports lore as a
player in the Major
Leagues for nine
seasons, mostly with
the Chicago White
Sox, then ran the
Pete Ward baseball
clinic in Oregon for
many years.
Born in
Canada in 1937, Ward
graduated from
Portland's Jefferson
High and played
baseball for Lewis
and Clark College
before signing with
the Baltimore
Orioles in 1958 at
age 20. He spent
five years in the
minors, the final
one in Rochester of
the International
League, where he hit
.328 with 22 homers
and 90 RBIs and was
called up to the big
leagues late in the
year.
Baltimore
traded him to the
Chicago White Sox
prior to the
1963 season and he
spent seven years
with the club. In
1963, he hit .295
with 22 home runs,
84 RBIs, seven
stolen bases and was
named Rookie of the
Year by The Sporting
News, although he
finished second in
the official
balloting.
In '64,
he hit .282 with 94
RBIs and 23 homers,
helping him develop
a reputation as one
of the American
League's premiere
power hitters.
Sports Illustrated
had him set to
appear on the cover
of its June 7 issue
in 1965, but bumped
him in favor of
coverage of Muhammad
Ali's fight with
Sonny Liston. Ward
didn't finish with a
batting average
higher than .247 for
the remainder of his
career, due in part
to an off-field
injury in 1965. In
nine seasons as an
outfielder, third or
first baseman, he
had 776 hits, 427
RBIs, 98 home runs
and a collective
.254 batting
average.
He worked
as a coach with the
Atlanta Braves and
in the Yankees' farm
system in the '70s.
In 1971, Ward began
the Pete Ward
Baseball Clinic,
which brought active
and former Major
League players,
including Mickey
Mantle, to the state
as guest speakers.
Ward was inducted
into the Oregon
Sports Hall of Fame
in 1985. in
1985.
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