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Bob Shawkey

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Win–loss record
  
196–150

Role
  
Baseball athlete

Name
  
Bob Shawkey

Strikeouts
  
1,360

Earned run average
  
3.10


Bob Shawkey wwwstevesteinbergnetphotospersonalitiesBobSha

Died
  
December 31, 1980, Syracuse, New York, United States

World Series 1926


James Robert Shawkey (December 4, 1890 – December 31, 1980) was an American baseball pitcher who played fifteen seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB). He played for the Philadelphia Athletics and New York Yankees from 1915 to 1927. He batted and threw right-handed and served primarily as a starting pitcher.

Contents

Bob Shawkey Bob Shawkey Society for American Baseball Research

Early life

Bob Shawkey Sailor Bob Shawkey And The Tiger Lady 1927 The Diary of Myles Thomas

Shawkey born to John William Shawkey and Sarah Catherine Anthony, in Sigel, Pennsylvania.

Professional career

Bob Shawkey Bob Shawkey

He moved from Slippery Rock State College to an independent league in 1911, then to the American League in 1912 as a pitcher for Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics. In 1915, Mack sold him to the New York Yankees where he remained (except for a brief service with the U.S. Navy during World War I when he served on the battleship Arkansas for eight months) until 1931. While facing his former team in 1919, he struck out 15 A's batters in a game, setting the Yankees team record for most strikeouts in a game; this record lasted for fifty-nine years.

Bob Shawkey Shawkey

At the start of the 1923 season, Shawkey was chosen to be the Yankees' Opening Day starting pitcher. Because the team's first game was at home, this also meant that he was the first player to pitch at the newly built Yankee Stadium. The Yankees won 4–1 behind Babe Ruth's three-run home run, with Shawkey pitching a complete game to become the first winning pitcher at the stadium.

Bob Shawkey Forgiving Forgetting And Bob Shawkeys 46Year Yankees Exile

Shawkey also served as the Yankees' manager in the 1930 season—following the sudden death of Miller Huggins—and guided the Yankees to a third-place finish.

Shawkey won 207 games in his career, and won 20 or more games in five different seasons (his high was 26). Shawkey is noted as the starting pitcher in the first game played in Yankee Stadium on April 18, 1923, and set the franchise record for 15 strikeouts in a single game, which stood until Whitey Ford broke it in the early 1960s. Bob credited his success to a super fastball and an outstanding curve ball. He later served as the baseball coach for Dartmouth College.

In 1970, Shawkey was inducted into the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame in Brookville, Pennsylvania. During the 1976 opening day festivities for the renovated Yankee Stadium, Shawkey threw out the ceremonial first pitch. He died at age 90 in Syracuse, New York on New Year's Eve 1980.

References

Bob Shawkey Wikipedia


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