Batting average .263 Role German television series Number of seasons 7 Home runs 2 Number of episodes 42 | Runs batted in 47 Cast Gregor Weber Name Heinz Becker Network Westdeutscher Rundfunk | |
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Similar Becker, Willkommen bei Carm, Tatort | ||
Final episode date March 12, 2004 First episode date March 23, 1992 |
Gerd dudenh ffer spielt heinz becker kosmopolit 1v2
Heinz Reinhard Becker (August 26, 1915 – November 11, 1991) was a Major League Baseball first baseman who played for the Chicago Cubs (1943, 1945–46) and Cleveland Indians (1946–47). Born in Berlin, Germany, he was one of only 27 German-born players in MLB history as of 2010.
Contents
- Gerd dudenh ffer spielt heinz becker kosmopolit 1v2
- Gerd dudenh ffer spielt heinz becker kosmopolit 2v2
- Career
- Legacy
- References

Gerd dudenh ffer spielt heinz becker kosmopolit 2v2
Career
Becker may be best known for being a key reserve on the 1945 Chicago Cubs, the last Cubs team to win a National League pennant until 2016. He got into 67 games and hit .286 with two home runs, 27 runs batted in, and 25 runs scored. He played solid defense, making no errors in 28 appearances at first base. In the 1945 World Series he made three appearances as a pinch hitter, going 1-for-2 with a walk. His hit was a single against winning pitcher Dizzy Trout in Game 4.
He was traded by the Cubs to the Cleveland Indians for first baseman Mickey Rocco and cash on June 26, 1946 and hit .299 in 59 games that season. He was released by Cleveland on May 14, 1947. He signed with the Boston Braves two days later, but never again appeared in a major league game.
Career totals include 152 games played, 92 hits, 2 HR, 47 RBI, 45 runs scored, and a lifetime batting average of .263. His on-base percentage was .359, and he had a slugging percentage of .346. He had a lifetime fielding percentage of .994 in 90 appearances at first base and participated in 64 double plays.
Legacy
Becker died at the age of 76 in Dallas, Texas.
Becker had problems with his feet during his playing career, earning him the nickname "Bunions". He was referenced in Chicago columnist Mike Royko's annual Cubs quiz on April 18, 1968:
Q: Which of these two players always had sore feet? Heinz Becker or the immortal Dominic Dallessandro?A: Becker had sore feet. Dallessandro had tiny feet. It used to take him twenty jumps to get out of the dugout.