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・ Bob King (athlete)
・ Bob King (basketball)
・ Bob King (children's musician)
・ Bob King (editor)
・ Bob King (footballer)
・ Bob King (labor leader)
・ Bob King (New Zealand footballer)
・ Bob King (Queensland politician)
・ Bob King (speed coach)
・ Bob Kingsley
・ Bob Kingsley's Country Top 40
・ Bob Kingston
・ Bob Kinnear
・ Bob Kinney
・ Bob Kinsella
Bob Kipper
・ Bob Kirk
・ Bob Kirkpatrick
・ Bob Kirkpatrick (musician)
・ Bob Kirkwood
・ Bob Kiss
・ Bob Klapisch
・ Bob Klein
・ Bob Kline
・ Bob Klinger
・ Bob Kloppenburg
・ Bob Klose
・ Bob Knepper
・ Bob Knight
・ Bob Knight (psychologist)


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Bob Kipper : ウィキペディア英語版
Bob Kipper

Robert Wayne Kipper (born July 8, 1964) is an American professional baseball coach and a former middle-relief pitcher in Major League Baseball. In , he was the pitching coach of the Pawtucket Red Sox of the Triple-A International League〔(milb.com 2015.01.08 )〕 through August 16, before being appointed interim bullpen coach of the parent Boston Red Sox.〔(Boston Red Sox official web site )〕
A native of Aurora, Illinois, Kipper, a left-hander, stood tall and weighed during his active career. After graduating from Aurora Central Catholic High School, he was selected by the California Angels with the eighth pick in the first round of the 1982 Major League Baseball Draft. He had signed to play baseball at Nebraska before his selection. Kipper led the Class A California League in wins (18) and earned run average (2.04) as his league's "pitcher of the year" in 1984. He made his MLB debut with the Angels in April at age 20, but was ineffective in two games pitched and was returned to the minor leagues. Then, on August 16, 1985, the contending Angels included Kipper in a six-player trade with the Pittsburgh Pirates that netted them veterans John Candelaria, George Hendrick and Al Holland. Kipper would pitch in 247 games for the Pirates over all or parts of seven seasons (1985–1991)—initially as a starter, but then as a relief specialist—before finishing his MLB career for the Minnesota Twins in .
In his eight-season MLB career, Kipper posted a 27–37 record with a 4.43 ERA and 11 saves in 271 appearances. He allowed 527 hits and 217 bases on balls, with 369 strikeouts, and 562 innings pitched.
Following his playing retirement, Kipper has worked as a pitching coach in independent league baseball and in the minor leagues. A member of the Boston Red Sox organization since , he has coached for their Lowell Spinners (1999), Augusta GreenJackets (2000–2001), Greenville Drive (2005–2006; 2008–2009), Lancaster JetHawks (2007) and Portland Sea Dogs (2003–2004; 2010–2014) affiliates, prior to his Pawtucket assignment.
Kipper spent the full 2002 season as bullpen coach of the MLB Red Sox.〔(Red Sox announce 2014 minor league managers, coaching staffs )〕 Thirteen years later, on August 16, 2015, he was named Boston's interim bullpen coach, part of a chain reaction of moves driven by manager John Farrell's medical leave of absence for treatment of lymphoma. In Farrell's absence, bench coach Torey Lovullo became acting manager and bullpen coach Dana LeVangie became acting bench coach.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Bob Kipper」の詳細全文を読む



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