Ken Griffey Jr. and Outback: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox MLB player
[[Image:Yalgoo Shire.jpg|thumb|right|A [[tourism]] sign post [[Yalgoo, Western Australia]]]]
| name = Ken Griffey, Jr.
| image = Ken Griffey Jr - Chicago White Sox - v.jpg
| width = 250
| caption =
| team = Chicago White Sox
| number = 17
| position = centerfielder
| birthdate = {{birth date and age|1969|11|21}}
| birthplace = {{city-state|Donora|Pennsylvania}}
| bats = Left
| throws = Left
| debutdate = April 3
| debutyear = 1989
| debutteam = Seattle Mariners
| statyear = September 15, 2008
| stat1label = [[Hit (baseball)|Hits]]
| stat1value = 2,670
| stat2label = [[Double (baseball)|Doubles]]
| stat2value = 500
| stat3label = [[Batting average]]
| stat3value = .288
| stat4label = [[Home run]]s
| stat4value = 610
| stat5label = [[Run batted in|Runs batted in]]
| stat5value = 1,767
| stat6label = [[Run (baseball)|Run]]s
| stat6value = 1,606
| teams = <nowiki></nowiki>
*[[Seattle Mariners]] ({{by|1989}}-{{by|1999}})
*[[Cincinnati Reds]] ({{by|2000}}-{{by|2008}})
*[[Chicago White Sox]] ({{by|2008}}-present)
| awards = <nowiki></nowiki>
*[[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|Most Valuable Player Award]] winner ({{by|1997}})
*7x [[Silver Slugger Award]] winner ({{by|1991}}, {{by|1993}}, {{by|1994}}, {{by|1996}}, {{by|1997}}, {{by|1998}}, {{by|1999}})
*10x [[Rawlings Gold Glove Award|Gold Glove Award]] winner ({{by|1990}}, {{by|1991}}, {{by|1992}}, {{by|1993}}, {{by|1994}}, {{by|1995}}, {{by|1996}}, {{by|1997}}, {{by|1998}}, {{by|1999}})
*13x [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star]] selection ({{by|1990}}, {{by|1991}}, {{by|1992}}, {{by|1993}}, {{by|1994}}, {{by|1995}}, {{by|1996}}, {{by|1997}}, {{by|1998}}, {{by|1999}}, {{by|2000}}, {{by|2004}}, {{by|2007}})
*Led [[American League|AL]] in [[run (baseball)|runs]] in {{by|1997}}
*Led [[American League|AL]] in [[total bases]] in {{by|1993}} and {{by|1997}}
*Led [[American League|AL]] in [[home run]]s in {{by|1994}}, {{by|1997}}, {{by|1998}}, and {{by|1999}}
*Led [[American League|AL]] in [[run batted in|runs batted in]] in {{by|1997}}
}}
'''George Kenneth "Ken" Griffey, Jr.''' (born [[November 21]], [[1969]] in [[Donora, Pennsylvania]]) is a [[Major League Baseball]] [[center fielder]] for the [[Chicago White Sox]]. He is one of the most prolific home run hitters in [[baseball history]], currently tied for fifth on the [[List of Major League Baseball home run records#500 career home runs|list of most career home runs]], and is tied for the record of most consecutive games with a home run.<ref>[http://www.baseball-almanac.com/recbooks/rb_hr5.shtml ''Consecutive Home Run Records by Baseball Almanac'']</ref> His nicknames have been '''"The Natural"''', '''"The Kid"''', and '''"Junior"'''. He is the son of former big league outfielder [[Ken Griffey, Sr.]] Many have described his swing as "one of the most beautiful and effortless."<ref>[http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/archives/1996/9606200072.asp "Griffey Breaks Bone in Hand- Mariners star will be out 3 to 4 Weeks", ''SeattlePI.com''], 20 June 1996.</ref>


[[Image:Dogfence.jpg|thumb|right||The [[Dingo Fence]] near [[Coober Pedy]]]]
Griffey previously played for the [[Seattle Mariners]] and the [[Cincinnati Reds]].


[[Image:Fitzgerald River National Park DSC04436.JPG|thumb|right|[[Fitzgerald River National Park]] in Western Australia]]
=="The Kid"==has a .000 average and takes self enhancing steriods
{{Refimprove|date=August 2008}}
Griffey shares the same birthday and the same birthplace as Hall of Famer [[Stan Musial]] in the town of [[Donora, Pennsylvania]].<ref>[http://www.epodunk.com/cgi-bin/genInfo.php?locIndex=13843 Donora, Pennsylvania PA, borough profile (Washington County) - hotels, festivals, genealogy, newspapers - ePodunk<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> His family moved to [[Cincinnati, Ohio]], where father [[Ken Griffey, Sr.]] played for the Cincinnati Reds. Ken was inside of the clubhouse during his father's back to back championships in the 1975-[[1976 World Series]]. He attended [[Archbishop Moeller High School]] where he starred in football and baseball.<ref>[http://mlb.mlb.com/team/player_career.jsp?player_id=115135 Ken Griffey Jr.: Biography and Career Highlights | whitesox.com: Players<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Griffey was the baseball player of the year in 1986 and 1987, and played football for 3 years.<ref>[http://www.askmen.com/celebs/men/may00/ken_griffey_jr/index.html Ken Griffey Jr. - AskMen.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
'''Outback''' or '''the Outback''' refers to remote arid areas of [[Australia]], although the term colloquially can refer to any lands outside of the main [[urban area]]s. The term "outback" is generally used to refer to locations that are comparatively more remote than those areas deemed "[[The Bush|the bush]]".


Note that the terms '''outback''' and '''bush''' refer to European settlers concepts of the lands of Australia - [[Indigenous Australians]] had in many cases a different perception of moving through and usage of the land.
==Seattle Mariners==
In {{by|1987}}, Griffey was selected with the first overall pick of that year's amateur draft by the [[Seattle Mariners]]. In his eleven seasons with Seattle (spanning from 1989 to 1999) Griffey established himself as one of the most prolific and exciting players of the era, racking up 1,752 hits, 398 home runs, 1,152 RBIs and 167 stolen bases. He led the American League in home runs four seasons (1994, 1997, 1998 and 1999), was voted the A.L. MVP in 1997, and maintained a .297 batting average.


==Overview==
Additionally, his defense in center field was widely considered as the standard of elite fielding during the decade. Thanks to his impressive range, Griffey frequently made spectacular diving plays, and he often dazzled fans by making over-the-shoulder basket catches and by robbing opposing hitters of home runs at the wall&mdash;leaping up and pulling them back into the field of play. He was featured on the [[Wheaties]] cereal box and also had his own signature sneaker line from [[Nike, Inc]].
The outback is home to the [[Australian feral camel]], [[donkey]] and [[dingo]]. The [[Dingo fence]] was built to restrict dingo movements into agricultural areas towards the south east of the continent. The marginally fertile parts are primarily utilised as [[rangeland]]s and have been traditionally used for [[domestic sheep|sheep]] or [[cattle]] grazing, on [[cattle station]]s which are [[pastoral lease|leased]] from the Federal Government. While small areas of the outback consist of [[Vertisol|clay soils]] the majority has exceedingly infertile [[paleosol]]s. [[Riversleigh]], in [[Queensland]], is one of Australia's most renowned [[fossil]] sites and was recorded as a [[World Heritage]] site in 1994. The 100 km² area contains fossil remains of ancient mammals, birds and reptiles of [[Oligocene]] and [[Miocene]] age.
[[Image:Kicks.jpg|frame|left|One of Ken Griffey, Jr. signature sneakers, the Nike Air Griffey Max.]]


==History==
Griffey was a frequent participant in the [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star Game]] during the 1990s. He has led his league multiple times in hitting categories and was awarded [[Gold Glove Award|Gold Gloves]] for his defensive excellence from {{by|1990}} to {{by|1999}}. In 1990 and 1991, Griffey and his father became the first son and father to play on the same team at the same time. At the MLB [[Home Run Derby]] in {{by|1993}}, which was held at [[Oriole Park at Camden Yards|Oriole Park]] in [[Baltimore]], Griffey slugged a ball over the right field wall, hitting the warehouse. Griffey is the first player<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE4DF1130F930A25754C0A965958260 "Now Fielder Is Where He Knows He Belongs", ''The New York Times''] July 13, 1993</ref> to have ever hit the warehouse on a fly, and is honored with a plaque.<ref>[http://baltimore.orioles.mlb.com/bal/ballpark/guide.jsp ''The Official Site of the Baltimore Orioles'']</ref> In {{by|1997}}, he won the [[American League]] [[MLB Most Valuable Player award|Most Valuable Player award]], hitting .304, with 56 [[home run]]s and 147 [[runs batted in]].
{{main|European exploration of Australia}}
Early European exploration of inland Australia was sporadic. More focus was on the more accessible and fertile coastal areas. The first party to successfully cross the [[Blue Mountains (Australia)|Blue Mountains]] just outside Sydney was led by [[Gregory Blaxland]] in 1813, 25 years after the colony was established. People starting with [[John Oxley]] in 1817, 1818 and 1821, followed by [[Charles Sturt]] in 1829-1830 attempted to follow the westward-flowing rivers to find an "inland sea", but these were found to all flow into the [[Murray River]] and [[Darling River]] which turn south.


Over the period 1858 to 1861, [[John McDouall Stuart]] led six expeditions north from Adelaide into the outback, culminating in successfully reaching the north coast of Australia and returning, without the loss of any of the party's members' lives. This contrasts with the ill-fated [[Burke and Wills expedition]] in 1860-61 which was much better funded, but resulted in the deaths of three of the four members of the transcontinental party.
One of the most memorable moments of Griffey's career with the Mariners came during the [[1995 American League Division Series]] (ALDS) against the [[New York Yankees]]. After losing the first two games, the Mariners and Griffey were on the verge of elimination, but came back to win the next two games, setting up a decisive fifth game. In the bottom of the 11th inning of Game 5, with Griffey on first base, teammate [[Edgar Martínez]] hit a double. Griffey raced around the bases, slid into home with the winning run, and popped up into the waiting arms of the entire team. Although the Mariners subsequently lost the [[American League Championship Series|ALCS]] to former Mariners manager [[Mike Hargrove]]'s [[Cleveland Indians|Indians]], that moment remains one of the most memorable in Mariners history, capping a season that "saved baseball in Seattle",<ref>[http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/print?id=1888518&type=story "Martinez is beloved by Seattle fans; what about Hall voters?" ''ESPN.com''] September 25, 2004</ref><ref>[http://web.baseballhalloffame.org/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080524&content_id=7420&vkey=hof_news "Legendary broadcaster reflects on 40 years of baseball", ''National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum" Hall of Fame News''] May 24, 2008.</ref> as it occurred in the midst of speculation that the franchise would relocate to another city.


The [[Overland Telegraph]] line was constructed in the 1870s along the route identified by Stuart, who had found enough water to support the needed repeater stations.
As the Mariners were playing to sellout crowds in the Kingdome, the voters of Washington state's King County narrowly defeated a ballot proposal to build a new baseball stadium. Following the success of the team that season and the narrowness of the vote, the then-governor of Washington, [[Mike Lowry]], called a special session of the Washington State Legislature where a new stadium authority was created and a new tax on hotels and rental cars were added to support the baseball stadium. Today this facility is known as Safeco Field and is referred to as "The House That Griffey Built".<ref>Verhovek, S.H. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D00E4DF1F3BF936A35752C1A96F958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all "Seattle Journal; No Joy: Mighty Griffey Has Cut Out", ''The New York Times''] November 5, 1999</ref><ref>Bell, G. [http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/2007-06-22-2183690235_x.htm "Griffey: 'I didn't know how much I missed being in Seattle.'", ''USAToday.com'']</ref> This game five final play of the ALDS was the inspiration for the title of the [[video game]], ''[[Ken Griffey, Jr.'s Winning Run]]'' for the [[Super Nintendo]].


Exploration of the outback continued up to the 1950s when [[Len Beadell]] explored, surveyed and built many roads in support of the nuclear weapons tests at [[Emu Field]] and [[Maralinga, South Australia|Maralinga]] and rocket testing on the [[Woomera Prohibited Area]]. Mineral exploration continues as new mineral deposits are identified and developed.
In 1999, he ranked 93rd on ''[[The Sporting News]]''' list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players. This list was compiled during the {{by|1998}} season, counting only statistics through 1997. It was argued by some that, had the voting been done two or three years later, he would have been ranked several places higher: at age 29 (going on 30), he was easily the youngest player on the list. That same year, Griffey was elected to the [[Major League Baseball All-Century Team]]. However, when ''TSN'' updated their list for a new book in {{by|2005}}, despite having surpassed 400 and 500 home runs, Griffey remained at Number 93.


==Mining==
While playing with Seattle, Griffey was a 10-time American League Gold Glove winner, the 1992 All-Star Game MVP, 1997 AL MVP, 1998 [[ESPY]] co-winner for Male Athlete of the Year, and was named to the All-Century team in 1999.
Along with agriculture, [[tourism]] and [[mining]] are the main economic activities in this vast and sparsely settled area. Due to the complete absence of mountain building and glaciation since the [[Permian]] (in many areas since the [[Cambrian]]), the outback is extremely rich in [[iron]], [[aluminium]], [[manganese]] and [[uranium]] ores, and also contains major deposits of [[gold]], [[nickel]], [[lead]] and [[zinc]] ores. Because of its size, the value of grazing and mining is considerable. Major mines and mining areas in the outback include opals at [[Coober Pedy, South Australia|Coober Pedy]], [[Lightning Ridge, New South Wales|Lightning Ridge]] and [[White Cliffs, New South Wales|White Cliffs]], metals at [[Broken Hill, New South Wales|Broken Hill]], [[Tennant Creek, Northern Territory|Tennant Creek]], [[Olympic Dam, South Australia|Olympic Dam]] and the remote [[Challenger Mine]]. Oil and gas are extracted in the [[Cooper Basin]] around [[Moomba, South Australia|Moomba]].


In Western Australia the [[Argyle diamond mine]] in the [[Kimberley (Western Australia)]] is the world's biggest producer of natural diamonds and contributes approximately one-third of the world's natural supply. The [[Pilbara]] region's economy is dominated by [[mining]] and [[petroleum]] industries.<ref> ''The Pilbara’s oil and gas industry is the region’s largest export industry earning $5.0 billion in 2004/05 accounting for over 96% of the State's production.'' source - http://www.pdc.wa.gov.au/industry/types-of-industries/oil-and-gas.aspx </ref> Most of [[Australia]]'s [[iron ore]] is also mined in the Pilbara and it also has one of the world's major [[manganese]] mines, Woodie Woodie.
===Departure from Seattle===


== Population ==
Griffey used to live in the same neighborhood in [[Orlando, Florida|Orlando]] as golfer [[Payne Stewart]]. After the death of Payne Stewart in a plane crash on [[October 25]], [[1999]], Griffey started expressing a desire to live closer to his relatives in his hometown of Cincinnati.
Due to the low and erratic rainfall over most of the outback, combined with soils which are usually not very fertile, inland Australia is relatively sparsely settled. More than 90 percent of Australians live in urban areas on the coast. However the outback and the history of its [[exploration]] and settlement provides Australians with a culturally valued backdrop, and stories of [[swagman|swagmen]], [[squatter]]s, and [[bushrangers]] are central to the national ethos. The song [[Waltzing Matilda]], which is about a swagman and squatters, is probably Australia's best internationally known and most well-loved song.


[[Australian Aborigines|Aboriginal]] communities in outback regions have not been displaced as they have been in areas of intensive agriculture and large cities, in coastal areas. So a significant proportion of the country's indigenous population lives in the Outback{{Fact|date=July 2007}}, in areas such as the [[Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara]] lands in northern South Australia.
After the 1999 season, Griffey's request was granted and he was traded to the [[Cincinnati Reds]] for [[Mike Cameron]], [[Brett Tomko]], [[Antonio Pérez (baseball player)|Antonio Pérez]], and Jake Meyer. Initially, the future looked extremely bright for him in Cincinnati, where the Reds had just come within one game of a playoff berth. It was the city in which he had grown up, and Griffey was reportedly very pleased to be playing on his father's former team.


==Medicine==
Ken Griffey, Jr. was a fan favorite in Seattle since he was a 19 year old rookie,<ref>Shipnuck, A. [http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1005475/index.htm "Junior Comes Of Age", ''Sports Illustrated''] August 08, 1994.</ref> and was the featured star of the Mariners throughout his tenure. In June {{by|2007}}, the near-capacity crowd welcomed him back in a Reds' uniform for a three-game series in Seattle. Griffey hit two home runs in the last game of the series. In a TV interview broadcast on the local FSN affiliate following the series finale, Griffey emotionally expressed an interest in returning to the Seattle ballclub in the future should circumstances warrant it.<ref>[http://archives.seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/texis.cgi/web/vortex/display?slug=kelley25&date=20070625&query=griffey Sports | This wasn't goodbye — Griffey will be back | Seattle Times Newspaper<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
[[Image:Outback.jpg|thumb|right|Flying over western [[New South Wales]]. Near the bottom of the picture, a squiggly line appears; apparently, a [[stream|creek]] created by recent [[rain]].]]


{{Main|Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia}}
==Cincinnati Reds==
===2000–2004===
The {{by|2000}} season began what has generally been seen by the media as a decline in Griffey's superstar status. Although his statistics during this season were respectable, they were far below his previous level of play: in 145 games, Griffey hit .271 with 40 home runs, but his .942 [[on-base plus slugging]] was his lowest mark in five years. Griffey wore his father's #30, not #24 like he did in Seattle. The number 24 was already retired in honor of [[Tony Perez]] and it was not brought out of retirement for Griffey. Additionally, from {{by|2001}} through {{by|2004}}, Griffey was plagued by a string of injuries, including season-ending injuries in {{by|2002}}, {{by|2003}}, and 2004. Worse yet for Griffey, the cumulative effects of the injuries lowered his bat speed, resulting in less power and fewer home runs (he [[Slugging average|slugged]] only .426 before succumbing to injury in 2002, his lowest output in seven years). Injuries forced Griffey to miss 260 out of 486 games from 2002 through 2004, diminishing both his skills and his star reputation. Consequently, he is not nearly the ubiquitous presence he once was on cereal boxes, television commercials, and the All-Star Game.


Due to the wide expanses and remoteness of people in the outback, a 'Flying Doctor Service' exists to provide medical services and [[medevac]] to remote areas. This service was created in 1928 in [[Cloncurry, Queensland]] by the Very Reverend [[John Flynn (minister)|John Flynn]] (known as Flynn of the Outback). The aim of the service is to provide medical care, primary and emergency, to people who cannot reach [[hospital]]s or [[general practitioner]]s. Regular Clinics are flown out to remote communities, with consultations held in a specially built clinic, in a homestead, or even under the wing of the plane. In addition The Royal Flying doctors Service provides Air Ambulance to remote areas, Hospital to Hospital Transport and Telephone and Radio consultations. In [[Queensland]] RFDS nurses are [[RIPRN]] endorsed so that they can offer a greater level of knowledge and skills to outback people. Often in areas where there may be no doctor in the town.
In 2004, Griffey avoided major injury during the first half of the season, and on [[June 20]] became the 20th player to hit 500 career home runs. His 500th home run came on [[Father's Day]] in a game against the [[St. Louis Cardinals]] at [[Busch Stadium II|Busch Stadium]], with his father in the stands; the homer also tied Ken Jr. with his father in career hits with 2,143. However, the injury bug bit again just before the All-Star break, he suffered a partial [[hamstring]] tear, knocking him out of the All-Star Game and putting him on the disabled list yet again.


==Education==
Griffey finished the 2004 season on the disabled list after suffering a rupture of his right hamstring in San Francisco.<ref>Kinney, T. [http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/nl/reds/2004-08-11-griffey-out_x.htm "Griffey Jr. nabbed by injury again", ''USAToday.com''] August 14, 2004.</ref> The play in question occurred at [[AT&T Park]] in a game against the [[San Francisco Giants]]. Griffey was starting in right field for the first time in his 16-year Major League career when he raced toward the gap to try to cut off a ball before it got to the wall. He slid as he got to the ball, but in the process hyper extended his right leg, tearing the hamstring completely off the bone. He later came out of the game, complaining of "tightness" in the hamstring exacerbated by chilly conditions in San Francisco. But there was far more to it than anyone realized at the time.


{{Main|School of the Air}}
Shortly after this injury, the Reds' team physician, Timothy Kremchek, devised an experimental surgery dubbed "The Junior Operation"<ref>Castrovince A. [http://www.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20050819&content_id=1176033&vkey=news_cin&fext=.jsp&c_id=cin "Griffey nominated for Comeback Award", ''MLB.com''] August 22, 2005.</ref> that would use three titanium screws to reattach Griffey's hamstring. For several weeks, Griffey's right leg was in a sling that kept it at a 90-degree angle, and he was not able to move the leg until late October. After an intense rehabilitation period, he returned for the 2005 season. In April, he hit .244 with one homer (on [[April 30]]) and nine RBIs.<ref>[http://cincinnati.reds.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20050819&content_id=1176033&vkey=news_cin&fext=.jsp&c_id=cin The Official Site of The Cincinnati Reds: News: Cincinnati Reds News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


In most outback communities, the number of children is too small for a conventional school to operate. Children are educated at home by the [[School of the Air]]. Originally the teachers communicated with the children via radio, but now satellite telecommunication is used instead.
===2005–2006 seasons===
Some children attend [[boarding school]], mostly only those in secondary school. Younger children are normally educated at home.


==Terminology==
Starting [[May 1]], the 2005 season saw the resurgence of a healthy Griffey. The fluid swing, which depends heavily on excellent lower body strength, returned to its original form, now that Griffey's hamstring and calf problems appear behind him. His 35 home runs were his highest since his first year with the Reds as Griffey slowly moved up the career home run list. He ended the season tied with [[Mickey Mantle]], after having passed [[Jimmie Foxx]], [[Ted Williams]], [[Willie McCovey]], [[Ernie Banks]], [[Eddie Mathews]], [[Mel Ott]], and [[Eddie Murray]].
Culturally, many urban Australians have had very generalised terms for the otherwise complex range of environments that exist within the inland and tropical regions of the continent. Regional terminology can be very specific to specific locations in each mainland state.


It is colloquially said that 'the outback' is located "beyond the [[Black Stump]]". The location of the black stump may be some hypothetical location or may vary depending on local custom and folklore. It has been suggested that the term comes from the ''Black Stump Wine Saloon'' that once stood about 10 kilometres out of [[Coolah, New South Wales]] on the Gunnedah Road. It is claimed that the saloon, named after the nearby Black Stump Run and Black Stump Creek, was an important staging post for traffic to north-west New South Wales and it became a marker by which people gauged their journeys.<ref name="SMHOutback2005">{{cite news | last = Lewis | first = Daniel | authorlink = | url = http://www.theage.com.au/news/outback/outer-limits/2005/05/16/1116095894531.html | title= Outer limits | work=Travel | publisher= [[Sydney Morning Herald]] | date= [[2005-05-17]] | accessdate= 2007-01-30}}</ref>
Early in September, he strained a tendon in his left foot (an injury unrelated to his past hamstring and calf problems), and was listed as day-to-day for several weeks. On [[September 22]], with the Reds out of playoff contention, the team decided to bench him for the rest of the season so he could immediately have arthroscopic surgery on his left knee and a separate operation to repair scars from his 2004 hamstring operation. Still, his 128 games in 2005 were the most he has played since 2000. Griffey's resurgence was recognized when he was named National League [[MLB Comeback Player of the Year Award|Comeback Player of the Year]]. He played in the [[World Baseball Classic]] for the American team that off-season with his father as a coach. Griffey batted .524, but the USA failed to reach the semifinals.
[[Image:West MacDonnell National Park.JPG|thumb|left|The MacDonnell Ranges in the [[Northern Territory]] are found in the centre of the country.]]
"The Never-Never" is a term referring to remoter parts of the Australian outback. The outback can be also referred to as "back of beyond", "back o' [[Bourke, New South Wales|Bourke]]" although these terms are more frequently used when referring to something a long way from anywhere, or a long way away. The well-watered north of the continent is often called the "[[Top End]]" and the arid interior "The Red Centre" due to its vast amounts of red soil and sparse greenery amongst its landscape.


== Wildlife ==
During the second game of the 2006 regular season, Griffey hit home run #537, surpassing [[Mickey Mantle]] for 12th on the all-time list. He returned on [[May 11]] from a knee injury suffered [[April 12]], and hit a walk-off three-run home run in the bottom of the 11th inning against the Washington Nationals. On [[June 5]], Griffey tied [[Fred McGriff]]'s record by hitting a home run in his 43rd different ballpark, at the [[St. Louis Cardinals]]' [[Busch Stadium]]. On [[June 19]], Griffey hit career home run 548, tying him with [[Mike Schmidt]], and then six days later passed Schmidt with 549. On [[June 27]], he hit his 550th career [[home run]] against the [[Kansas City Royals]].
[[Image:BrunbyAusschnitt.jpg|thumb|100px|right|A Brumby in the Outback]]
The Australian Outback is full of very well-adapted wildlife, although much of it may not be immediately visible to the casual observer. Many animals rest during the heat of the day, such as [[kangaroo]]s and native dogs, the [[dingo]].


Birdlife is prolific, most often seen at waterholes at dawn and dusk. Huge flocks of budgerigars, [[cockatoo]]s, [[corella]]s and [[galah]]s are often sighted. Various species of [[snake]]s and [[lizard]]s bask in the sun in winter, on bare ground or roads, but they are rarely seen during the summer months.
On [[September 25]] 2006, Griffey hit his 27th home run of the season against [[Chicago Cubs]] relief pitcher [[Scott Eyre]] to tie [[Reggie Jackson]] for tenth on the all time home run list.


Feral animals such as [[Camel]]s thrive in central Australia, brought to Australia by the early [[Afghan (Australia)|Afghan drivers]]. Wild horses known as '[[brumby|brumbies]],' are station horses that have run wild. Feral pigs, foxes, cats and rabbits are also imported animals that degrade the environment, and time and money is spent eradicating them, to help protect fragile rangelands.
Griffey's injuries continued in the 2006 off-season. While on holiday in the Bahamas with his family, he broke his wrist. He said he was wrestling with his daughter and two younger sons when the oldest jumped in and knocked him off balance; he landed awkwardly on his left hand. Griffey said his hand felt fine and he expected to be ready to go for 2007 [[spring training]].<ref>[http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/baseball/mlb/02/18/griffey.injury.ap/index.html]</ref>


===2007 season===
==Tourism==
[[Image:CIN Griffey Jr.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
At the beginning of the 2007 Major League Baseball Season, [[Ryan Freel]] took over [[center field]] for the Reds, and Griffey Jr. was moved to [[right field]]. Reds manager [[Jerry Narron]] said that "I've got to do everything I can do to put our best club out there. My feeling is that with Ryan Freel out there, it gives us strong defense up the middle."<ref>[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17687610/ Off center: Griffey moving to right field - Baseball - MSNBC.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> On [[May 10]] [[2007]], Griffey hit his sixth home run of the season and the 569th of his career, tying [[Rafael Palmeiro]] for ninth place on the career home runs list. He passed Palmeiro on May 13. Griffey tied [[Harmon Killebrew]] for eighth on the all-time list hitting his 573rd career home run on May 22. He then surpassed him on [[May 25]].


There are many popular tourist attractions in the outback. Some of the well known destinations include:
On [[June 22]] [[2007]], Griffey made his first return to Seattle after his trade to the Reds. Before the game, the Mariners honored him with a 15-minute presentation which included a highlight reel of his playing career with the Mariners, a presentation of a "The House that Griffey Built" memorial by Mariners hall-of-famers [[Jay Buhner]] and [[Edgar Martínez]], and a 4 minute standing ovation from the sold out crowd. A speech was given by Griffey, and many of the fans in attendance made signs professing their gratitude and adoration toward him with quotes such as: "The House that Griffey Built", "Seattle [hearts] Junior", and "Griffey we miss you." Griffey went 1–5 in the game. On June 24, Griffey hit his 583rd and 584th career home runs, tying and passing [[Mark McGwire]] for 7th place on the all-time career home run [[List of top 500 Major League Baseball home run hitters|list]].


*[[Alice Springs]]
In an interview on [[FSN Northwest]] with [[Angie Mentink]], Griffey stated that he would like to end his career as a Seattle Mariner and that he feels that he owes it to the fans of Seattle:
*[[Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame]]
{{quote|Would I do it? Yeah. I think for the simple reason that this is the place where I grew up and I owe it to the people of Seattle and to myself to retire as a Mariner.}}
*[[Birdsville]]
*[[Broome, Western Australia|Broome]]
*[[Coober Pedy]]
*[[Uluru|Uluru (Ayers Rock)]]
*[[Devils Marbles]]
*[[Kakadu National Park]]
*[[Nitmiluk National Park|Katherine Gorge]]
*[[Kata Tjuta|The Olgas (Kata Tjuta)]]
*[[Kings Canyon, Northern Territory|Kings Canyon (Watarrka)]]
*[[MacDonnell Ranges]]
*[[Mount Isa]]
*[[Monkey Mia]]
*[[Mount Augustus National Park]]
*[[Willandra Lakes Region]]
[[Image:ISS007 Gosses Bluff.jpg|thumb|right|[[Gosses Bluff crater]], one of a number of [[meteor]] [[impact crater]]s that can be found across outback Australia.]]
Visitors to the outback often drive their own or rented vehicles, or take organised tours. Travel through remote areas on main roads is easily done and requires no advance planning. However travel through very remote areas, on isolated tracks, requires advance planning and a suitable, reliable vehicle (usually a [[four wheel drive]]). On very remote routes considerable supplies and equipment may be required, this can include prearranged caches. It is not advisable to travel into these especially remote areas with a single vehicle, unless fully equipped with good communication technology (eg a satellite phone, EPIRB etc). Many visitors prefer to travel in these areas in a convoy. Deaths from tourists and locals becoming stranded on outback trips occasionally occur, invariably because insufficient water and food supplies were taken, and/or because people have walked away from their vehicle in search of help. Travellers through very remote areas should always inform a reliable person of their route and expected destination arrival time, and remember that a vehicle is much easier to locate in an aerial search, than a person, so in the event of a breakdown, they must not leave their vehicle.


===Year of the Outback 2002===
Following the [[Cincinnati Reds]] versus [[Seattle Mariners]] series of 2007, a fan movement emerged petitioning Mariners' management to bring Griffey back. Over 1,900 signatures were collected on a fan vid-blog/petition.<ref>[http://bringgriffeyback.com/]</ref>
In 2002 the Western Australian Tourism Commission promoted the outback of Western Australia as part of its promotional programmes.


==Transport==
Griffey received the most votes of any player in the National League for the 2007 All-Star balloting and on the July 10 game, he went on to drive in two runs for the [[National League]]. On [[July 16]] [[2007]], Ken Griffey, Jr. hit his 587th home run to pass [[Frank Robinson]] for 6th place on the all-time home run [[List of top 500 Major League Baseball home run hitters|list]]. On [[July 18]], [[2007]], Griffey hit his 2,500th hit, a first inning single off [[Atlanta Braves]] starting pitcher [[John Smoltz]].
[[Image:Gibb River Rd-1.jpg|thumb|right|A road sign warning of potentially dangerous conditions ahead.]]
The outback is criss-crossed by historic tracks, roads and highways. Most of the highways have an excellent bitumen surface and other major roads are usually well-maintained dirt roads. Tracks in very sandy or exceedingly rocky areas may require high-clearance four wheel drives and spare fuel, tyres, food and water before attempting to travel them, however most outback roads are easily traversed in ordinary vehicles, provided care is taken. Drivers unused to dirt roads should be especially cautious - it is recommended that drivers reduce their speed, drive with extra care, and avoid driving at night due to animals straying onto roads. Travelling in remote areas in northern Australia is not advisable during the wet season (November to April), as heavy tropical downpours can quickly make dirt roads impassable. In the remotest parts of Australia fuel sellers are located hundreds of kilometres apart, so spare fuel must be carried or refuelling spots calculated carefully in order not to run out of fuel in between towns.


The [[Stuart Highway]] runs from north to south through the centre of the continent, roughly paralleled by the [[Adelaide-Darwin railway]]. There is a proposal to develop some of the roads running from the SW to the NE to create an all-weather road named the [[Outback Highway]], crossing the continent diagonally from [[Laverton, Western Australia]] (north of [[Kalgoorlie, Western Australia|Kalgoorlie]], through the Northern Territory to [[Winton, Queensland|Winton]], in Queensland.
On [[September 19]] [[2007]], in a game against the [[Chicago Cubs]], Griffey fielded a [[Derrek Lee]] single in right field, then suddenly went down in pain. He was on the ground for several minutes, but eventually walked off under his own power. The injury, first thought to be a lower abdominal strain, was later revealed to be a season-ending groin strain. This marked one of many seasons in Cincinnati in which Griffey had to end the year on the disabled list. Griffey ended the 2007 season with 593 career home runs. [[Image:Ken Griffey Jr..jpg|thumb|right|150px| Ken played in his hometown from 2000-2008.]]


Air transport is relied on for mail delivery in some areas, due to sparse settlement and wet season road closures. Most outback mines have an airstrip and many have a [[fly-in fly-out]] workforce. Most outback [[sheep station]]s and [[cattle station]]s have an airstrip and quite a few have their own light plane. Medical and ambulance services are provided by the [[Royal Flying Doctor Service]]. The [[School of the Air]] is a radio-based school using the RFDS radios.
On [[August 22]] [[2007]], Griffey was selected as an all-time Gold Glove winner, on a list of nine players are considered the greatest defensive players in the last fifty years.<ref>[http://www.rawlingsgoldglove.com/News/Releases/Aug-22-2007.aspx Rawlings to Present First-Ever Junior Rawlings Gold Glove Award<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> He finished the season with 78 runs, 146 hits, 24 doubles, one triple, 30 home runs, 93 RBIs, and a .277 batting average.


{{col-begin}}
===2008 season===
{{col-2}}
On [[April 4]], [[2008]], Ken Griffey, Jr. passed [[Reggie Jackson]] for 16th on the all-time list after driving in his 1,702nd RBI.<ref>[http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=280404117 ESPN - Phillies vs. Reds - Recap - April 04, 2008<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Two days later, in an 8–2 victory over the [[Philadelphia Phillies]], Griffey hit his 594th career home run and his first of the 2008 season. The two-run homer pushed him closer to becoming the sixth player in history to reach 600-home runs.<ref>[http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=280406117 ESPN - Phillies vs. Reds - Recap - April 06, 2008<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> On [[April 9]], in the 12–4 victory over the [[Milwaukee Brewers]], Griffey batted 2 for 4 with 3 runs and an RBI. On [[April 15]], in the 9–5 loss to the [[Chicago Cubs]], Griffey hit his 595th career home run, batting 1 for 4 on the game with the solo hit being the two-run homer. Two days later on April 17, Griffey hit his 596th career home run while batting 2 for 5 with 3 RBIs in a 9–2 victory by the [[Cincinnati Reds]] over the [[Chicago Cubs]]. In the [[April 20]] matchup against the [[Milwaukee Brewers]], Griffey batted 1 for 5 with the walk-off [[RBI]] in the bottom of the 10th inning for the 4–3 victory. Griffey's walk-off hit came after [[Edwin Encarnacion]]'s and [[Joey Votto]]'s back-to-back home runs. On May 31st, 2008 Griffey hit the 599th home run of his career against the [[Atlanta Braves]], needing only 1 more home run to become only the sixth member of the legendary 600 home run club. He reached the plateau on June 9, 2008, hitting his 600th home run on a 3-1 pitch from [[Mark Hendrickson]] of the [[Florida Marlins]] in the first inning. Fans of both teams gave him a standing ovation.<ref>[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,364781,00.html FOXNews.com - Griffey Hits 600th Career Home Run - Local News | News Articles | National News | US News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
* [[Birdsville Track]]
* [[Burke Developmental Road]]
* [[Canning Stock Route]]
* [[Colson Track]]
* [[Connie Sue Highway]]
* [[French Line]]
* [[Gary Highway]]
* [[Gibb River Road]]
* [[Great Central Road]]
* [[Gunbarrel Highway]]
* [[K1 Line]]
* [[Kalumburu Road]]
{{col-2}}
* [[Kidson Track]]
* [[Lasseter Highway]]
* [[Oodnadatta Track]]
* [[Peninsula Developmental Road]]
* [[Plenty Highway]]
* [[Rig Road]]
* [[Sandover Highway]]
* [[Strzelecki Track]]
* [[Tallawana Track]]
* [[Tanami Track]]
* [[WAA Line]]
{{col-end}}


==Notable Cities==
On June 30, Griffey hit his fifth career walk-off home run against the [[Pittsburgh Pirates]]. The two-run pinch-hit shot, his 603rd career home run, came in the bottom of the ninth to lead the Reds to the 4-3 victory. On July 4, Griffey hit career home run 604 as the Reds beat the [[Washington Nationals]], 3-0.
*[[Alice Springs, Northern Territory]]

*[[Tennant Creek, Northern Territory]]
Despite being ranked second in the National League All-Star voting for outfielders for most of the first half of the season, Griffey finished fourth with 2,907,746 ballots and was not selected to his 14th [[2008 MLB All-Star Game|All-Star Game]] as a reserve, being 87,000 votes away from [[Kosuke Fukudome]] in third place. At the All-Star Break, Griffey was batting .239 with 12 home runs and 42 RBIs. "I always have a backup plan...If you can't hit a tough lefty, bunt. If you can't hit a tough righty, bunt. If you can't go to the All-Star Game, go to the Bahamas," Griffey said.<ref>[http://cincinnati.reds.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080706&content_id=3076321&vkey=news_cin&fext=.jsp&c_id=cin Volquez named to All-Star staff | reds.com: News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
*[[Broken Hill, New South Wales]]

*[[Coober Pedy, South Australia]]
On [[July 30]], [[2008]], Griffey hit his 608th career home run, and the 15th of 2008 in his last game for the Reds.<ref>[http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/boxscore?gameId=280730118 ESPN - Reds vs. Astros - Box Score - July 30, 2008<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==White Sox==
On [[July 31]], [[2008]], at the [[MLB trade deadline]], Griffey was traded to the [[Chicago White Sox]] in exchange for pitcher [[Nick Masset]] and infielder [[Danny Richar]], ending his nine-year tenure in Cincinnati<ref>[http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/8398348 FOX Sports on MSN - Ken Rosenthal - Griffey accepts trade to White Sox<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>. In his first game against the Royals, he went 2 for 3 with 2 RBI, a walk, and a run.<ref>[http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080731&content_id=3230331&vkey=trade2008&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb Griffey moves from Reds to White Sox | MLB.com: News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

On [[August 20]], [[2008]], Griffey hit his first home run as a member of the White Sox, off of the Mariners' [[R.A. Dickey]], which moved him into a tie with former Chicago Cubs outfielder [[Sammy Sosa]] for career home runs.<ref>http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080820&content_id=3338798&vkey=news_mlb&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb</ref>

==Statistics==
==Career statistics==
{| cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" style="border: 1px black solid; text-align: center"
|- style="background-color:black; color:white"
! width="35"|Year!! align="left" width="20"|Age!! align="left" width="60"|Team!! align="left" width="20"|Lg!! width="25"|[[Games played|<font color=white>G</font>]]!! width="25"|[[At bat|<font color=white>AB</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Run (baseball)|<font color=white>R</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Hit (baseball)|<font color=white>H</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Double (baseball)|<font color=white>2B</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Triple (baseball)|<font color=white>3B</font>]]!! width="20"|[[Home run|<font color=white>HR</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Run batted in|<font color=white>RBI</font>]]!! width="20"|[[Stolen base|<font color=white>SB</font>]]!! width="20"|[[Caught stealing|<font color=white>CS</font>]]!! width="20"|[[Base on balls|<font color=white>BB</font>]]!! width="20"|[[Strikeout|<font color=white>SO</font>]]!! width="30"|[[Batting average|<font color=white>BA</font>]]!! width="30"|[[On base percentage|<font color=white>OBP</font>]]!! width="30"|[[Slugging percentage|<font color=white>SLG</font>]]!! width="30"|[[On-base plus slugging|<font color=white>OPS</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Total bases|<font color=white>TB</font>]]!! width="20"|[[Sacrifice hit|<font color=white>SH</font>]]!! width="20"|[[Sacrifice fly|<font color=white>SF</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Intentional base on balls|<font color=white>IBB</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Hit by pitch|<font color=white>HBP</font>]]!! width="25"|[[Double play|<font color=white>GDP</font>]]
|-
| [[1989 Major League Baseball season|1989]]||19|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 127|| 455|| 61|| 120|| 23|| 0|| 16|| 61|| 16|| 7|| 44|| 83|| .264|| .329|| .420|| .749|| 191|| 1|| 4|| 8|| 2|| 4
|-style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[1990 Major League Baseball season|1990]]||20|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 155|| 597|| 91|| 179|| 28|| 7|| 22|| 80|| 16|| 11|| 63|| 81|| .300|| .366|| .481|| .847|| 287|| 0|| 4|| 12|| 2|| 12
|-
| [[1991 Major League Baseball season|1991]]||21|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 154|| 548|| 76|| 179|| 42|| 1|| 22|| 100|| 18|| 6|| 71|| 82|| .327|| .399|| .527|| .926|| 289|| 4|| 9|| 21|| 1|| 10
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[1992 Major League Baseball season|1992]]||22|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 142|| 565|| 83|| 174|| 39|| 4|| 27|| 103|| 10|| 5|| 44|| 67|| .308|| .361|| .535|| .896|| 302|| 0|| 3|| 15|| 5|| 15
|-
| [[1993 Major League Baseball season|1993]]||23|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 156|| 582|| 113|| 180|| 38|| 3|| 45|| 109|| 17|| 9|| 96|| 91|| .309|| .408|| .617|| 1.025|| 359|| 0|| 7|| 25|| 6|| 14
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[1994 Major League Baseball season|1994]]||24|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 111|| 433|| 94|| 140|| 24|| 4|| 40|| 90|| 11|| 3|| 56|| 73|| .323|| .402|| .674|| 1.076|| 292|| 0|| 2|| 19|| 2|| 9
|-
| [[1995 Major League Baseball season|1995]]||25|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 72|| 260|| 52|| 67|| 7|| 0|| 17|| 42|| 4|| 2|| 52|| 53|| .258|| .379|| .481|| .860|| 125|| 0|| 2|| 6|| 0|| 4
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[1996 Major League Baseball season|1996]]||26|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 140|| 545|| 125|| 165|| 26|| 2|| 49|| 140|| 16|| 1|| 78|| 104|| .303|| .392|| .628|| 1.020|| 342|| 1|| 7|| 13|| 7|| 7
|-
| [[1997 Major League Baseball season|1997]]||27|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 157|| 608|| 125|| 185|| 34|| 3|| 56|| 147|| 15|| 4|| 76|| 121|| .304|| .382|| .646|| 1.028|| 393|| 0|| 12|| 23|| 8|| 12
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[1998 Major League Baseball season|1998]]||28|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 161|| 633|| 120|| 180|| 33|| 3|| 56|| 146|| 20|| 5|| 76|| 121|| .284|| .365|| .611|| .976|| 387|| 0|| 4|| 11|| 7|| 14
|-
| [[1999 Major League Baseball season|1999]]||29|| align="left"|[[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]]|| align="left"|[[American League|AL]]
|| 160|| 606|| 123|| 173|| 26|| 3|| 48|| 134|| 24|| 7|| 91|| 108|| .285|| .384|| .576|| .960|| 349|| 0|| 2|| 17|| 7|| 8
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[2000 Major League Baseball season|2000]]||30|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|Cincinnati]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]
|| 145|| 520|| 100|| 141|| 22|| 3|| 40|| 118|| 6|| 4|| 94|| 117|| .271|| .387|| .556|| .943|| 289|| 0|| 8|| 17|| 9|| 7
|-
| [[2001 Major League Baseball season|2001]]||31|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|Cincinnati]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]
|| 111|| 364|| 57|| 104|| 20|| 2|| 22|| 65|| 2|| 0|| 44|| 72|| .286|| .365|| .533|| .898|| 194|| 1|| 4|| 6|| 4|| 8
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[2002 Major League Baseball season|2002]]||32|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|Cincinnati]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]
|| 70|| 197|| 17|| 52|| 8|| 0|| 8|| 23|| 1|| 2|| 28|| 39|| .264|| .358|| .426|| .784|| 84|| 0|| 4|| 6|| 3|| 6
|-
| [[2003 Major League Baseball season|2003]]||33|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|Cincinnati]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]
|| 53|| 166|| 34|| 41|| 12|| 1|| 13|| 26|| 1|| 0|| 27|| 44|| .247|| .370|| .566|| .936|| 94|| 1|| 1|| 5|| 6|| 3
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[2004 Major League Baseball season|2004]]||34|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|Cincinnati]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]
|| 83|| 300|| 49|| 76|| 18|| 0|| 20|| 60|| 1|| 0|| 44|| 67|| .253|| .351|| .513|| .864|| 154|| 0|| 2|| 3|| 2|| 8
|-
| [[2005 Major League Baseball season|2005]]||35|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|Cincinnati]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]
|| 128|| 491|| 85|| 148|| 30|| 0|| 35|| 92|| 0|| 1|| 54|| 93|| .301|| .369|| .576|| .945|| 283|| 0|| 7|| 3|| 3|| 9
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[2006 Major League Baseball season|2006]]||36|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|Cincinnati]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]
|| 109|| 428|| 62|| 108|| 19|| 0|| 27|| 72|| 0|| 0|| 39|| 78|| .252|| .316|| .486|| .802|| 208|| 0|| 3|| 6|| 2|| 13
|-
| [[2007 Major League Baseball season|2007]]||37|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|Cincinnati]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]
|| 144|| 528|| 78|| 146|| 24|| 1|| 30|| 93|| 6|| 1|| 85|| 99|| .277|| .372|| .496|| .868|| 262|| 0|| 9|| 14|| 1|| 14
|- style="background-color:#d3d3d3"
| [[2008 Major League Baseball season|2008]]||38|| align="left"|[[Cincinnati Reds|CIN]]/[[Chicago White Sox|CWS]]|| align="left"|[[National League|NL]]/[[American League|AL]]
|| 137|| 472|| 62|| 116|| 28|| 1|| 16|| 67|| 0|| 1|| 75|| 87|| .246|| .350|| .411|| .761|| 194|| 0|| 4|| 14|| 3|| 12
|- style="background-color:black; color:white"
| colspan=4 align="right" |Totals:
|| 2,515|| 9,298|| 1,607|| 2,674|| 501|| 38|| 609|| 1,768|| 184|| 69|| 1,237|| 1,680|| .288|| .373|| .546|| .819|| 5,078|| 8|| 98|| 244|| 80|| 189
|}
{{small|Roll over stat abbreviations for definitions. Stats through [[September 20]], [[2008 Major League Baseball season|2008]].<ref name=br-stats>{{cite web| url=http://www.baseball-reference.com/g/griffke02.shtml | title=Ken Griffey Statistics| work=Baseball-Reference| accessdate=2008-08-04}}</ref>}}

==Griffey in popular culture==
{{trivia|date=July 2008}}
As a Mariner, Griffey has starred in four [[Nintendo]] [[videogames]]: 1994's ''[[Ken Griffey, Jr. Presents Major League Baseball]]'' and 1996's ''[[Ken Griffey, Jr.'s Winning Run]]'' for the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]], as well as the [[Nintendo 64]] games ''[[Major League Baseball Featuring Ken Griffey, Jr.]]'' in 1998, and ''[[Ken Griffey, Jr.'s Slugfest]]'' in 1999. He has also appeared on the [[Game Boy]] in 1997 (a portable version of his 1994 game, with authentic rosters as they were on Opening Day 1997) and 1999's ''Slugfest'', a portable version of the Nintendo 64 game. Nintendo has owned the Seattle Mariners since 1992.

In 1996, [[Nike, Inc.|Nike]] promoted a "Ken Griffey, Jr. for President" ad campaign, releasing "Griffey in '96" buttons and a TV commercial featuring [[Penny Hardaway]]. Of course, Griffey could not take office as he was only 27 at the time; the Constitution requires President to be at least 35. Thus the first election cycle which would be Constitutionally permissible would be the 2008 election.

Griffey also had a memorable guest turn on ''[[The Simpsons]]'', in episode 52, during the third season, "[[Homer at the Bat]]", along with fellow stars [[José Canseco]], [[Wade Boggs]], [[Darryl Strawberry]], [[Don Mattingly]], [[Roger Clemens]], [[Steve Sax]], [[Ozzie Smith]], and [[Mike Scioscia]]. In the episode, Griffey overdoses on a nerve tonic prescribed to him by [[Mr Burns]], causing him to suffer from [[gigantism]].

Griffey also has had a candy bar name after him called the Ken Griffey, Jr. Bar. Unfortunately, he is allergic to chocolate so their manufacture soon ceased.

Griffey was mentioned in an episode of "Scrubs". A paramedic, played by Molly Shannon, said she bought her son Griffey's card, and he carried it with him wherever he went.

Griffey also had an appearance in "Love Hurts", an episode of [[The Fresh Prince of Bel Air]], in which he insults Will Smith at a local carnival. In 1994, he was featured in the major motion picture ''[[Little Big League]]'', directed by Andrew Scheinman. In the 2001 baseball movie, ''[[Summer Catch]]'', Griffey makes a brief cameo appearance at the very end of the movie, showcasing him hitting a home run at the now defunct Cinergy Field/Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati.

Griffey has appeared in some games in the [[Backyard Baseball]] series.

Griffey is a paintball fan and can often be found playing with his wife and children at paintball facilities around [[Orlando, Florida|Orlando]], [[Florida]], his off-season home. At the 2007 PSP World Cup, Planet Eclipse presented Griffey with his own "Private Label" 2008 Ego paintball marker. <ref>[http://img2.putfile.com/thumb/10/29818084778.jpg][http://img2.putfile.com/thumb/10/29818084785.jpg][http://img2.putfile.com/main/10/29818084785.jpg]</ref>

Griffey was the first player to ask Bud Selig to wear the number 42 in celebration of Jackie Robinson Day. After its approval from the league commissioner, Selig encouraged players across the league to do the same in a temporary suspension of the number being retired to honor the great Jackie Robinson on Jackie Robinson Day celebrated throughout the Major League.

Griffey's 1989 Upper Deck rookie card, numbered 1, was selected as the first ever* printed MLB baseball card for an official set by Upper Deck.
* Promotional cards of [[Wally Joyner]] and DeWayne Buice were printed by the company, prior to the release of the official set. The Buice promo card is also numbered 1 on the reverse, but the hologram is rectangular, rather than the diamond shape.

Ken Griffey Jr's 1989 Upper Deck rookie card was mentioned on the Sci-fi television show [[Eureka (TV series)|Eureka]] in the episode titled [[Games People Play (Eureka)|Games People Play]] as Sheriff Jack Carter's prized baseball card from his former baseball card collection. The sheriff's ex-wife disposed of the collection.

Griffey was featured (and performed) on Seattle-based rapper Kid Sensation's 1992 album "The Power of Rhyme", in the song "The Way I Swing" (track #8).

==Philanthropy==
In 2008, Griffey released a series of charity wines to support The Ken Griffey, Jr. Family Foundation, a fund that supports several causes, including the Boys and Girls Clubs of America and several children's hospitals across the United States.
<ref>[http://www.charityhop.com/graphics/2008_reds_griffey.jpg]
[http://www.charityhop.com/graphics/2008_reds_griffey_seattle.jpg]
[http://www.charityhop.com/graphics/Griffey600_Label.jpg]
</ref>

== Personal ==
Griffey and his wife Melissa have three children: George Kenneth III ("Trey"), daughter Taryn Kennedy, and adopted son Tevin Kendall. When Trey was born, Mariners' then-G.M. [[Woody Woodward]] sent him a player's contract dated 2012. Griffey switched his uniform number in {{by|2006}}, from 30 to 3, to honor his three kids. In April 2007, Griffey was diagnosed with [[pleurisy]], an inflammation of the lining of the cavity surrounding the lungs which can cause painful respiration and other symptoms.

==See also==
{{commonscat}}
* [[MLB players who have hit 30 or more home runs before the All-Star break]]
* [[50 home run club]]
* [[500 home run club]]
* [[List of Major League Baseball Home Run Records]]
* [[Top 500 home run hitters of all time]]
* [[List of second generation Major League Baseball players|List of second generation MLB players]]
* [[List of MLB individual streaks]]
* [[List of major league players with 2,000 hits]]
* [[List of Major League Baseball players with 400 doubles]]
* [[List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 runs]]
* [[List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 RBI]]
* [[List of Major League Baseball RBI champions]]
* [[List of Major League Baseball home run champions]]
* [[List of Major League Baseball runs scored champions]]
* [[Major League Baseball hitters with three home runs in one game]]
* [[Major League Baseball titles leaders]]


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


==External links==
==Further reading==
*Dwyer Andrew (2007) OUTBACK- Recipes and Stories from the Campfire Miegunyah Press ISBN 978 0 522 85380 3
* {{Baseballstats |mlb=115135 |espn=2148 |br=g/griffke02 |fangraphs=327 |cube=g/ken-griffey}}
* Read, Ian G.(1995) ''Australia's central and western outback : the driving guide'' Crows Nest, N.S.W. Little Hills Press. Little Hills Press explorer guides ISBN 1863150617
* [http://www.swingman3.com swingman3.com] - Official website
* ''Year of the Outback 2002'', Western Australia Perth, W.A.


{{s-start-collapsible|header={{s-ach}}}}
{{succession box | title= [[List of MLB first overall draft choices|First overall pick in the MLB Entry Draft]] | before= [[Jeff King (baseball)|Jeff King]] | years = {{by|1987}} | after=[[Andy Benes]]}}
{{succession box | before = [[Paul Molitor]] <br> [[Frank Thomas (AL baseball player)|Frank Thomas]] | title = [[Player of the Month|American League Player of the Month]]| years = April, {{by|1990}} <br> April {{by|1997}} | after = [[José Canseco]] <br> [[Frank Thomas (AL baseball player)|Frank Thomas]]}}
{{succession box | title = [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game]]<br> Most Valuable Player| before= [[Cal Ripken, Jr.]] | years = {{by|1992}} | after = [[Kirby Puckett]]}}
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Revision as of 21:25, 7 October 2008

A tourism sign post Yalgoo, Western Australia
The Dingo Fence near Coober Pedy
Fitzgerald River National Park in Western Australia

Outback or the Outback refers to remote arid areas of Australia, although the term colloquially can refer to any lands outside of the main urban areas. The term "outback" is generally used to refer to locations that are comparatively more remote than those areas deemed "the bush".

Note that the terms outback and bush refer to European settlers concepts of the lands of Australia - Indigenous Australians had in many cases a different perception of moving through and usage of the land.

Overview

The outback is home to the Australian feral camel, donkey and dingo. The Dingo fence was built to restrict dingo movements into agricultural areas towards the south east of the continent. The marginally fertile parts are primarily utilised as rangelands and have been traditionally used for sheep or cattle grazing, on cattle stations which are leased from the Federal Government. While small areas of the outback consist of clay soils the majority has exceedingly infertile paleosols. Riversleigh, in Queensland, is one of Australia's most renowned fossil sites and was recorded as a World Heritage site in 1994. The 100 km² area contains fossil remains of ancient mammals, birds and reptiles of Oligocene and Miocene age.

History

Early European exploration of inland Australia was sporadic. More focus was on the more accessible and fertile coastal areas. The first party to successfully cross the Blue Mountains just outside Sydney was led by Gregory Blaxland in 1813, 25 years after the colony was established. People starting with John Oxley in 1817, 1818 and 1821, followed by Charles Sturt in 1829-1830 attempted to follow the westward-flowing rivers to find an "inland sea", but these were found to all flow into the Murray River and Darling River which turn south.

Over the period 1858 to 1861, John McDouall Stuart led six expeditions north from Adelaide into the outback, culminating in successfully reaching the north coast of Australia and returning, without the loss of any of the party's members' lives. This contrasts with the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition in 1860-61 which was much better funded, but resulted in the deaths of three of the four members of the transcontinental party.

The Overland Telegraph line was constructed in the 1870s along the route identified by Stuart, who had found enough water to support the needed repeater stations.

Exploration of the outback continued up to the 1950s when Len Beadell explored, surveyed and built many roads in support of the nuclear weapons tests at Emu Field and Maralinga and rocket testing on the Woomera Prohibited Area. Mineral exploration continues as new mineral deposits are identified and developed.

Mining

Along with agriculture, tourism and mining are the main economic activities in this vast and sparsely settled area. Due to the complete absence of mountain building and glaciation since the Permian (in many areas since the Cambrian), the outback is extremely rich in iron, aluminium, manganese and uranium ores, and also contains major deposits of gold, nickel, lead and zinc ores. Because of its size, the value of grazing and mining is considerable. Major mines and mining areas in the outback include opals at Coober Pedy, Lightning Ridge and White Cliffs, metals at Broken Hill, Tennant Creek, Olympic Dam and the remote Challenger Mine. Oil and gas are extracted in the Cooper Basin around Moomba.

In Western Australia the Argyle diamond mine in the Kimberley (Western Australia) is the world's biggest producer of natural diamonds and contributes approximately one-third of the world's natural supply. The Pilbara region's economy is dominated by mining and petroleum industries.[1] Most of Australia's iron ore is also mined in the Pilbara and it also has one of the world's major manganese mines, Woodie Woodie.

Population

Due to the low and erratic rainfall over most of the outback, combined with soils which are usually not very fertile, inland Australia is relatively sparsely settled. More than 90 percent of Australians live in urban areas on the coast. However the outback and the history of its exploration and settlement provides Australians with a culturally valued backdrop, and stories of swagmen, squatters, and bushrangers are central to the national ethos. The song Waltzing Matilda, which is about a swagman and squatters, is probably Australia's best internationally known and most well-loved song.

Aboriginal communities in outback regions have not been displaced as they have been in areas of intensive agriculture and large cities, in coastal areas. So a significant proportion of the country's indigenous population lives in the Outback[citation needed], in areas such as the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara lands in northern South Australia.

Medicine

Flying over western New South Wales. Near the bottom of the picture, a squiggly line appears; apparently, a creek created by recent rain.

Due to the wide expanses and remoteness of people in the outback, a 'Flying Doctor Service' exists to provide medical services and medevac to remote areas. This service was created in 1928 in Cloncurry, Queensland by the Very Reverend John Flynn (known as Flynn of the Outback). The aim of the service is to provide medical care, primary and emergency, to people who cannot reach hospitals or general practitioners. Regular Clinics are flown out to remote communities, with consultations held in a specially built clinic, in a homestead, or even under the wing of the plane. In addition The Royal Flying doctors Service provides Air Ambulance to remote areas, Hospital to Hospital Transport and Telephone and Radio consultations. In Queensland RFDS nurses are RIPRN endorsed so that they can offer a greater level of knowledge and skills to outback people. Often in areas where there may be no doctor in the town.

Education

In most outback communities, the number of children is too small for a conventional school to operate. Children are educated at home by the School of the Air. Originally the teachers communicated with the children via radio, but now satellite telecommunication is used instead. Some children attend boarding school, mostly only those in secondary school. Younger children are normally educated at home.

Terminology

Culturally, many urban Australians have had very generalised terms for the otherwise complex range of environments that exist within the inland and tropical regions of the continent. Regional terminology can be very specific to specific locations in each mainland state.

It is colloquially said that 'the outback' is located "beyond the Black Stump". The location of the black stump may be some hypothetical location or may vary depending on local custom and folklore. It has been suggested that the term comes from the Black Stump Wine Saloon that once stood about 10 kilometres out of Coolah, New South Wales on the Gunnedah Road. It is claimed that the saloon, named after the nearby Black Stump Run and Black Stump Creek, was an important staging post for traffic to north-west New South Wales and it became a marker by which people gauged their journeys.[2]

The MacDonnell Ranges in the Northern Territory are found in the centre of the country.

"The Never-Never" is a term referring to remoter parts of the Australian outback. The outback can be also referred to as "back of beyond", "back o' Bourke" although these terms are more frequently used when referring to something a long way from anywhere, or a long way away. The well-watered north of the continent is often called the "Top End" and the arid interior "The Red Centre" due to its vast amounts of red soil and sparse greenery amongst its landscape.

Wildlife

A Brumby in the Outback

The Australian Outback is full of very well-adapted wildlife, although much of it may not be immediately visible to the casual observer. Many animals rest during the heat of the day, such as kangaroos and native dogs, the dingo.

Birdlife is prolific, most often seen at waterholes at dawn and dusk. Huge flocks of budgerigars, cockatoos, corellas and galahs are often sighted. Various species of snakes and lizards bask in the sun in winter, on bare ground or roads, but they are rarely seen during the summer months.

Feral animals such as Camels thrive in central Australia, brought to Australia by the early Afghan drivers. Wild horses known as 'brumbies,' are station horses that have run wild. Feral pigs, foxes, cats and rabbits are also imported animals that degrade the environment, and time and money is spent eradicating them, to help protect fragile rangelands.

Tourism

There are many popular tourist attractions in the outback. Some of the well known destinations include:

Gosses Bluff crater, one of a number of meteor impact craters that can be found across outback Australia.

Visitors to the outback often drive their own or rented vehicles, or take organised tours. Travel through remote areas on main roads is easily done and requires no advance planning. However travel through very remote areas, on isolated tracks, requires advance planning and a suitable, reliable vehicle (usually a four wheel drive). On very remote routes considerable supplies and equipment may be required, this can include prearranged caches. It is not advisable to travel into these especially remote areas with a single vehicle, unless fully equipped with good communication technology (eg a satellite phone, EPIRB etc). Many visitors prefer to travel in these areas in a convoy. Deaths from tourists and locals becoming stranded on outback trips occasionally occur, invariably because insufficient water and food supplies were taken, and/or because people have walked away from their vehicle in search of help. Travellers through very remote areas should always inform a reliable person of their route and expected destination arrival time, and remember that a vehicle is much easier to locate in an aerial search, than a person, so in the event of a breakdown, they must not leave their vehicle.

Year of the Outback 2002

In 2002 the Western Australian Tourism Commission promoted the outback of Western Australia as part of its promotional programmes.

Transport

A road sign warning of potentially dangerous conditions ahead.

The outback is criss-crossed by historic tracks, roads and highways. Most of the highways have an excellent bitumen surface and other major roads are usually well-maintained dirt roads. Tracks in very sandy or exceedingly rocky areas may require high-clearance four wheel drives and spare fuel, tyres, food and water before attempting to travel them, however most outback roads are easily traversed in ordinary vehicles, provided care is taken. Drivers unused to dirt roads should be especially cautious - it is recommended that drivers reduce their speed, drive with extra care, and avoid driving at night due to animals straying onto roads. Travelling in remote areas in northern Australia is not advisable during the wet season (November to April), as heavy tropical downpours can quickly make dirt roads impassable. In the remotest parts of Australia fuel sellers are located hundreds of kilometres apart, so spare fuel must be carried or refuelling spots calculated carefully in order not to run out of fuel in between towns.

The Stuart Highway runs from north to south through the centre of the continent, roughly paralleled by the Adelaide-Darwin railway. There is a proposal to develop some of the roads running from the SW to the NE to create an all-weather road named the Outback Highway, crossing the continent diagonally from Laverton, Western Australia (north of Kalgoorlie, through the Northern Territory to Winton, in Queensland.

Air transport is relied on for mail delivery in some areas, due to sparse settlement and wet season road closures. Most outback mines have an airstrip and many have a fly-in fly-out workforce. Most outback sheep stations and cattle stations have an airstrip and quite a few have their own light plane. Medical and ambulance services are provided by the Royal Flying Doctor Service. The School of the Air is a radio-based school using the RFDS radios.

Notable Cities

References

  1. ^ The Pilbara’s oil and gas industry is the region’s largest export industry earning $5.0 billion in 2004/05 accounting for over 96% of the State's production. source - http://www.pdc.wa.gov.au/industry/types-of-industries/oil-and-gas.aspx
  2. ^ Lewis, Daniel (2005-05-17). "Outer limits". Travel. Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2007-01-30. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

Further reading

  • Dwyer Andrew (2007) OUTBACK- Recipes and Stories from the Campfire Miegunyah Press ISBN 978 0 522 85380 3
  • Read, Ian G.(1995) Australia's central and western outback : the driving guide Crows Nest, N.S.W. Little Hills Press. Little Hills Press explorer guides ISBN 1863150617
  • Year of the Outback 2002, Western Australia Perth, W.A.