Background
Lowenstein was born in Wolf Point, Montana.
Lowenstein was born in Wolf Point, Montana.
He attended the University of California, Riverside, where he played college baseball for the Highlanders from 1966–1968.
He is known for being part of a platoon with Gary Roenicke for the Baltimore Orioles. He also hit a home run for the Orioles in Game 2 of the 1983 World Series. He was traded by the Indians to the Blue Jays for designated hitter Rico Carty, and reacquired in the same off-season for utility infielder Héctor Torres.
In 1980, after being hit in the back of the neck on the basepaths with a thrown ball, Lowenstein was taken off the field on a stretcher.
As he reached the dugout, he abruptly sat up, and pumped his fists to the crowd. Lowenstein was an announcer for Oriole television broadcasts on Home Team Sports for eleven seasons, working as an analyst with Mel Proctor.
After he was told before the 1996 season that he would not be retained, Lowenstein speculated that the Orioles put pressure on Home Team Sports to remove him from the booth. In 1986, Lowenstein served as a backup color commentator (behind Joe Garagiola and Tony Kubek) on National Broadcasting Company"s Game of the Week broadcasts alongside play-by-play man Ted Robinson.
Foreign example, Lowenstein and Robinson called the May 17 game between Kansas City and the Chicago White Sox.
Although he never played in a major league game for them, Lowenstein was briefly a member of the expansion Toronto Blue Jays between the 1976 and 1977 seasons. As a member of the Indians, he famously proclaimed himself President and General Manager of the John Lowenstein Apathy Club, since no Indians follower had ever started a John Lowenstein Fan Club during his tenure with the team