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Mike Shannon

Mike Shannon
Mikeshannon.jpg
Shannon in 1983
Third baseman / Right fielder
Born: (1939-07-15) July 15, 1939 (age 77)
St. Louis, Missouri
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 11, 1962, for the St. Louis Cardinals
Last MLB appearance
August 12, 1970, for the St. Louis Cardinals
MLB statistics
Batting average .255
Home runs 68
Runs batted in 367
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Thomas Michael "Mike" Shannon (born July 15, 1939) is an American former Major League Baseball player and current radio sportscaster.

Shannon is a radio broadcaster for the St. Louis Cardinals. He was raised in St. Louis, Missouri and played with the Cardinals during some of the team's most successful years. Shannon was the proprietor of Mike Shannon's Steaks and Seafood in downtown St. Louis until the restaurant closed January 30, 2016. He still has Mike Shannon's Grill in Edwardsville, IL and at Lambert St. Louis Airport run by his grandson Justin VanMatre .

Shannon was born and raised in south St. Louis at 7045 Winona Avenue. Mike was the 2nd oldest of six children of Thomas A. Shannon and Elizabeth W. Richason Shannon. Shannon's father was a St. Louis police officer and after getting his law degree, worked in the Prosecuting Attorney's office before becoming the Prosecuting Attorney for the City of St. Louis in the early 1970s.

Mike attended grade school at Epiphany of Our Lord Catholic School, and graduated from Christian Brothers College High School in 1957. While at CBC Mike was the Missouri High School Player of the Year in both football and basketball his senior year. He is the only athlete to win both awards in the same year. He attended the University of Missouri before leaving in 1958 to begin his professional baseball career after signing with Bing Devine, GM of the St. Louis Cardinals. Shannon has commented that if football players were paid better during his era, he probably would have stayed at Missouri and sought a professional football career. He believed himself a better football player, and his former coach, Frank Broyles, commented that had he stayed in school, Shannon might have won the Heisman Trophy.

Shannon began his big-league career with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1962. In 1964, he became the team's regular right fielder, shifting to third base (in order to make room for the newly acquired Roger Maris) in 1967. Shannon played in three World Series for the Cardinals. He hit a game-tying two-run homer off Whitey Ford in the Game 1 of the 1964 World Series against the New York Yankees, which St. Louis won 9-5.


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Wikipedia

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