
Score won The Sporting News Minor League Player of the Year Award and began to be referred to as "left-handed Bob Feller". For the 1954 season, both were promoted to Triple-A Indianapolis. At Reading, he became a roommate and lifetime friend with Rocky Colavito, a near future Cleveland Indians home run hitter and right fielder from the Bronx, New York. In 1953, he moved to Cleveland's Class A affiliate, Reading (Pennsylvania) of the Eastern League. He was sent to Indianapolis of the American Association where he made 10 pitching starts. On J(his 19th birthday), he signed a baseball contract with the Cleveland Indians. In 1952, he threw six no-hitters for the Lake Worth Community High School baseball team, when the school won its only state baseball championship. As a teenager, he started playing basketball and baseball at Holy Name of Mary School until he moved with his family to Lake Worth, Florida. At 3, he was run over by a truck and later had rheumatic fever. Herb Score was born in Rosedale, New York, in 1933. 2.1.1 Injury from Gil McDougald's line drive.He was inducted into the Cleveland Indians Hall of Fame in 2006. Score was a television and radio broadcaster for the Cleveland Indians from 1964 through 1997. Due to an on-field injury that occurred in 1957, he retired early as a player in 1962. He was the American League (AL) Rookie of the Year in 1955, and an AL All-Star in 19. Score pitched for the Cleveland Indians from 1955 through 1959 and the Chicago White Sox from 1960 through 1962. Herbert Jude Score (J– November 11, 2008) was an American Major League Baseball (MLB) player and announcer. April 15, 1955, for the Cleveland Indians
