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Dinesh Kumar Patel (born 8 May 1989) is an Indian right-handed baseball pitcher who played in the Pittsburgh Pirates organization. Along with Rinku Singh, he was the first Indian player ever to sign a contract with a major American baseball team.
Singh was signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates organisation after he won a pitching contest on a 2008 reality television show The Million Dollar Arm. He was the first Indian to play professional baseball and spent several seasons in the minor leagues, reaching the Single-A level. [4] He is the subject of the movie Million Dollar Arm.
Million Dollar Arm is a 2014 American biographical sports drama film directed by Craig Gillespie and produced by Walt Disney Pictures from a screenplay written by Tom McCarthy. The film is based on the true story of baseball pitchers Rinku Singh and Dinesh Patel who were discovered by sports agent J. B. Bernstein after winning a reality show ...
The addition of Canady makes Texas Tech a favorite in the Big 12 in 2025 and gives the Red Raiders a decent chance at the College World Series given how often pitchers can throw in softball.
During and after his time on the series, which came to an end in 2015, Hamm scored roles in movies like The Town (2010), Million Dollar Arm (2014) and Tag (2018). Today, Hamm is a sought-after ...
House served as pitching coach for the USC Trojans from 2008-2011, when he retired from coaching. [7] In 2008, House worked as a consultant and pitching coach for the reality program The Million Dollar Arm. In this capacity, he trained two young Indian prospects, Rinku Singh and Dinesh Patel over a period of seven months.
Former OU pitcher Alex Storako said going to the Mary Nutter as a fan gave her a different perspective. That and more in the Sooners' weekend rewind.
In 2007, struggling MLB agent J.B. Bernstein decided to start a competition in India titled Million Dollar Arm, a talent search for the best throwing arms in India.He gained his inspiration after watching ESPN's broadcast of a cricket match featuring bowlers that bowled at speeds as high as 150 km/h (93 mph) and realising that India was one of the largest untapped environments for baseball.