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Trivia: Batting Champs spilt between teams
Name the 6 players that played for multiple teams the year they won a Batting title?
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Luis Arraez and Willie McGee
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Harry Walker.
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And in 1990, McGee led the NL with a .335 Batting Average while splitting time between the Cardinals and the Athletics. I believe McGee is the only player to be traded to a different League in a year he won the Batting Title. Only one person did the feat in between McGee and Arraez. |
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Harry Walker led the NL with a .363 Batting Average in 1947 while splitting time between the Cardinals and the Phillies. |
E Murray?
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https://www.reddit.com/r/baseball/co...ing/?rdt=32780
was thinking of something else, related to mcgee |
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LOL, I got frustrated and had to look that one up. In the process, it kind of blew my mind some of the names who actually won Batting Titles in the last 35 years, and how those names had completely left my memory in that time. :eek: |
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I actually bumped into Eddie once and asked him about that. He said he bet I win a lot of bar bets with that one lol.
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Dale Alexander
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Dale Alexander hit .367 in 1932, when he was traded from the Tigers to the Red Sox for doubles king Earl Webb. Over his 5 season career, Alexander hit .331 (which would have tied him with Stan Musial on the all-time list if he had recorded 3,000 plate appearances, but Alexander only amassed 2,450). Per SABR: Alexander hurt his leg sliding into home plate in 1933. Red Sox trainer Doc Woods used a new deep-heat method called diathermy to try to reduce pain and inflammation, and speed healing. Unfortunately, Woods left the machine on too long (apparently leaving the treatment room and not returning for quite some time) and burned Alexander’s leg. “They’d just barbecued his leg,” said his son Steve. Don Alexander (Dale’s other son) reported, “It really sort of atrophied. It really was smaller than the other. Just like it was a burn. Scarring tissue. It was discolored.” He was so badly burned that there was worry they might need to amputate his leg. Dale never blamed anyone for it, never complained about bad treatment, and certainly never tried to sue the Red Sox. Don said, “He played the game hard, and then when it was over, he came home. He never felt like anybody mistreated him in baseball.” https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/5568e9fe He did not return to MLB. Two more to go. |
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Yup, another fascinating story of a flash in the pan type of player. He was also a hitting machine in the Minor Leagues both before and after his stint in the Majors. Hit .336 for the Yankees farm club in Newark the year after he was forced out of the MLB, and then continued to carry a solid stick for several more organizations after that. Had over 2000 hits and carried a lifetime .338BA at various levels in the Minors. Gotta think he would have challenged for more batting titles if not for the injury and following malpractice on his leg. |
Not that anyone cares (nor should they), but the last two were Trea Turner in 2021 (Nats/Dodgers) and Nap Lajoie in 1902, who played one game with the Athletics before going to Cleveland.
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Never would have guessed Lajoie. |
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