Loren Babe
{{short description|American baseball player (1928-1984)}}
{{Multiple issues|{{BLP single source|date=June 2025}}{{more footnotes|date=June 2025}}}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2024}}
{{Infobox baseball biography
| name = Loren Babe
| caption = Babe in 1965
| position = Third baseman
| image = File:Loren Babe CCY (cropped).jpg
| bats = Left
| throws = Right
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1928|1|11}}
| birth_place = Pisgah, Iowa, U.S.
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1984|2|14|1928|1|11}}
| death_place = Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.
| debutleague = MLB
| debutdate = August 19
| debutyear = 1952
| debutteam = New York Yankees
| finalleague = MLB
| finaldate = September 27
| finalyear = 1953
| finalteam = Philadelphia Athletics
| statleague = MLB
| stat1label = Batting average
| stat1value = .223
| stat2label = Home runs
| stat2value = 2
| stat3label = Runs batted in
| stat3value = 26
| teams = *New York Yankees (1952–1953)
- Philadelphia Athletics (1953)
}}
Loren Rolland Babe (January 11, 1928 – February 14, 1984), nicknamed "Bee Bee", was an American professional baseball infielder, manager, scout and coach.
The native of Pisgah, Iowa, was signed by the New York Yankees in 1945 and was a longtime player and manager in the Bombers' minor league organization. During his two seasons in Major League Baseball, he played for the Yankees and the Philadelphia Athletics. He was traded back to the Yankees after the 1953 season but did not play another major league game. He registered 85 hits in 382 at bats, yielding a .223 batting average. He batted left-handed, threw right-handed, stood {{convert|5|ft|10|in}} tall and weighed {{convert|180|lb}}.
After his playing days were over, Babe worked as a minor league manager and Major League Baseball coach. During the mid-1960s, he managed the Toledo Mud Hens, who were at the time the Yankees' AAA affiliate. He was the Yankees' first base coach in 1967, on the staff of skipper Ralph Houk. In {{baseball year|1983}}, while scouting for the Chicago White Sox, Babe was diagnosed with colon cancer. At the time, he needed 57 days of Major League service to become a vested member of the players' pension plan, which also provides health benefits. The ChiSox named Babe to their coaching staff to enable him to qualify. At the same time the White Sox had another coach, batting instructor Charley Lau, who was battling colon cancer. Babe and Lau both survived the 1983 season while undergoing cancer treatments. Babe died on February 14, 1984, at his home in Omaha, Nebraska.[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ZroeAAAAIBAJ&sjid=vGgEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4262,4799441&dq=loren+babe+died&hl=en Chisox Loren Babe dies] He was 56. Lau, 50, succumbed slightly over a month later, on March 18.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{baseballstats |br=b/babelo01}}
- {{Find a Grave|19925536}}
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{{succession box|title=New York Yankees first-base coach |years=1967|before=Wally Moses|after=Whitey Ford}}
{{s-end}}
{{Iowa Cubs managers|state=collapsed}}
{{Toledo Mud Hens managers|state=collapsed}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Babe, Loren}}
Category:Auburn Yankees players
Category:Baseball players from Iowa
Category:Beaumont Exporters players
Category:Beaumont Roughnecks players
Category:Binghamton Triplets players
Category:Deaths from cancer in Nebraska
Category:Chicago White Sox coaches
Category:Chicago White Sox scouts
Category:Deaths from colorectal cancer in the United States
Category:Kansas City Blues (baseball) players
Category:Major League Baseball first base coaches
Category:Major League Baseball third basemen
Category:Muskegon Clippers players
Category:New York Yankees coaches
Category:New York Yankees players
Category:New York Yankees scouts
Category:People from Harrison County, Iowa
Category:Philadelphia Athletics players
Category:20th-century American sportsmen
Category:Rochester Red Wings players
Category:Seattle Rainiers players
Category:Baseball players from Omaha, Nebraska
Category:Syracuse Chiefs managers
Category:Syracuse Chiefs players