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Why I love this game II...

PostPosted: Sun Dec 09, 2012 9:27 am
by drfreeze49
George Bradley

Bradley threw the first official no-hit, no-run game in major league history. He pitched for the St. Louis Brown Stockings in the club's victory over the Hartford Dark Blues on July 15, 1876. The score ended 2-0 without a hit being allowed by Bradley. That year, he completed 63 of St. Louis' 64 games, winning 45 and leading the league with a 1.23 earned run average. He also threw 16 shutouts, setting a record that has not been broken.

Babe Herman

Herman was an outstanding hitter, but a markedly below-average fielder who led the NL in errors in 1927 as a first baseman and in each of the next two years playing in right field. Fresco Thompson, a 1931 teammate, observed: "He wore a glove for one reason: because it was a league custom." Herman developed a self-deprecating attitude about his shortcomings; when informed by a local bank that someone had been impersonating him and cashing bad checks, he said, "Hit him a few flyballs. If he catches any, it ain't me." His style of play, along with that of the entire team, led to Brooklyn being dubbed "The Daffiness Boys," with sportswriter Frank Graham noting, "They were not normally of a clownish nature, and some of them were very good ballplayers, indeed, but they were overcome by the atmosphere in which they found themselves as soon as they had put on Brooklyn uniforms."

Wild Bill Wright

Got his nickname for his control problems as a young pitcher. Wright played in the Mexican league he stayed in Mexico after retiring, opening a restaurant in Aguascalientes ("Bill Wright's Dugout").

Charlie Keller

Following his retirement as a player, Keller founded Yankeeland Farm[ and had a successful career as a horse breeder – pacers and trotters – near his hometown of Middletown, Maryland. He named many of his horses after the franchises he played for: Fresh Yankee, Handsome Yankee, Yankee Slugger and Guy Yankee. He also benefited by owning syndicated shares of several stallions, which entitled him to free stud fees..

Goose Goslin

Goslin’s difficulty in judging fly balls contributed to his nickname "Goose." Opposing players said Goslin resembled a bird flapping its wings when he ran after a ball with his arms waving. While not a great fielder, Goslin did have a good throwing arm, leading the American League in assists by an outfielder in 1924 and 1925. However, one year during spring training, Goslin wandered to an adjacent field where a track and field team was working out. Goslin tried the shot put, and his throwing arm was never the same afterward.

Re: Why I love this game II...

PostPosted: Sun Dec 09, 2012 9:41 am
by Musial6
I'll be using George Bradley in your Original Franchise Theme League. Hopefully he'll do half as good as that phenominal 1876
season of what was the predecessors to eventually the Cardinal franchise. I was also unaware that Cy Young pitched for the same franchise (your Redlegs will be seeing a lot of both of them - Bradley and Young).