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MLB Hall of Famer Willie Mays wins lifetime achievement award

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MLB Hall of Famer Willie Mays wins lifetime achievement award

Willie Mays has won the inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award presented by Baseball Digest.The Hall of Fame center fielder was honored Thursday with a new accolade to be given annually recognizing a living individual who has made "significant contributions to the national game." Mays, who turns 90 on May 6, was chosen over five other finalists in voting by a panel of longtime baseball writers, broadcasters, historians and executives.The Say Hey Kid appears on the cover of Baseball Digest for the fourth time. Mays made 24 All-Star teams and won two NL MVP awards and 12 Gold Gloves during his dazzling career from 1951 to 1973. He moved with the Giants from New York to San Francisco, then finished up with two seasons back in the Big Apple playing for the Mets. He ranks sixth on the career chart with 660 home runs. Also selected as finalists were Hank Aaron (who died this past January), Roland Hemond, Rachel Robinson, Vin Scully and Joe Torre. "Baseball Digest was honored to cover and celebrate Willie Mays for the duration of his incredible career, and we are equally honored to celebrate an entire lifetime of contributions to baseball," said Norman Jacobs, publisher since 1969. "Just as he thrilled us during a Hall of Fame playing career that spanned four decades, Willie has exemplified the best qualities of our game and our country in the nearly 50 years since his retirement."

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Willie Mays arrives at Oracle Park in style as San Francisco Giants celebrate his 90th birthday

The San Francisco Giants turned their idyllic waterfront park into baseball's biggest birthday bash Friday night as the team celebrated Willie Mays turning 90 years old the day before. Mays, baseball's oldest living Hall of Famer, took a victory lap of sorts around Oracle Park before the Giants' 5-4 victory over the San Diego Padres, riding in a choice white and turquoise 1956 Oldsmobile convertible and waving his cap to a cheering crowd. The field had a massive grass etching in center field of Mays in his backswing with the words "SAY HEY 90" next to it. Mays' major league career spanned from 1951 through 1973 (with a one-year break for military service in 1953) for the New York and San Francisco Giants and New York Mets. When he retired, his 660 home runs ranked third in big league history; he now ranks sixth behind his godson Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron, Ruth, Alex Rodriguez and Albert Pujols.

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