Quick Facts
In full:
Tubal Claude Ryan
Born:
Jan. 3, 1898, Parsons, Kan., U.S.
Died:
Sept. 11, 1982, San Diego, Calif. (aged 84)

T. Claude Ryan (born Jan. 3, 1898, Parsons, Kan., U.S.—died Sept. 11, 1982, San Diego, Calif.) was an American airline entrepreneur and aircraft manufacturer who designed the plane from which Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis was built.

Ryan learned to fly in 1917, trained with the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1919 at Marsh Field, California, and served with the U.S. Aerial Forest Patrol until 1922. Ryan established a flight school and a business flying sightseers around San Diego and then, having formed Ryan Airlines, flew passengers between San Diego and Los Angeles (1925–27). The company moved into design and manufacture of planes, including the M-1, used to fly airmail, but Ryan left the firm in 1926. After a period of selling engines, Ryan established another company in 1929 and designed the Ryan S-T, used by the army as its basic-training plane, the PT-22. Ryan held contracts for the training of thousands of army pilots, and his company boomed throughout World War II. In the postwar slump the company produced coffins but then turned out Navion planes until the Korean War. Later the company diversified, and it was sold in 1969. Ryan founded Ryson Corporation, a design firm, with his son to build powered glider planes and planes flown by remote control.

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Nolan Ryan

American baseball player
Also known as: Lynn Nolan Ryan, Jr.
Quick Facts
In full:
Lynn Nolan Ryan, Jr.
Born:
January 31, 1947, Refugio, Texas, U.S. (age 78)
Awards And Honors:
Baseball Hall of Fame (1999)
Baseball Hall of Fame (inducted in 1999)
eight-time All-Star
2x ERA leader
1 World Series championship
Height/Weight:
6 ft 2 inches, 170 lb (188 cm, 77 kg)
Batting Hand:
right
Throwing Hand:
right
Debut Date:
September 11, 1966
Draft:
Drafted by the New York Mets in the 12th round of the June 1965 MLB draft.
Last Game:
September 22, 1993
Jersey Number:
34 (1989-1993, Texas Rangers)
34 (1983-1988, Houston Astros)
34 (1980-1982, Houston Astros)
30 (1972-1979, California Angels)
30 (1968-1971, New York Mets)
34 (1966-1966, New York Mets)
Position:
pitcher
Earned Run Average:
3.19
Games Played:
807
Games Started:
773
Innings Pitched:
5,386
Losses:
292
Saves:
3
Strikeouts:
5,714
Walks And Hits Per Inning Pitched:
1.247
Wins:
324

Nolan Ryan (born January 31, 1947, Refugio, Texas, U.S.) is an American professional right-handed baseball pitcher who in 1983 became the first pitcher to surpass Walter Johnson’s record of 3,508 career strikeouts, set in 1927. Ryan retired in 1993 at age 46 with a record 5,714 strikeouts.

Ryan was taught to play baseball by an elder brother and was a wild but fast pitcher in high school before he was signed by the National League (NL) New York Mets in 1965. He pitched for their minor league teams (1965–67), and, except for time out for military service, he pitched regularly for the Mets through the 1971 season and was then traded to the American League (AL) California Angels. Although he pitched brilliantly in relief for the Mets in 1969 when they won the pennant and the World Series, he came into his own as a pitcher with the Angels, leading the league in strikeouts seven of his first eight years with them (1972–74, 1976, 1977–79). In 1980 he moved as a free agent to the NL Houston Astros, and he moved to the Texas Rangers in 1989.

The extraordinarily durable Ryan was still a leading pitcher in his early 40s. In 1989 he struck out his 5,000th batter; he also held the record for most strikeouts in a “live-ball era” (post-1920) season (383 in 1973). He led the AL in strikeouts a total of 10 times and was the oldest pitcher ever to lead a league in strikeouts (in 1990 at age 43). In 1991 Ryan, who was nicknamed the “Ryan Express,” pitched his seventh no-hit game, establishing another record. He also held the major league record for most games with 15 or more strikeouts in a career (26). In 1993 Ryan retired from baseball, and in 1999 he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. At the end of his 27-year career in the major leagues, Ryan finished with 324 wins and 292 losses and an earned-run average of 3.19; he also finished fifth in innings pitched (5,386) and tied with former Mets teammate Tom Seaver for seventh all-time in shutouts (61).

Serena Williams poses with the Daphne Akhurst Trophy after winning the Women's Singles final against Venus Williams of the United States on day 13 of the 2017 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 28, 2017 in Melbourne, Australia. (tennis, sports)
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Following his retirement from playing, Ryan continued to be active in the sport, including having an ownership interest in two minor league teams and serving as a consultant to the Houston Astros. In 2008 he became team president for the Texas Rangers. Ryan was a member of the ownership group that purchased the Rangers in 2010. In 2011 he became the CEO of the Rangers, and two years later he gave up his title of president of the team. At the end of the 2013 season, he resigned as CEO and sold his Rangers ownership stake. Ryan joined the Astros organization as an executive adviser in 2014. He helped the Astros win a World Series title in 2017, but he resigned from the team amid front-office turmoil shortly after the end of the 2019 major league season.

Ryan wrote several autobiographies, including Throwing Heat: The Autobiography of Nolan Ryan (1988), written with Harvey Frommer; Miracle Man: Nolan Ryan, the Autobiography (1992), written with Jerry Jenkins; and Nolan Ryan: The Road to Cooperstown (1999), written with T.R. Sullivan and Mickey Herskowitz. He also collaborated on instructional guides, such as Pitching & Hitting (1977) and Nolan Ryan’s Pitching Bible (1991).

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