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・ Keith Hartwig
・ Keith Harvey
・ Keith Harvey Miller
・ Keith Harwood
・ Keith Haslam
・ Keith Hawkins
・ Keith Flint
・ Keith Flowers
・ Keith Floyd
・ Keith Follesé
・ Keith Forbes
・ Keith Forde
・ Keith Fordyce
・ Keith Forsey
・ Keith Forsyth
Keith Foulke
・ Keith Fowler
・ Keith Foy
・ Keith Frank
・ Keith Fraser
・ Keith Fraser (Bay Area sportsman)
・ Keith Fraser (footballer)
・ Keith Fraser (skier)
・ Keith Frazier
・ Keith Frazier (musician)
・ Keith Freeman
・ Keith Froome
・ Keith Fullerton Whitman
・ Keith Furphy
・ Keith G. Allred


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Keith Foulke : ウィキペディア英語版
Keith Foulke

Keith Charles Foulke (; born October 19, 1972) is a former Major League Baseball relief pitcher. A graduate of Hargrave High School in Huffman, Texas, Foulke attended Galveston College and Lewis-Clark State College. Between 1997 and 2008, he pitched for the San Francisco Giants, Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics, Boston Red Sox and Cleveland Indians. Foulke was an All-Star in 2003 and he earned the final out of the 2004 World Series.
==Career==
After graduating from Hargrave High School in Huffman, Texas in 1991, he attended Galveston College and Lewis-Clark State College in Idaho. He began his career in the minor-league system of the San Francisco Giants. During the season, Foulke was one of six prospects (along with Bob Howry, Lorenzo Barceló, Mike Caruso, Ken Vining, and Brian Manning) traded to the White Sox in exchange for Wilson Alvarez, Danny Darwin, and Roberto Hernández in what became known as the White Flag Trade.〔http://espn.go.com/blog/sweetspot/print?id=13944〕
In 1998, Keith found a home in the White Sox bullpen, primarily serving as set-up man for closers Matt Karchner (who was traded to the Chicago Cubs in the middle of the season) and Bill Simas. In 1999, Foulke established himself as one of the league's best relief pitchers, posting a 2.22 ERA in 105.1 innings of work over 67 games, however, he was still used primarily as a set-up man. His stellar season even netted him a vote for the 1999 AL Cy Young Award.
In 2000, Foulke again was an important piece of the White Sox bullpen. Though Bob Howry entered the season as the team's primary closer, Foulke was seeing more and more time closing out games, and by April's end he had recorded 4 saves (in 1999, he didn't notch a save until June). As Howry continued to struggle, Foulke inherited the closer's role and flourished, saving 34 games for the White Sox in 2000, and was a major reason the White Sox won the AL Central title.
On December 3, 2002, Foulke, along with catcher Mark Johnson, minor league pitcher Joe Valentine, and cash, was traded by the White Sox to the Oakland Athletics for closer Billy Koch and two minor leaguers. During the 2003 season with the Athletics, Foulke would distinguish himself as a closer, leading the league in saves and games finished, being named to the All-Star team and winning the American League Rolaids Relief Man of the Year Award. However, it was Foulke who also gave up the game-winning double to David Ortiz in Game 4 of the American League Division Series that year.
Foulke was granted free agency on October 27, 2003, and signed with the Boston Red Sox.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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