Sneha Girap (Editor)

Jigger Statz

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Batting average
  
.285

Role
  
Baseball player

Name
  
Jigger Statz

Runs batted in
  
215

Home runs
  
17


Jigger Statz bioprojsabrorgbpftpimages4StatzJiggerjpg

Died
  
March 16, 1988, Corona del Mar, Newport Beach, California, United States

Root broadcasters surprised jigger statz is an answer to a trivia question


Arnold John "Jigger" Statz (October 20, 1897 – March 16, 1988) was an American Major League Baseball outfielder who also had a lengthy minor league career. He is one of only eight players (along with Pete Rose, Ty Cobb, Julio Franco, Hank Aaron, Derek Jeter, Ichiro Suzuki, and Stan Musial) known to have amassed at least 4,000 combined hits in the major leagues and minor leagues. Jake Beckley and Sam Crawford may also have hit 4,000, but data for some of their minor league seasons are missing.

Jigger Statz Jigger Statz Baseballs Longest and Best Center Fielder The

Statz attended Holy Cross College in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he moved from Illinois along with his parents at an early age. He played baseball for two years at Holy Cross before enlisting in the U. S. Navy during World War I. Though he signed with the Giants in 1919, Statz continued his studies at Holy Cross and graduated with his class in 1921.

Jigger Statz Jigger Statz Baseballs Longest and Best Center Fielder The

Jigger Statz played in the major leagues during eight seasons from 1919 to 1928 for the Chicago Cubs, New York Giants, Boston Red Sox, and Brooklyn Robins. His best season was in 1923 with the Cubs, when he played in all 154 games, compiling a .319 batting average, with 10 home runs and 70 runs batted in.

Statz also played 18 minor league seasons, all of them for the Los Angeles Angels of the Pacific Coast League. In an era when many players had lengthy minor league careers, Jigger Statz's statistics surpassed those of his contemporaries, e.g. a grand total of 4,093 major and minor league hits, and a total number of games played which was exceeded only by Pete Rose.

Statz had a distinguished career in the Pacific Coast League. He holds the PCL records for games played (2790), hits (3356), doubles (597), triples (136), and runs scored (1996). His career PCL batting average was .315. The year after his playing career ended, he was a member of the first group of players elected to the Pacific Coast League Hall of Fame.

Statz managed for five years in the minor leagues. He was the Angels' player-manager during 1940-41-42, and managed the Visalia Cubs of the California League in 1948-49.

Jigger Statz played himself in the 1929 Paramount film, Fast Company, and in 1952 served as a technical advisor for The Winning Team, a fictionalized Warner Bros. biography of Grover Cleveland Alexander which starred Ronald Reagan.

References

Jigger Statz Wikipedia