Joe Collins
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Joseph Edward "Joe" Collins (December 3, 1922 - August 30, 1989) (born Joseph Edward Kollonige) was a Major League Baseball player, born in Scranton, Pennsylvania.
On September 25, 1948 he began his major league career laying for the New York Yankees. He played in 10 Major League seasons and seven World Series, all for the Yankees. At 6'0" tall and 185 pounds, he batted left and threw left, which made him unavailable to play most infield positions, where he was a first baseman in 715 games regular-season games. He also played 114 games as an outfielder. His peak number of games played in a season was 130 in 1954. Collins hit 86 regular-season home runs, but more importantly, four in the World Series with powerful Yankee teams. He was a teammate of both Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle.
His last Major League game was on September 29, 1957. His entire major league career was spent with the Yankees. He was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies at the start of the 1958 season, but he chose to retire rather than join the Phillies, thus cancelling the trade. He died in Union, New Jersey in 1989.
[edit] External links
- Joe Collins' statistics on the Baseball Almanac site
- Joe Collins' bio on the Baseball Library site
- Joe Collins' statistics on the Baseball Reference site
Categories: 1950 New York Yankees World Series Championship Team | 1951 New York Yankees World Series Championship Team | 1952 New York Yankees World Series Championship Team | 1953 New York Yankees World Series Championship Team | 1956 New York Yankees World Series Championship Team | New York Yankees players | Major league first basemen | Major league players from California | People from Scranton, Pennsylvania | 1922 births | 1989 deaths