Every important Jewish baseball player Jewish baseball player 

Jews have had success in art, science, cinema, and literature. Sports, however, is not the first thing that comes to mind but there is a field that has yielded some Jewish sports players, for example, Jewish baseball players. In this article, we will introduce you to some important Jewish baseball players.

Sandy Copax

Sandy Copax (1935) is perhaps the most well-known Jewish baseball player. His career lasted only 11 years, but he repeatedly broke serving records. He is not only the best Jewish baseball player of all time but one of the best baseball players in general, and one of the outstanding Jewish athletes in the world. His career began in 1955 and he retired from basketball in 1966 due to arthritis. His Judaism was expressed in the fact that he refused to play on Yom Kippur. His team the Dodgers lost that game but won the entire series.

Hank Greenberg

Hank or Henry Greenberg (1986-1911) was also one of the greatest Jewish-American baseball players of all time. Hank was born an ultra-Orthodox Jew from the Bronx. As a teenager, he was an outstanding athlete in several fields, but the field in which he was most successful was baseball. He began his baseball career with the Detroit Tigers after refusing to join the New York Yankees. He was twice selected as an Outstanding MVP, the outstanding Baseball League Award, and was the first Jew to receive this award. In 1934 he brought the team to the championship. Greenberg played on Rosh Hashanah, with a Rabbinical permit according to the fact that in the Talmud, children played on Rosh Hashanah. Like Copax, he also refused to play on Yom Kippur, and yet the Tigers won first place in the league.

Ian Kinsler

Ian Kinsler (1982) is an Israeli baseball player who played in the professional league of MLB baseball. He currently plays for the Israeli national baseball team and serves as a consultant. Kinsler served as a second baseman for the Texas Rangers, Detroit Tigers, Los Angeles Angels, Boston Red Sox and San Diego Federers. He won the All-Star title four times and the Golden Glove twice. In 2009 he was selected as one of the fifty greatest baseball players active today.

Mo Berg

Mo Berg (1972-1902) was a Jewish baseball player, known not necessarily for his game but for something more important. Mo Berg played with legends like Babe Ruth and Lou Grigg, and all three were sent to Japan to teach the Japanese the game that gained popularity in the island nation. Berg was not as well known as Grigg and Ruth. The reason he was sent there was espionage, to photograph Tokyo in the years before Pearl Harbor. He was then sent to Switzerland, Italy, and Germany to bring information about the Nazi atom project and befriended the German physicist who was behind the development of the bomb.

Jason Kipnis

Jason Kipnis (1987). Kipnis is an American Jew who played in the MLB League for the Cleveland Indians and Chicago Cobs. At Kipnis College, he was in the All-Star American and Player of the Year in 2009 at Pacific 10, a competition that combines several sports, and was named Player of the Year and All-Star in the National / Minor League. Although Kipnis celebrates Catholic holidays, he identifies as a Jew.

Lip Pike

Lip Pike (1893-1845) was one of the greatest baseball players of the nineteenth century and one of the first Jewish players. He was one of the outstanding batsmen of the period. Pike was born into a Dutch Jewish family and grew up in Brooklyn. He played from 1886-1891

Ryan Brown

Ryan Brown (1983) is a Jewish baseball player, he plays as a left fielder.  He played for the Milwaukee Brewers. He also played additional roles and was twice in the Miami All-Star and in 2003 was named America’s Baseball Magazine’s Promise of the Year. In 2009 he was selected as one of the fifty greatest baseball players active today.

Not all Jewish baseball players are mentioned here, Jewish baseball player. There are other Jewish baseball players who make the league more interesting like Alex Bergman, Al Rosen, Kevin Youkilis, and more.

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