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Bill Dahlen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American baseball player (1870–1950)

Baseball player
Bill Dahlen
Dahlen,c. 1908
Shortstop /Manager
Born:(1870-01-05)January 5, 1870
Nelliston, New York, U.S.
Died: December 5, 1950(1950-12-05) (aged 80)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 22, 1891, for the Chicago Colts
Last MLB appearance
October 12, 1911, for the Brooklyn Dodgers
MLB statistics
Batting average.272
Hits2,461
Home runs84
Runs batted in1,234
Stolen bases548
Managerial record251–355–9
Winning %.414
Stats atBaseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams
As player

As manager

Career highlights and awards

William Frederick Dahlen (January 5, 1870 – December 5, 1950), nicknamed "Bad Bill",[1] was an Americanshortstop andmanager inMajor League Baseball who played for fourNational League teams from1891 to1911. After twicebatting over .350 for theChicago Colts, he starred on championship teams with theBrooklyn Superbas and theNew York Giants, winning fourNational League pennants and oneWorld Series title.

At the end of his career, he held the major league record for careergames played (2,443); he ranked second inwalks (1,064, behindBilly Hamilton's 1,187) and fifth inat bats (9,033), and was among the top ten inruns batted in (1,234),doubles (414) andextra base hits (661). He was also among the NL's top seven players inhits (2,461; some sources list totals up to 2,471),runs (1,589),triples (163) andtotal bases (3,447). After leading the league inassists four times anddouble plays three times, he set major league records for career games (2,132),putouts (4,850), assists (7,500),total chances (13,325) and double plays (881) as a shortstop; he still holds the record for total chances, and is second in putouts and fourth in assists. His 42-gamehitting streak in1894 was a record until1897, and remains the fourth longest in history and the longest by a right-handed NL hitter. In defensivewins above replacement (WAR), his 28.5 is eleventh best all-time, and he finished in the top five in the category in ten different seasons.[2][3]

Early life

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Baseball card of Bill Dahlen,T206 set.

Dahlen was born inNelliston, New York at the corner of Berthoud and Dahlen and East Main to a family of German descent.[1] He attendedFort Plain High School and theClinton Liberal Institute, where he began an amateur baseball career as a pitcher and second baseman. He played semi-professionally in 1889, and professionally in theNew York State League in 1890.[1]

Dahlen married his wife, Hattie, on January, 1, 1890, and the couple had a daughter, Corinne, the next year.[1]

Professional career

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Playing career

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Dahlen was a very good hitter and had a good amount of power for thedead-ball era. He began his career with the Colts in1891, and during his eight years with the team finished among the NL's top ten players inhome runs four times and inslugging average three times. He also scored over 100 runs with 10 or more triples in each of his first six seasons; in 1894 he posted the highest batting average to that time by a major league shortstop (various sources state .357 or .362), and he followed with a .352 average in1896. His 1894 season included a record 42-game hitting streak from June 20 to August 6, surpassing the 33-game streak byGeorge Davis one year earlier. Amazingly, after going 0-for-6 in the next game, a 10-inning contest on August 7, Dahlen pulled off another 28-game streak, ending up having hit in 70 of 71 games. His mark was broken three years later byWillie Keeler, who hit in 44 straight; that NL record was eventually tied byPete Rose. OnlyJoe DiMaggio, with his56-game streak in1941, has bettered Dahlen's mark among right-handed batters. Dahlen also twice hit three triples in a game, and once he tripled twice in one inning (August 30, 1900).

Prior to the 1899 season, Dahlen was traded by Chicago, and ended up in Brooklyn after another deal. His new team won the NL title in each of his first two seasons, and although his batting average had dropped from that of earlier years, he compensated by continuing to accumulate numerous walks andstolen bases and by playing outstanding defense. In 1902, he finished fourth in the NL with 74 RBI. In1903 he set an NL record forfielding percentage with a .948 average, breakingGeorge Wright's 1878 mark of .947;Tommy Corcoran broke his record in1905 with a .952 average.

Bill Dahlen with Brooklyn, circa 1910

After the 1903 season, Dahlen was traded to the Giants, the team he'd always strived to play for, in exchange forpitcherJack Cronin andCharlie Babb. While Cronin and Babb contributed only three bad years to Brooklyn, Dahlen posted great numbers with the Giants, leading the league with 80 RBI in his first year,1904. In 1905 he was again among the RBI leaders, despite hitting only .242, as the Giants won their firstWorld Series title. Although he was hitless in the five-game Series, he contributed with flawless defense and by drawing three walks and stealing three bases. He was often considered one of the quietest players in the game, keeping to himself most of the time. After the 1907 season, he was traded to theBoston Doves, for whom he played his last two full seasons. In1909 he brokeJake Beckley's record of 2,386 career games; his record was broken in turn byHonus Wagner in1914. He was named Brooklyn's manager for the 1910 season, but never finished above 6th place in four seasons. His last playing appearances were three games as a pinch-hitter in 1910, and one game at shortstop in1911.

In a 21-season career, Dahlen batted .272; his 84 home runs were then among the fifteen highest totals in history, and ranked behind onlyHerman Long (91) among shortstops. His 289 stolen bases after thestatistic was redefined in 1898 were then among the ten highest totals, as were his 547 total steals since they were first recorded in 1887. His records for games and putouts at shortstop were broken byRabbit Maranville, and his mark for assists was surpassed byLuis Aparicio, with his NL record standing untilOzzie Smith broke it in1993; his record for double plays was broken byRoger Peckinpaugh. Dahlen's 14,566 total chances at all positions have been surpassed by only Maranville (16,091) and Wagner (15,536). His reputation as a hot-headed player led to Dahlen being ejected 34 times as a player, tied for the 4th-most in MLB history.[4]

Managerial career

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As early as 1908, Brooklyn ownerCharles Ebbets sought to have Dahlen manage his club, though he was unable to achieve this until the 1910 season.[1]

In four years as a manager, all for Brooklyn, he posted a 251–355 record for a .414 winning percentage; his reputation as a hot-headed player continued as a manager, drawing 36 ejections in only four seasons. Dahlen tied an MLB record by being ejected 11 times in the 1910 MLB season, followed up with another 10 ejections in 1911, only trailingJohn McGraw in 1905–1906 for most ejections in a two-year span.[5]

Later years and death

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Dahlen worked a number of jobs after his baseball career ended, including serving as an attendant atYankee Stadium and working as a night clerk in a Brooklyn post office.[1]

Dahlen died inBrooklyn after a long illness at age 80, and was buried in theCemetery of the Evergreens, Brooklyn, New York City, New York. As of 2006, his grave remained unmarked.[1]

Hall of Fame consideration

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Dahlen initially received very little support for induction into theNational Baseball Hall of Fame; he received just one vote from theVeterans Committee on the Hall's inaugural1936 ballot and again received a single vote when he was included on theBaseball Writers' Association of America's1938 ballot. Dahlen was not considered again by the Veterans Committee for several decades, however, in part due to the reputation of hisadvanced statistics, Dahlen's candidacy has received renewed interest in recent years. He was included on the committee's Pre-1943 ballot for2009 but received three or fewer of the twelve member committee's votes.[6] He was included again on the newly formed Pre-Integration Committee's ballot for2013. Dahlen received ten out of sixteen votes, falling two votes short of election, the highest total of any person on the ballot who was not elected.[7] Dahlen was included again on the Pre-Integration Committee's2016 ballot but the committee selected no new Hall of Fame members as Dahlen tied for second place with eight of sixteen votes.[8] Dahlen was considered again by the newly formed Early Baseball Era Committee for the2022 ballot but received three or fewer of the committee's sixteen votes.[9] According toBaseball-Reference, Dahlen has the most careerWins Above Replacement of any position player not already inducted with the exception of players who either aren't yet eligible or are held back by a scandal.

The Nineteenth Century Committee of theSociety for American Baseball Research named Dahlen the Overlooked 19th Century Baseball Legend for 2012—a 19th-century player, manager, executive or other baseball personality not yet inducted into theNational Baseball Hall of Fame inCooperstown, New York.[1]

Dahlen was featured inDavid Pietrusza's 1995 television documentaryLocal Heroes in the segment "Knocking on Cooperstown's Door."

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefghKrell, David."Bill Dahlen". Society for American Baseball Research. RetrievedAugust 12, 2022.
  2. ^"Most Times in Top 5 of League Batting Statistics".
  3. ^"Career Leaders & Records for Defensive WAR".
  4. ^"Ejections Through the Years"(PDF).Retrosheet. RetrievedJanuary 30, 2025.
  5. ^"Ejections Through the Years"(PDF).Retrosheet. RetrievedJanuary 30, 2025.
  6. ^"Joe Gordon Elected to Baseball Hall of Fame by Vets' Committee" (Press release). National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. December 8, 2008. Archived fromthe original on December 11, 2008. (apparently a copy of the original accessed 2008-12-10)
  7. ^"Hank O'Day, Jacob Ruppert, Deacon White Elected to National Baseball Hall of Fame by Pre-Integration Committee".National Baseball Hall of Fame. December 3, 2012. Archived fromthe original on August 2, 2014. RetrievedDecember 3, 2012.
  8. ^Barry M. Bloom (December 7, 2015)."Pre-Integration vote yields no new Hall inductees".MLB.com. RetrievedDecember 28, 2021.
  9. ^"Fowler, Hodges, Kaat, Miñoso, Oliva, O'Neil Elected to Hall of Fame".National Baseball Hall of Fame. December 5, 2021.
  • Spatz, Lyle (2004),Bad Bill Dahlen: The Rollicking Life and Times of an Early Baseball Star, Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland,ISBN 0-7864-1978-4.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toBill Dahlen.
Manager:John McGraw
Trainer:Harry Tuthill
International
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