Chuck Klein | |
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![]() Klein in 1936 | |
Right fielder | |
Born:(1904-10-07)October 7, 1904 Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S. | |
Died: March 28, 1958(1958-03-28) (aged 53) Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S. | |
Batted: Left Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | |
July 30, 1928, for the Philadelphia Phillies | |
Last MLB appearance | |
June 1, 1944, for the Philadelphia Phillies | |
MLB statistics | |
Batting average | .320 |
Hits | 2,076 |
Home runs | 300 |
Runs batted in | 1,201 |
Stats atBaseball Reference ![]() | |
Teams | |
Career highlights and awards | |
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Member of the National | |
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Induction | 1980 |
Vote | Veterans Committee |
Charles Herbert Klein (October 7, 1904 – March 28, 1958), nicknamed "the Hoosier Hammer" because of his Indiana roots, was anAmerican professionalbaseballoutfielder. Klein played inMajor League Baseball (MLB) for thePhiladelphia Phillies (1928–1933,1936–1939,1940–1944),Chicago Cubs (1934–1936), andPittsburgh Pirates (1939).
Klein led theNational League (NL) in home runs four times, and won theNL Most Valuable Player Award in 1932.[1][2] In 1933 he became one of six (at the time) NL players to win a battingTriple Crown. In 1930 he set theNL record forextra-base hits with 107. On July 10, 1936, he hit four home runs in a game, becoming the fourth player to do so.[3] He was the first player to be selected to theAll-Star Game as a member of two different teams (Phillies and Cubs). Klein was elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame in1980.[4]
Klein was born inIndianapolis,Indiana, on October 7, 1904, the son of immigrant farmers Frank and Margaret Klein.[5] After finishing high school atSouthport High School, he began working at asteel mill[6] instead of attending college due to his poor grades at school. As a result, Klein’s talents were not noticed by the major league clubs until his early 20s.[7] He was picked up by a semi-pro team and played for them for a few years earning $200 a week (equivalent to $3,620 in 2024).[7] TheSt. Louis Cardinals noticed his talent and signed him to a minor-league contract. Within a year, he worked his way up to the Cardinals' farm team inFort Wayne, which played in the Class BCentral League (roughly equivalent to today's Double-A).
After hitting 26 homers in 88 games in 1928, Klein was slated to be called up to St. Louis midway through the season. However,Baseball CommissionerKenesaw Mountain Landis discovered that the Cardinals owned a team inDayton, Ohio, that also played in the Central League with Fort Wayne. Landis ordered the Cardinals to sell off the Fort Wayne team and give up the rights to its players. The Phillies purchased Klein's contract for a sum of $5,000[8] (equivalent to $91,560 in 2024) and in the process outbid theNew York Yankees for Klein's services. Klein joined the Phillies in July.
Klein hit .356 in 1929, his first full season, and won the NLhome run title. In the middle of the season, the Phillies added a 15-foot screen on top of the short right-field wall ofBaker Bowl. The timing was peculiar as Klein was coming off of a torrid July where he hit 14 home runs,[9] and was making a run at the home run record. However,William Baker, the Phillies' notoriously miserly owner, defended the addition of the screen, stating, "a number of accidents happen[ing] on Broad street owing to the balls going over the fence and hitting pedestrians, also damaging automobiles, breaking windshields, etc."[10] For the remainder of the season, due to the new height of the right field wall, Klein only hit 4 home runs in the 25 games he played at Baker Bowl after August 1st.[9] In those 25 home games however, he hit 12 doubles.[9] On the last day of the season, the Phillies played a doubleheader against theNew York Giants. The Giants' star slugger,Mel Ott, was tied with Klein for the lead with 42. In the first game, Klein homered to put him one ahead of Ott, who was held to a single. In the second game, the Phillies' pitcherswalked Ott five straight times, including once with the bases loaded. Early in the 1930 season before their season debut with the Giants, New York press acknowledged that Klein's home run record was tainted, because of what happened with Ott in the last game the previous season. "He calls me the pop fly home run champ." Klein said in referring to Ott. "Say, I can hit a ball farther with one hand than that little runt can with two. Bring on those Giants. I'll eat them up!"[11]
In 1930, Klein enjoyed one of the best offensive years in baseball history, batting .386 with 250hits and 158runs scored,[1] all career highs. He also set career bests and still-standing Phillies records with 59doubles, 170runs batted in (RBI), a .687slugging percentage and 445total bases. No player has had as many total bases in a season since. His 107extra-base hits that year are a National League record, tied byBarry Bonds in 2001.[12] Along with his batting prowess, Klein was also a good defensiveright fielder; he is tenth on the all-time list for assists for a right fielder.[13] 1930 marked the second straight season where Klein had collected at least 200 hits, along with his hitting records he set the single season mark for assists by a right fielder with 44.[14][15] This is due to the height that was added to the right field wall in 1929 which caused more balls to fall in right field.[16] On July 1, 1931, in a game against the Chicago Cubs, Kleinhit for the cycle, going 4-for-5 with five RBI.[17] At the end of the season, he led the National League in runs scored with 121 and RBI with 121. He also led the league in home runs for the second time in his career with 31,[15] and amassed at least 200 hits for the third season in a row.
After the 1932 season, Klein was awarded the National League MVP award. During the season, he led the league in home runs for the third time, as well as hits and runs scored,[1] he also became the first player in the live-ball era to lead the league in both home runs andstolen bases.[15] No player since has led the league in both categories in the same year. He finished the season with 226 hits, marking the fourth year in a row that he exceeded the 200 hit mark. On May 26, 1933, the Phillies lost a 14 inning game to theSt. Louis Cardinals,[18] during this game Klein hit for the cycle for the second time in his career.[15] OnJuly 6, 1933, he became the first Phillies player ever to bat in anAll-Star Game after receiving a majority of the fans’ votes.[19] At the end of the season, he became the fourth NL player since 1901 to win theTriple Crown with a batting average of .368, and led the NL in home runs with 28 and RBI with 120.[19][1] At the end of the season, due in part toCarl Hubbell's brilliant pitching season, and the Giants winning the1933 World Series, Klein finished second in MVP voting behind Hubbell.
Chuck Klein was honored alongside theretired numbers of thePhiladelphia Phillies in 2001. |
On November 21, 1933 Klein was traded to the Cubs for $65,000 (equivalent to $1,578,882 in 2024) and three other players,[1][20][12] Klein hit 20 and 21 home runs in his two full seasons with the Cubs (1934, 1935) and batted .301 and .293 in those seasons respectively. As good as those numbers were, they were nowhere near what Klein had posted in Philadelphia, leading to claims that he would not have hit nearly as many homers had he not played in notoriously hitter-friendly Baker Bowl. The Phillies reacquired him on May 21, 1936. OnJuly 10, 1936, in the spaciousForbes Field, against the 42-34 Pirates, Klein became the first NL player to hitfour home runs in a game in the 20th century, and only the 4th player in major league history to accomplish the feat. His fourth home run that game was a leadoff home run in the top of the tenth inning, the Phillies scored 2 more runs to win the game 9-6 after ten innings.[21][22]
Klein went to the Pirates during the 1939 season, but was back in Philadelphia in 1940 for what proved to be his last year as a regular player. From 1941 onward, he never played in more than 50 games in a season, and was often used as apinch hitter. In his last eight seasons, from 1937 to 1944, he averaged 69 games played, batted .253 and hit 43 home runs.[1] He retired midway through the 1944 season after getting one hit in sevenat-bats.
After retiring, he owned and operated a bar inKensington, Philadelphia, until 1947.[12] He endured some difficult financial times, largely due to a drinking problem. He would later suffer a stroke which left one leg paralyzed. By 1947, Klein was living with his brother, and his wife inIndianapolis, Indiana.[12] He died there in 1958.[23]
In his 17-year major league career, Klein played in 1,753 games, batted .320, with 1,201 RBI, 1,168runs, 2,076hits, 398doubles, 74 triples, 300 home runs, .379on-base percentage, .543 slugging percentage, and an OPS of .922. Klein was known for exploiting the Phillies home park, theBaker Bowl, and its short right field wall.[24] In his career he hit for a .395 average and slugged 164 home runs in only 581 career games at the Baker Bowl.[25] Klein recorded five five-hit games, 36 four-hit games in his career and 28 multi-home run games.
After never receiving more than 28% on the ballot, a campaign was started to get Klein elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame via theVeterans Committee.[26] He was elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame in 1980 via the Veterans Committee.Richard Nixon listed Klein on his all-time baseball team.[26] In 1999, he ranked number 92 onThe Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players,[27] and was a nominee for theMajor League Baseball All-Century Team.
As with another Philadelphia legend from the pre-numbers era of baseball,Grover Cleveland Alexander, the Phillies simply honored Klein with his name and an Old English-style "P" where a retired uniform number would go on the outfield wall ofVeterans Stadium. The Phillies began using numbers in 1932, and in that season and 1933, Klein wore number 3. He was then traded to theChicago Cubs, and when he returned to the Phillies in 1936, he wore 32 (later retired by the Phillies forSteve Carlton), and soon switched to 36 (later retired by the Phillies forRobin Roberts) for that season and 1937. In 1938, he wore number 1 (later retired by the Phillies forRichie Ashburn), wore 26 and then 14 (later retired by the Phillies forJim Bunning) in 1939, wore 29 in 1940 and 1941, 3 again in 1942, 8 in 1943 and 26 again in 1944, his last major league season.[28]
Awards and achievements | ||
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Preceded by | Hitting for the cycle July 1, 1931 May 26, 1933 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by | National LeagueTriple Crown 1933 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by | Batters with 4 home runs in one game July 10, 1936 | Succeeded by |