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Babe Ruth: A Short Bio

George Herman Ruth, Jr. is the legendary baseball player of the United
States. He had many nicknames like Babe, The Sultan of Swat, The
Colossus of Clout and The Great Bambino. An American Major League
baseball player, Ruth was one of the famous baseball players of all times
and according to many he is the no.1 player in history.

Born to Kate Schamberger Ruth and George Herman Ruth, Babe Ruth
was a native of Maryland. He was admitted in St. Mary's Industrial School
for Boys, where he met Brother Matthias who cultivated his interest in
the game of baseball. He taught him to hit, field and even pitch.


















Ruth started his career as a starting pitcher for the Boston Red Sox, he
spent most of his an outfielder with the New York Yankees, starting form
1920. With the Red Sox he won eighty-nine games and lost forty-six. He
played as an outfielder in one hundred and eleven games and he broke
the record of Ned Williamson by hitting twenty-nine runs, which is the
maximum number of runs in a single season, in 1919.

Red Sox owner sold Ruth to the New York Yankees in 1920. He turned
out to be the golden duck for the team as in the next fifteen season, he
not only lead the league by walks, runs, home runs, and RBI but also
placed it in the top ten in slugging percentage, batting average, and
total bases. The team even won seven American League Pennants and
four World Series titles. In 1921, he made a record by hitting fifty nine
home runs in a single season which he broke himself by hitting sixty in
1927. Nobody else could break this record for the next thirty-four years.

Ruth also appeared in many movies and he became a very popular media
figure. He featured in the silent era films like Speedy and Pride of the
Yankees.          

Ruth's health began deteriorating in 1946 when he developed a
malignant tumor that spread over his neck and his left carotid artery. He
received many treatments during which he lost eighty pounds. At that
time Dr. Brian Hutchings had developed a new drug named teropterin,
which showed improvement in leukemia patients. Ruth was induced with
this experimental drug, which gave him headaches, hoarseness and
swallowing problems. From June 1947, he was given injections, which
proved to bring improvements in his health. His case was also discussed
at the fourth Annual internal research congress, but now his conditions is
being recognized as nasopharyngeal carcinoma, which is a very rare
tumor located near the Eustachian tube for which the patient should be
given radiation therapy and concurrent chemotherapy.          

During his marriage to Helen Woodford, Ruth adopted a daughter. But
after his separation with his first wife, whom he married in 1914, in early
1920s, she died in a house fire. He married actress Claire Hodgson on
April 17, 1929, with whom he stayed till death. Ruth liked to spend his
winters in Florida playing golf. After his retirement from the game he
settled in a winter beachfront home in Florida. Babe Ruth expired at the
age of fifty-three, on August 16, 1948.

He was elected as the baseball's Greatest Player Ever in 1969, on
professional Baseball's hundredth anniversary. The Sporting News in
1998 ranked babe Ruth No.1 in the list of Baseball's 100 Greatest
Players. In 1999, his fans named him to the Major League Baseball
All-Century Team.

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