Roger Bresnahan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Roger Bresnahan | ||
|---|---|---|
| catcher, player-manager | ||
| Born: June 11, 1879 | ||
| Died: December 4, 1944 (aged 65) | ||
| Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
| MLB debut | ||
| August 27, 1897 for the Washington Senators |
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| Final game | ||
| October 3, 1915 for the Chicago Cubs |
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| Career statistics | ||
| Batting average | .279 | |
| Hits | 1252 | |
| Runs batted in | 530 | |
| Teams | ||
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As Player
As Manager
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| Career highlights and awards | ||
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| Member of the National | ||
| Elected | 1945 | |
| Election Method | Veteran's Committee | |
Roger Philip Bresnahan (June 11, 1879 – December 4, 1944), nicknamed "The Duke of Tralee" for his Irish roots[1], was an American player in Major League Baseball who starred primarily as a catcher and a player-manager.
He introduced the use of the catcher's shin guard in 1907[2] and was elected in 1945 to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Born in Toledo, Ohio, he began his major league career as a pitcher, throwing a six-hit shutout on August 27, 1897. However, he eventually moved to catcher (although he could play all nine positions), and was labeled one of the best at that position by managers John McGraw and Branch Rickey. Despite taunts by other players, he experimented with head and thigh protection gear which had been introduced by some college teams, and this led to the widespread use of more protection for catchers in the early 20th century.
Bresnahan played for the Washington Senators (1897), Chicago Orphans/Cubs (1900, 1913-15), Baltimore Orioles (1901-02), New York Giants (1902-08), St. Louis Cardinals (1909-12), and the Cubs again (1913-1915). In 1430 games, he had a batting average of .279 in 4480 at-bats.
Bresnahan had managed the Cardinals while playing for them, and the Cubs in 1915. His overall record was 328-432.
Bresnahan died of a heart attack at his home in Toledo at age 65, and was elected to the Hall of Fame the following year; decades later, Sabermetrician Bill James said it was an honor that Bresnahan did not deserve.[3]
Bresnahan was buried in Calvary (Roman Catholic) Cemetery in Toledo, Ohio.
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[edit] 1911 train wreck
On July 11, 1911, with the Cards only three games out of first place in early July, the team was involved in a train wreck while riding the Federal Express from Philadelphia to Boston.[4] Fourteen passengers were killed after the train derailed and plunged down an 18-foot (5.5 m) embankment outside Bridgeport, Connecticut.[4] None of the Cardinals were seriously injured, due to a fortuitous pre-trip change in the location of their Pullman car that Bresnahan had requested. The Cardinals helped remove bodies and rescue the injured.[4]
Despite posting their first winning season since 1901, the Cardinals never recovered from the incident, finishing a distant fifth.
[edit] Commemorations
Bresnahan was mentioned in the poem "Lineup for Yesterday" by Ogden Nash:
| Baseball Hall of Fame plaque | |
|---|---|
| Battery mate of Christy Mathewson with the New York Giants, he was one of the games most natural players and might have starred at any position. The "Duke of Tralee" was one of the few major league catchers fast enough to be used as a leadoff man | |
| Lineup for Yesterday | |
|---|---|
| B is for Bresnahan Back of the plate; The Cubs were his love, and McGraw his hate. |
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| — Ogden Nash, Sport magazine (January 1949)[5] | |
[edit] References
- ^ Have you heard of this Player; Nicknames and 18 from the Sporting News
- ^ Suehsdorf, A. D. (1978). The Great American Baseball Scrapbook, p. 36. Random House. ISBN 0-394-50253-1.
- ^ Bill James Answers All Your Baseball Questions, an April 2008 entry from the Freakonomics blog
- ^ a b c Tuesday, July 11th from BaseballLibrary.com
- ^ Baseball Almanac. Retrieved on 2008-01-23.
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[edit] External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference
- Major league career managerial statistics from Baseball-Reference
- baseballhalloffame.org – Hall of Fame biography page
- The Deadball Era

