MONDAY — 17-Jul
Q. Which
future Hall of Famer’s debut was one game at third base for the Dodgers before two
years of military service?
Hint: #1
He once led the league in strikeouts, but never reached triple digits in
strikeouts in any of his eighteen seasons.
Hint: #2
He is the only player to win a Gold Glove award for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
- Ans. Hodges
had a decent day: 1 BB, 1 SB, 2E &
started a DP.
- #1 Struck
out 99 X in 1951 while leading MLB in G at 158. [ …tied
with teammate Carl Furillo and3 ALers.]
- #2 Won
the 1957 NL GG at 1st base, the 1st ever awarded at that
position in either league. He won it again
in 1958.
FCR - Tom
Veal, Spanaway, Washington
Incorrect guesses: Billy Cox, Dolph Camilli, Duke Snider, Jim
Gilliam, Pee Wee Reese, Carl Furillo,
Roy Campanella, Dazzy Vance
TUESDAY — 18-Jul
Q. Who was the first
second baseman to homer twice in one inning?
Hint: #1 When he retired, his career fielding
average at second base was the highest in MLB history.
Hint: #2 His wife once
complimented the immortal Nap Lajoie on being named the best second sacker of
all-time. Lajoie humbly replied: “The
greatest second baseman was your husband.”
A. BOBBY LOWE [SABR Bio]
- Ans. Those 2 HR were matched by 2 more in the game. Lowe is the first ever to hit 4 HR in a major
league G. All 4 were over the fence.
- #1 He retired in 1907 with a career fielding average of .951 at
second base.
- #2 Lowe’s wife Harriet was no doubt pleased to
hear it from such a source.
FCR - DeLodovico, Rockville, Maryland
Incorrect guesses: Eddie
Collins, Rogers Hornsby, Charlie Gehringer, Bill Regan, Ron Cey
WEDNESDAY — 19-Jul
Q. Who was the first
player to be named League Championship Series Most Valuable Player?
Hint: #1 He is
reputed to be the co-inventor of the “high five” greeting.
Hint: #2 He was the
last batter of Nolan Ryan’s fifth no-hitter.
- Ans. He had a 1.295 OPS in the 1977 NLCS.
- #1 Baker & Glenn Burke are said to have
invented the gesture simultaneously and
spontaneously on 02-Oct-1977. The
American League did not begin naming an MVP for its LCS until 1980.
- #2 Baker succumbed to Ryan’s heater 26-Sep-1981 when he grounded out
for the 27th out.
FCR - Dan Greder, Ames, Iowa
Incorrect guesses: Mike
Marshall
THURSDAY — 20-Jul
Q. Who
won a National League batting title with an average of .440?
Hint: #1
His first manager, unimpressed with this guy‘s height, snorted, “We
already have a bat boy.”
Hint: #2
He is the all-time Players League record holder for plate appearances, at
bats and runs scored.
A. HUGH DUFFY [SABR Bio]
-
Ans. Several factors contributed
to his outstanding hitting in 1894. 4
additional players finished with averages above .400 & the next 5 were .371
& above!
-
#1 His manager, Cap Anson, soon
came to realize the talent Duffy had, his 5'7" stature
notwithstanding.
-
#2 The Players League lasted only
one season, 1890. Duffy dominated in
plate appearances (657), at bats (596); &
runs (161). He also led
the Players league in G played (137) & hits (191)
FCR - John
Rickert, Terre Haute, Indiana
Incorrect guesses: Hugh
Kelly, Nap Lajoie, Wee Willie
Keeler, Tip O’Neill, John Montgomery Ward, Hugh Jennings
FRIDAY— 21-Jul
Q. Whose
reputations for speed and sobriety are the salient reasons his time in the
majors outlasted his mediocre performance?
Hint: #1
His favorite drink in public was sarsaparilla?
Hint: #2
In the days before radio, [he]
was the most successful evangelist America had ever known.
-
Ans. His Hall of Fame manager,
Cap Anson was enamored of those two of Sunday’s traits. He was not a terrible player. Thrice he had double-digits in doubles. Still, his 8 seasons in the majors produced
only a 3.0 WAR.
-
#1 In his autobiography he wrote: “I never drank much. I was never drunk but four times in my life. I never drank whisky or beer; I never liked
either. I drank wine.” When he went “to the saloons” with his
teammates, “I would take lemonade or sarsaparilla.”
-
#2 Players & fans alike were
attracted to him & felt he had been called to preach the word of God. The reference is his SABR biography.
FCR - Mark Hayne, Dumfries, Virginia
Incorrect guesses: Branch Ricky
SATURDAY — 22-Jul
Q. Who was the first major leaguer to hit
three home runs in a single game?
Hint: #1
Until passed by the mid-1970s
Dodgers, he was a part of the infield that played together the longest.
Hint: #2
A teammate of his, a
well-known Hall of Famer, once tabbed
him as the all-time best third baseman.
A. ED [Ned] WILLIAMSON [Wiki Bio]
-
Ans. Williamson stroked his trio
of round trippers on 30-May-1884. Check out the rare ancient film footage of
his feat here. (A new shorter fence was quite helpful.
-
#1 The Chicago White
Stockings of 1883 started out with Mgr. Cap Anson at 1B, Fred Pfeffer at 2B, Tom Burns at SS & Williamson at 3B. In 1886 Burns shifted to 3B & Williamson to
SS, keeping their quartet intact.
-
#2 Williamson & Cap Anson
were teammates for 11 seasons on the Chicago White Stockings. The Hall of Famer hit .343 with 67 HR &
1,001 RBI over that period. Williamson
went .260, 61, 622. Cap hailed Ned, a
more than competent fielder, as “the greatest all-around ball player the
country ever saw.” [Very difficult to
disprove.]
FCR - Rick
Tharp, Gaithersburg, Maryland
Incorrect guesses: Pie Traynor, Frank Baker, Jimmy Colins, Harry
Steinfeldt, John McGraw, Eddie Mathews, Fred Lindstrom, Ross Barnes, Ed Williamson
WEEKEND BONUS — 22-Jul
Q. Who is the only member of the Hall of
Fame with a career pitching Win-Loss percentage of .000 (minimum 5
decisions)?
Hint: #1
His claim to be the developer of a game strategy has been disputed.
Hint: #2
He was once involved in the first and third outs of a triple play.
A. TOMMY McCARTHY [SABR Bio]
-
Ans. McCarthy split the early part of his major league time between
the mound & outfield. His 0-8 pitching
W-L record is the worst among the 8 Hall
of Famers who pitched and got
decisions but without winning a single game.
Of those not in the Hall but with similar credentials, 70 qualify.
-
#1 John Montgomery Ward contended that he & teammate Hugh
Duffy were the first to innovate the hit-and-run play, which they used to great
advantage with Duffy batting behind the mercurial McCarthy. John McGraw claimed that the play was first
used in Baltimore, before McCarthy/Duffy. Cap Anson joined the debate, saying that the
stratagem had been pioneered by his White Stockings, well before the time
asserted by McCarthy/Duffy. (One senses
apathy rising among researchers.)
-
#2 He started the TP on 15-Aug-1894 with a purposeful non-catch
in center field, threw to the infield to complete a more traditional DP, then
sprinted home to cover the vacant plate & there made the 3rd out
by tagging the runner coming in from second.
FCR - Eric
Harrington, Suffield, Connecticut
Incorrect guesses: Cap Anson, Casey Stengel, Tommy Lasorda, Jim
O'Rourke, Albert Spaulding, Tris Speaker
SUNDAY — 23-Jul
Q. About
which Baltimore Oriole was Casey Stengel speaking when he tossed a barb at Brooks Robinson,
saying, “You’re the second greatest third baseman of all time!”?
Hint:
#1 His hitting was seldom in the headlines, but he and a couple
of Pittsburgh Pirate teammates made home run history one afternoon.
Hint:
#2 He was from a large family and came
home before his first tryout was finished because he said he was lonely and
homesick.
- Ans. I’d
like to think Stengel meant chronologically.
(He didn’t.) Cox’s last season in
the majors was in 1955 w/BAL. That
was Brooks Robinson’s first year there.
Their combined WAR was -0.1 & together they didn’t play as many games
as Wayne Causey, the teams regular 3rd baseman that year.
- #1 On 16-Aug-1947, for 1st time in baseball history, 3 teammates
each hit multiple home runs in the same G. Ralph Kiner had 3, Hank Greenberg 2 & Cox
had a brace of them that day & hit 15 for the year, his career high for one
season.
- #2 Cox
was part of a family of 9, including 2 brothers & 4 sisters.
FCR - Mark DeLodovico, Rockville, Maryland
Incorrect
guesses: Pie Traynor, John McGraw, Clete
Boyer, George Kell, Ken Boyer
SUNDAY
EXTRA — 23-Jul
Q. Which player is credited with the idea of
having more than one umpire work major league games?
Hint:
#1 His book was one of the earliest
available to the public on how the game is played.
Hint:
#2 He was called the mortar of baseball’s “Stonewall Infield”.
A. FRED
PFEFFER
[Wiki
Bio]
- Ans. It
seems to have caught on.
- #1 As Pfeffer explained, his “Scientific Ball” was "written for those who would play base ball to win, and for
those who would fully enjoy winning play."
- #2 The
Chicago White Stockings’ famed infield of the 1880s had Cap Anson at
1st base, Pfeffer at 2nd, Tommy Burns at SS & Ed
Williamson at 3rd. It was the
most celebrated quartet of its day, an unbeatable combination for the Chicago NL
pennant winners of 1885 & 1886.
FCR - Joe O’Neill, London, Ontario
Incorrect
guesses: Cap Anson, Tom Burns, Johnny
Evers, Henry Chadwick
WEEK’S
FINALE
— 23-Jul
Q. Who
came to regret his antics after hitting a walk-off grand slam off of a future
Hall of Famer?
Hint:
#1 He may very well have stolen more
strikes than any catcher of his era.
Hint:
#2 Norman Rockwell included him in “The
Rookie”.
A. SAMMY
WHITE
[SABR Bio]
- Ans. Turning
a 2-run deficit into a walk-off on 11-June-1952
with his 9th inning slam over the Green Monster off of Satchel
Paige, rookie White took it too far by crawling halfway home from 3rd
base & planting a kiss on home plate. White explains, “I was struggling like a dog
to make the club and I was mighty thrilled with the home run. I remember that by the time I got to third the
tension was too much. But that’s still
no excuse for crawling home.”
- #1 White’s
ability to frame pitches to induce strike call was a well-honed art. It was said, “[White] could catch a ball with
his palm, heel down, no more than two inches off the ground. Umpires might call it a strike calculating
that no ball that low could be caught that way.”
- #2 Rockwell was a fan and
baseball was a frequent
theme in his art. In the March 2,
1957 cover of The Saturday Evening Post (The original
sold at auction for $22.5M in 2014.), White can be seen in the foreground
seated at far left, wearing his catcher's mitt.
FCR - Bill
Henry, East Greenwich, Rhode Island
Incorrect
guesses: Pie Traynor, Freddy Leach, Gabby
Hartnett
WEEK’S THEME – Each of
these 10 players had 3 plate appearances in 1 MLB inning. [There are an additional 17 who are not mentioned
here.]
Player Date Inning Result WAR
Baker.................... 20-Sep-1972.............. 2nd............ 2B, HR, G6 ......................... 37.0
Cox....................... 21-May-1952.............. 1st............. G5, H, HBP ......................... 10.1
Duffy..................... 18-Jun-1894.............. 1st............. HBB, HR, BB ...................... 43.1
Hodges.................. 21-May-1952.............. 1st............. BB, BB,F5 ........................ . 43.8
Lowe..................... 18-Jun-1894.............. 1st............. 1B, HBP, 1B ............................ 20.3
McCarthy............... 18-Jun-1884.............. 1st............ 2B, BB, FC .............................. 14.6
Pfeffer.................. 06-Sep-1883.............. 7th............. 1B, HBP, 1B.............................. 26.6
Sunday.................. 06-Sep-1883.............. 1st............. B, HBP, 1B ............................... 3.0
White.................... 18-Jun-1953.............. 7th............. 1B, HBP, 1B ............................... 1.8
Williamson............ 06-Sep-1883.............. 7th............. 2B,
1B, 1B ............................... 35.7
First
Correct Respondent identifying theme – Joe Cohen, Holden, Massachusetts
(After Baker)
Incorrect theme guesses:
Mon - Seven youngest players to hit exactly four home runs in a game
Tues - Players with 17 or more total bases in a game
If you know
someone who would enjoy receiving daily Horsehide Trivia questions, Have them
start by clicking here.
Click here to see this
week’s quiz (and all previous weeks’ quizzes):
http://horsehidetriviA. blogspot.com/
Horsehide Trivia encourages
independent research. ⚾️