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Charlie Hollocher

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Batting average
  
.304

Role
  
Baseball player

Name
  
Charlie Hollocher

Hits
  
894

Home runs
  
3


Charlie Hollocher httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
August 14, 1940, Frontenac, Missouri, United States

Charlie hollocher top 5 facts


Charles Jacob "Charlie" Hollocher (June 11, 1896 – August 14, 1940) was a professional baseball player who was a shortstop in Major League Baseball.

Contents

Charlie Hollocher File1920 Charlie Hollocherjpeg Wikimedia Commons

Biography

Charlie Hollocher Charlie Hollocher They Played the Game

Born in St. Louis, Hollocher was a shortstop for the Chicago Cubs from 1918 to 1924. His cousin Bob Klinger was also a Major League Baseball player.

Hollocher helped the Cubs win the National League pennant in 1918. (In that year the professional baseball season was prematurely curtailed due to World War I.) That season he led the National League in games (131), at bats (509), hits (161), total bases (202), singles (130) and runs created (76, although this statistic was a retroactive metric).

In 1922 he led the National League in at bats per strikeout (118.4), which to this day remains the Cubs' single season record. His five strikeouts for the entire season remains the National League record by a player with a minimum of 150 games.

Hollocher left the Cubs in August 1923 due to depression, apparently linked to an undiagnosed intestinal disorder. He tried a comeback in 1924, but was unable to complete the season.

He killed himself in Frontenac, Missouri, on August 14, 1940, when he shot himself in the throat. He had suffered from depression most of his adult life.

References

Charlie Hollocher Wikipedia