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Roberto Clemente Award

Roberto Clemente Award
Craig Biggio, Vera Clemente and Commissioner Bud Selig pose with the Roberto Clemente Award. (Ron Vesely/MLB Photos)
Biggio receives Clemente Award

Less than a month after he said goodbye to baseball and hello to retirement, Craig Biggio, one of the most celebrated players in Astros history, was given the highest off-the-field honor in baseball -- the 2007 Roberto Clemente Award.  More >

Fans participate in Clemente Award selection process
2007 Roberto Clemente Award nominees announced
Delgado proud of Clemente honor
Reynolds, '91 Clemente winner, reflects


Video
Relive history
Watch some of Roberto Clemente's career highlights. 350K

The Roberto Clemente Award is given annually to a player who demonstrates the values Clemente displayed in his commitment to community and understanding the value of helping others. Each club nominated a player.

Roberto Clemente Award

About the award

Since 1972, Major League Baseball annually has presented an award (originally known as The Commissioner's Award) which recognizes the player who best exemplifies the game of baseball, sportsmanship, community involvement and the individual's contribution to his team.

In 1973, following the tragic death of Roberto Clemente, the award was re-named to honor the man whose spirit and goodwill always will be remembered. The award recognizes those individuals who truly understand the value of helping others.

A panel of baseball dignitaries, including Vera Clemente and Commissioner Allan H. (Bud) Selig, annually selects a winner from a list of 30 nominees, one from each Major League Baseball club. This year, the MLB.com fan ballot winner will be tallied as one vote among those cast by the special selection panel. Past winners include Al Leiter, Tony Gwynn, Sammy Sosa, Willie Mays, Lou Brock, Ozzie Smith, Cal Ripken, Jr. and Kirby Puckett.

2007 Presenting Partner, Chevrolet Chevy LOGO

Roberto Clemente was a legendary figure both on and off the field. In baseball, he was labeled "complete" for his incredible offensive and defensive skills. But it was his compassion off the field that redefined the term.

Clemente once said, "Anytime you have an opportunity to make things better and you don't, then you are wasting your time on this Earth."

It is with a similar spirit of dedication and far-reaching sense of purpose that Chevy strives to achieve in our commitment to technologies that go from gas-friendly to gas-free. What does that mean? At Chevy, it means making cars and trucks that get better fuel economy than ever before. It's taking advantage of alternate fuels by offering more models than any other brand that can run on cleaner-burning, mostly renewable E85 ethanol*. And it means looking to the future with advanced hybrid technologies; the eventual production of an affordable, extended-range electric car (such as the concept Chevy Volt); and developing a hydrogen fuel cell that is both gas free and emissions-free. Do more. Use less.

At Chevy, this "do more" attitude is what inspires them to contribute to the Roberto Clemente Award, its recipients and other community benefiting charities.

"Roberto's philosophy was to make the world a better place with everything he did," says Ed Peper, Chevrolet General Manager. "We should all hold ourselves to such a high standard. That's why we're proud to sponsor the award that recognizes those who make that mission their own."

*E85 ethanol is 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline.

Roberto Clemente bio

"Roberto Clemente played the game of baseball with a great passion that could only be matched by his unrelenting commitment to making a difference in the lives of those in need. People saw him as a great ballplayer and humanitarian."

Manny Sanguillen
friend and former Pirates teammate

Born in Barrio San Anton in Carolina, Puerto Rico, on August 18, 1934, Roberto Clemente was the youngest of four children. Early on he excelled in track and field, winning medals in the javelin throw and short distance races. However, Roberto's real love was baseball.

In 1954, the Pittsburgh Pirates drafted him away from the Dodgers. Clemente joined the Pirates in 1955, where he played his entire 18-year Major League Baseball career. Roberto played in two World Series, batting .310 in 1960 and .414 in 1971. He was the National League Batting Champion four times, was awarded 12 Gold Gloves, selected National League MVP in 1966 and was chosen as the MVP in the 1971 World Series.

On September 30, 1972, Roberto Clemente hit a double to earn his 3,000th Major League hit, placing him in an elite group of baseball greats. No one knew it at the time, but that two-bagger would represent the last regular season hit for Roberto Clemente. That New Year's Eve, Roberto and four others boarded a plane to deliver relief supplies to earthquake-striken Nicaragua. Shortly after takeoff the plane exploded and crashed in the Atlantic Ocean. There were no survivors.

Clemente's death shocked the world. The Baseball Writers Association of America held a special election and the mandatory five year waiting period for the Hall of Fame was waived. On August 6, 1973, Clemente, who had a lifetime .317 average with 240 homers and 1,305 RBI, was posthumously inducted into the Cooperstown Hall of Fame. He became the first Hispanic player ever elected to the shrine.

It has been almost 34 years since his untimely death and still today Roberto is remembered as one of the greatest athletes and humanitarians of all time. One of Roberto's dreams, the Roberto Clemente Sports City, is just part of the legacy he left behind. Visitors to Carolina, Puerto Rico are greeted by a 12-foot statue as they enter into a 304 acre sports complex. Roberto Clemente's legacy is perpetuated by his wife Vera, and sons Roberto Jr., Luis Roberto and Roberto Enrique, who have been instrumental in continuing Roberto's dream.