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The waiting game ended for Joe Crede Tuesday night when the longtime prospect finally began his career as starting third baseman for the White Sox.It took seven long years, two most valuable ...
CHICAGO – As much as anyone, Joe Crede was responsible for the White Sox being here in the first place. As much as anyone, Crede had shown an affinity for the big moment, had already displaye… ...
Crede is hardly a great player and even a mediocre .257/.306/.447 career line overstates his bat thanks to calling Chicago’s power-boosting ballpark home, as he’s hit .258/.302/.431 on the road.
Joe Crede’s off-season rewards included a hometown parade, the key to his city, the retiring of his high school jersey and an acrimony-free contract negotiation.Those perks came after his ...
It was prior to the 2009 season that the Minnesota Twins faced an issue that needed to be addressed—a legitimate third basemen. The Twins have been without an offensive power at third base since ...
For the last week or so, Ozzie Guillen has been praising Juan Uribe’s defense at third. The Sox skipper has even gone so far as to say that Uribe’s defense has been on par with what Joe Crede ...
CHICAGO – When Joe Crede was drafted in 1996, Robin Ventura was entrenched at third base for the White Sox. Crede often has mentioned since then that Ventura was his gold standard. Last night… ...
CHICAGO -- Joe Crede listened to a simple batting tip and suddenly he seems to have it all figured out at the plate. Crede plays long ball for White Sox - Los Angeles Times ...
Crede already has begun mulling at-bat music for his old friends. “I’ve got some good stuff for them,” he smiled. Originally Published: April 10, 2009 at 11:01 PM CDT ...
MINNEAPOLIS — Joe Crede capped another Minnesota comeback with a two-run, two-out single in a six-run seventh inning Thursday that ruined Justin Verlander’s strong start and sent the Twins to ...
Frustrated by his latest bout with a sore back that has left him sidelined during his team's push for the playoffs, Chicago White Sox third baseman Joe Crede will seek a second opinion.
Joe Crede was about 9 years old when he started playing baseball. He wasn’t passionate about the game — not at first, anyway. “I really didn’t get too serious about it until… ...
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