Cal Ripken Jr. is on another streak
With Hall of Fame career over, he’s a hit with his entrepreneurial ventures
![]() | Cal Ripken has channeled the tenacity that allowed him to play in 2,632 straight games, and brand power, to build a thriving baseball empire. |
The numbers would have been enough. Over the course of his baseball career, all of it with the lowly Baltimore Orioles, Cal Ripken Jr. racked up 3,184 hits, drove in 1,695 runs, smacked 431 dingers, played in 19 All-Star games, earned two Most Valuable Player Awards, bagged two Gold Gloves and won a World Series.
But for all his accomplishments with his bat and his glove, Ripken, elected into baseball’s Hall of Fame in January, will always be revered for “the streak.” From May 30, 1982 to Sept. 20, 1998, Ripken played in 2,632 consecutive games, shattering Lou Gehrig’s record of 2,130 games, and earning him the moniker Iron Man.
Since retiring in 2001, Ripken has channeled that tenacity and brand power to build a thriving baseball empire. Aided only by a few business managers, a publicist and his brother Bill, Ripken oversees the entire operation — from raising capital for the construction of baseball fields at his youth camps to attracting advertising for his minor league stadium.
“When I retired, I wanted to develop businesses around the grassroots of baseball,” he says. “The game is a focal point for a lot of communities.”
These efforts all feed off one another. For example, the massive baseball complex he built in his hometown of Aberdeen, Md., is home to both one of his teams and his instructional summer camps — an ideal set up for enticing youngsters who attend the pro games with their families. And when Ripken does an endorsement, he asks the company he is pitching to become a partner with him on one of his businesses, rather than just shelling out a flat fee. Comcast and Chevrolet have signed on so far.
Calvin Edwin Ripken Jr. was born Aug. 24, 1960 to Violet and Cal Ripken Sr. Dad set the tone: A minor league baseball coach and manager, he always preached the importance of showing up everyday to work, developing positive relationships and practicing perfectly.
Here's classic Cal Sr.: After he and the four kids would finish shoveling their driveway following a heavy snow storm, writes Junior, the group would move to the sidewalks — and then to the neighbors' driveways. Dad was often on the road coaching, and knew that a favor to his neighbors in the winter would be repaid during the summer when he was away.
After retiring, Ripken Jr. was bombarded with requests to lecture on the merits of persistence. (Get In The Game is an extension of the speech he wrote for the appearances.) But Ripken is more about action, not talk.
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