Kiner made his major league debut on April 12, 1946, with the
Pittsburgh Pirates. He finished the season with 23 home runs, but 109 strikeouts. After the season, the Pirates convinced future Hall of Famer
Hank Greenberg not to retire. Greenberg gave Kiner hours of instruction, and in 1947, Kiner led the major leagues with 51 home runs while striking out fewer than 100 times. Many of Kiner's homers were hit into a shortened left-field and left-center-field porch at
Forbes Field (originally built for Greenberg and known in the press as "Greenberg Gardens"); the porch was retained for Kiner and redubbed "Kiner's Korner". Kiner would later use "
Kiner's Korner" as the title of his post-game TV show in New York. From 1947 to 1951, Kiner topped 40 home runs and 100 RBIs each season. Through 2011 he was one of seven major leaguers to have had at least four 30-HR, 100-RBI seasons in their first five years, along with
Chuck Klein,
Joe DiMaggio,
Ted Williams,
Mark Teixeira,
Albert Pujols,
Ryan Howard and
Ryan Braun. Kiner's string of seasons leading the league in
home runs reached seven in 1952, when he hit 37. This also was the last of a record six consecutive seasons in which he led Major League Baseball in home runs, all under the guidance of manager
Billy Meyer and Pirate great
Honus Wagner. He was selected to participate in the
All-Star Game in six straight seasons, 1948 to 1953. The equally famous "Home run hitters drive
Cadillacs and singles hitters drive
Fords," frequently misattributed to Kiner himself, was, by his own account, actually coined by teammate
Fritz Ostermueller. Footage of Kiner hitting a home run in Forbes Field can be seen in the 1951 film
Angels in the Outfield. On June 4, 1953, Kiner was sent to the
Chicago Cubs as part of a ten-player trade. The Pirates traded Kiner,
Joe Garagiola,
George Metkovich, and
Howie Pollet to the Cubs in exchange for
Bob Addis,
Toby Atwell,
George Freese,
Gene Hermanski,
Bob Schultz,
Preston Ward, and $150,000. This was largely due to continued salary disputes with Pirates general manager
Branch Rickey, who reportedly told Kiner, "We finished last with you, we can finish last without you." Kiner played the rest of 1953 and all of 1954 with the Cubs, finishing his career with the
Cleveland Indians in 1955. Cleveland finished second that year in Kiner's second and last season on a team that finished above .500, and Kiner batted .243 in 113 games with eighteen home runs. A back injury forced him to retire at the age of 32, finishing his career with 369 home runs, 1,015
runs batted in and a .279 lifetime
batting average. He hit better than .300 three times, with a career best .313 with the Pirates in 1947. ==Broadcasting career (1961–2013)==