Harry Steinfeldt
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Harry Steinfeldt | ||
|---|---|---|
| Third Baseman | ||
| Born: September 29, 1877 St. Louis, Missouri |
||
| Died: August 17, 1914 (aged 36) Bellevue, Kentucky |
||
| Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
| MLB debut | ||
| April 22, 1898 for the Cincinnati Reds |
||
| Final game | ||
| July 1, 1911 for the Boston Rustlers |
||
| Career statistics | ||
| Batting average | .267 | |
| Hits | 1576 | |
| Runs batted in | 762 | |
| Teams | ||
|
||
| Career highlights and awards | ||
|
||
Harry M. Steinfeldt (September 29, 1877 - August 17, 1914) was a third baseman in Major League Baseball who played for the Cincinnati Reds (1898-1905), Chicago Cubs (1906-10) and Boston Rustlers (1911). Steinfeldt batted and threw right handed. He was born in St. Louis, Missouri.
In a 14-season career, Steinfeldt was a .267 hitter with 27 home runs and 762 RBI in 1646 games played.
Steinfeldt died in Bellevue, Kentucky, at age of 36.
Contents |
[edit] Highlights
- Led National League in hits (1906/176)
- Led NL in RBIs (1906/83)
- Led NL in doubles (1903/32)
- Set a major league record with three sacrifice flies (1909)
- In 1906 finished second in the NL batting race with a .327 average, behind Honus Wagner (.339) and over Harry Lumley (.324)
[edit] Best season
- 1906: Hit a career-high .312 with 29 stolen bases and led the National League with 83 RBIs and 176 hits to lead the Cubs to their first World Series.
[edit] Postseason appearances
[edit] Fact
- Steinfield is the only member of the Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance infield left out of Franklin Pierce Adams' famous poem Baseball's Sad Lexicon.
[edit] Quotation
- The only member of the Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance infield left out of Franklin P. Adams's poem, Steinfeldt was a reliable third baseman with an unusually powerful arm. He originally hoped for a theatre|theatrical career but did so well in a baseball game put on by his touring troupe that he switched to the diamond. – Jack Kavanagh, sports historian and writer
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
| Preceded by Cy Seymour |
National League RBI Champion 1906 (with Jim Nealon) |
Succeeded by Sherry Magee |
|
|||||
|
|||||

