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Johnny Callison
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==Baseball career== Callison became a fan favorite in Philadelphia; [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court Justice]] and lifelong Phillies fan [[Samuel Alito]] recalls he "adopted Johnny Callison out there in right field" as a boy.<ref>{{cite news |first= Ben|last= Walker |title= Supreme Court justice trades robe for jersey|agency= Associated Press|date= March 10, 2007}}</ref> Over the next decade, Callison would be named to the NL All-Star roster three times (1962, 64-65).{{efn|name=twoASG}} In {{Baseball year|1962}}, he batted an even .300, the only time he would reach that mark, and led the NL with 10 triples. On June 27, {{Baseball year|1963}}, he [[hitting for the cycle|hit for the cycle]] against the [[Pittsburgh Pirates]]. The 1964 season became best remembered, however, for the Phillies' late-season collapse; despite a {{frac|6|1|2}}-game lead with 12 games to play, the Phillies lost 10 in a row and finished one game behind the [[St. Louis Cardinals]]. Manager [[Gene Mauch]] was criticized for his handling of the pitching staff over the final two weeks, but players such as slugging rookie third baseman [[Dick Allen|Richie Allen]] also drew harsh treatment. Callison was 12-for-48 during the last 12 games, including a 3-homer game on September 27 against the [[Milwaukee Braves (1953β65)|Milwaukee Braves]] which the Phillies still lost 14β8, dropping them out of first place for the first time since July. With the Phillies behind by two on September 29, Callison did not start because he had the flu with chills and fever. However, Callison pinch-hit late in the game and managed a single. He reached first base and would not come out, so the Cardinals and the umpires allowed him to wear his Phillies jacket on the base paths, against MLB rules; due to his high fever, Callison needed help from [[Bill White (first baseman)|Bill White]] to button his jacket.<ref>{{cite news |title=Recalling a Phillies Fall; Share Your Pennant Race Memories |author=George Vecsey |url=http://bats.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/27/recalling-a-phillies-fall-share-your-pennant-race-memories/?emc=eta1|newspaper=New York Times|date=27 September 2011|access-date=26 September 2011}}</ref> Despite the disappointing second-place finish for Philadelphia, Callison ended the year third in the league in home runs (31) and fifth in [[run batted in|runs batted in]] (104). He earned two first-place votes for the MVP Award, won by [[Ken Boyer]] of the World Series champion Cardinals. In the 1964 All-Star Game at [[Shea Stadium]] in New York on July 7, Callison hit a game-winning [[walk-off home run]] off [[Red Sox]] pitcher [[Dick Radatz]] with two out in the ninth inning, a three-run shot to right field to give the NL a 7β4 victory; it was only the third walk-off home run in All-Star history (and the last one as of 2022), with Callison joining legends [[Ted Williams]] and [[Stan Musial]] in baseball annals.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2013-07-12 |title=Uni Watch: All-Star helmet mix-ups |url=https://www.espn.com/blog/sweetspot/post/_/id/38106/uni-watch-all-star-helmet-mix-ups |access-date=2024-08-15 |website=ESPN.com |language=en}}</ref> In 1965, Callison again led the NL with a career-high 16 triples, once more topping 30 home runs and 100 RBI; on June 6, he hit three home runs against the Cubs and the Phillies won 10-9. In {{Baseball year|1966}}, he paced the league with 40 doubles. Callison also is remembered for being an excellent outfielder with a formidable throwing arm. He led the NL in fielding average as a right fielder in 1963 and 1964, and his throwing accuracy helped him lead the NL in outfield assists (24) and double plays (7) in 1962 and he topped the league in assists the next three years with totals of 26, 19, and 21. But his power production fell off sharply, and he failed to collect 20 homers or 65 RBI in any of his last four Phillies seasons. After the 1969 season, he was traded to the Cubs, and he posted 1970 totals of 19 home runs and 68 RBI before hitting only .210 in 1971 with just 8 home runs. In January 1972 he was traded to the [[New York Yankees]], and he found limited playing time over two years, closing his career with a .176 average, one home run, and 10 RBI in 45 games in {{Baseball year|1973}}. Callison was a career .264 hitter with 226 home runs, 926 [[run (baseball)|runs]], 840 RBI, 1,757 [[hit (baseball)|hits]], 321 doubles, 89 triples, and 74 stolen bases in 1,886 games. He recorded a .984 [[fielding percentage]] at all three outfield positions.
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