Cal Ripken is baseball's all-time Iron Man. He retired from
baseball in October 2001 after twenty-one seasons with the
Baltimore Orioles. His name appears in the record books repeatedly,
most notably as one of only eight players in history to achieve 400
home runs and 3,000 hits. In 1995, Ripken broke Lou Gehrig's record
for consecutive games played (2,130) and voluntarily ended his
streak in 1998 after playing 2,632 consecutive games. Although he
finished his career at third base, he is best known for redefining
the position of shortstop, and in January 2007 he was elected to
the National Baseball Hall of Fame. As the President & CEO of the
Ripken Baseball Group, Cal is committed to growing the game of
baseball at the grassroots level. Ripken Baseball has built and
operates The Aberdeen Project, a baseball complex consisting of
Ripken Stadium, home to the minor league Aberdeen IronBirds, and
the Ripken Youth Baseball Academy. It also owns the Class A Augusta
(GA) GreenJackets and has recently opened The Ripken Experience, a
youth complex in Myrtle Beach, SC. Cal is also founder of the Cal
Ripken, Sr. Foundation, which brings baseball to disadvantaged
youth across the country, refurbishes fields, and donates baseball
equipment to public schools. He lives in Maryland with his wife,
Kelly, and their children, Rachel and Ryan.
Mike Bryan has written or collaborated on many books, including Cal
Ripken's bestselling autobiographyThe Only Way I Know, Uneasy
Rider, and The Afterword, a novel.
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