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Charles Ray Knight (born December 28, 1952) is an American former Major League Baseball infielder best remembered for his time with the Cincinnati Reds and New York Mets.
Knight instituted the Raymond Stampede, the oldest and longest-running rodeo in Canada and is considered the first rodeo stock contractor. Ray Knight and Ad Day formed the Knight and Day Stampede Company. [35] [36] Notably, Knight was closely involved in the establishment and settlement of Raymond, Alberta, a town named in his honor by his ...
Team owner Schott had decided before the 1995 season that manager Johnson would be gone by the end of the year, regardless of the team's outcome, to be replaced by former Reds third baseman Ray Knight. [21] Schott did not like Johnson, and she did not approve of Johnson living with his fiancée before they were married. [21]
Ray Knight, studio analyst, substitute color commentator, 2007–2018; Johnny Holliday, studio host, substitute play-by-play announcer, 2007–2018; Phil Wood, substitute studio analyst, 2008–2020; Michael Morse, substitute studio analyst and substitute color commentator, 2018–2020; Alex Parker, substitute studio host, 2018–2020
He also had harsh words for 1996 Reds manager Ray Knight, with whom Davis had had a memorable on-field fight in 1986. [13] He claimed Knight did not support his comeback and did not stand up for him in contract negotiations after the season. Davis remains bitter about the Reds' treatment of him after his World Series injury.
From 2007 to 2018, Holliday hosted the Washington Nationals baseball team pre- and post-game shows on the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network (MASN), Nats Xtra, with analyst Ray Knight, [4] [8] and occasionally filled in as a substitute play-by-play announcer for Nationals games on MASN. Holliday also contributes sports reports to the ABC Radio Network ...
Dave McCollough’s first memory of Bob Knight was at a Lions Club spaghetti dinner in South Bend, early in Knight’s tenure at Indiana in the early 1970s.. McCollough would later meet Knight on ...
Johnson's inability to hit well from the right side resulted in him being platooned by the Mets in 1985, this time with Ray Knight. [10] Both started terribly and neither reached .200 until early July. Johnson hit below average all season, while Knight was even worse. The Mets, as they had in 1984, narrowly missed the postseason in 1985.