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・ George Kinzie Fitzsimons
・ George Kiraz
・ George Kirby
・ George Kirby (footballer)
・ George Kirbye
・ George Kircher
・ George Kirgo
・ George Kirke Spoor
・ George Kirkpatrick
・ George Kirstein
・ George Kirwan
・ George Kirwan Carr Lloyd
・ George Kirya
・ George Kisevalter
・ George Kish
George Kissell
・ George Kissling
・ George Kistiakowsky
・ George Kitchen
・ George Kitchens
・ George Kitchin
・ George Kitching
・ George Kitson Clark
・ George Kittinger
・ George Kittredge
・ George Klay Kieh
・ George Klein
・ George Klein (biologist)
・ George Klein (Canadian football)
・ George Klein (comics)


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George Kissell : ウィキペディア英語版
George Kissell

George Marshall Kissell (9 September 1920 – 7 October 2008) was an American baseball minor league player, manager, coach, scout, and instructor, as well as a Major League coach, for the St. Louis Cardinals organization. Born in Evans Mills, New York, he graduated from Evans Mills High School and attended Ithaca College, where he earned both bachelor's and master's degrees in history and physical education. As a player he stood 5'8" (173 cm) tall and weighed 175 pounds (79 kg). He threw and batted right-handed.〔Marcin, Joe, ed., ''The Official 1970 Baseball Register.'' St. Louis: The Sporting News, 1970〕
==Almost 70 years with Cardinals==
Kissell was signed as an infielder in 1940 by Branch Rickey, and spent 69 years with the Cardinals organization. He was primarily a third baseman, although he also played shortstop, and never rose above the Class B level as a player. By 1946, after three seasons in the military during World War II, he had become a playing manager for the Lawrence Millionaires of the Class B New England League. His most successful season as a manager came in 1950 with the Class B Winston-Salem Cardinals, who won 106 of 153 regular-season games and the Carolina League playoff championship.
Kissell managed in the Cardinal farm system through 1957, scouted for them in 1958–62, then returned to the field as a minor league manager in 1963–67. In 1968, he spent his first season as a roving instructor in the Cardinal system, where his efforts led to the nickname of "the Professor," and his influence is generally regarded as being a major basis for what came to be known as the "Cardinal Way". He mentored a number of major league managers, including Sparky Anderson, Joe Torre, and Tony LaRussa.

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