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Dave Hoskins

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Win-Loss record
  
9–4

Role
  
Baseball player

Name
  
Dave Hoskins

Innings pitched
  
139⅓

Earned run average
  
3.81


Dave Hoskins oakcliffadvocatemagcomwpcontentuploads20150

Died
  
April 2, 1970, Flint, Michigan, United States

David Taylor Hoskins (August 3, 1925 – April 2, 1970) was an American professional baseball player: a right-handed pitcher who appeared in 26 games for the Cleveland Indians of Major League Baseball during the 1953 season and 14 games during the 1954 campaign.

Dave Hoskins Dave Hoskins First Black Texas Leaguer 1952 The Pecan Park Eagle

Hoskins was the first African American to play in the minor league Texas League, pitching for the Double-A Dallas Eagles in 1952. He faced much the same kind of hostility that Jackie Robinson did when he first broke into the majors five years earlier. Though players loved him, some fans cursed and taunted him, especially outside Dallas. At first, he was not allowed to play in Shreveport when the Eagles traveled there to play the Shreveport Sports.

Dave Hoskins Dave Hoskins Society for American Baseball Research

Hoskins won 22 games for the Dallas Eagles in 1952 with a 2.12 earned run average. The pitcher made the All-Star team and also hit .328, an outstanding average for a pitcher. Six years later, he won 17 more games for the renamed Dallas Rangers in the same circuit.

Hoskins made the big-league Indians in 1953, going 9-3 with a 3.99 ERA. The following year, he had an ERA of 3.04, as the Indians won the American League pennant. But he developed a sore arm and would not return to the Major League again.

Hoskins' professional career began in the Negro Leagues and continued from 1949 to 1960 in minor and Major League baseball. In 139⅓ Major League innings, Hoskins allowed 131 hits and 48 bases on balls. He struck out 64.

References

Dave Hoskins Wikipedia


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