Tom McBride (baseball)
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Thomas Raymond McBride (November 2, 1914 - December 26, 2001) was a Major League Baseball outfielder. A native of Bonham, Texas, he played for the Boston Red Sox (1943-1947) and Washington Senators (1947-1948).
McBride's busiest and best season was 1945 when he appeared in 100 games for Boston and made 374 plate appearances. He hit .305 (105-for-344) with 1 home run, 47 runs batted in, and 38 runs scored. Also that season he tied a major league record with 6 RBI in the 4th inning on August 4 (game 2). In that game against the Washington Senators he hit a bases-loaded double and a bases-loaded triple. McBride's 7 triples that season tied him for eighth in the American League.
He played an important role on the pennant-winning Red Sox team of 1946, hitting .301 in 61 games and making no errors in 43 outfield appearances. In five World Series games he was 2-for-12 with one RBI.
On May 14, 1947 McBride was purchased by the Washington Senators from the Red Sox. In two seasons with Washington he hit a combined .263 and continued to play good defense. His last major league appearance was on September 30, 1948.
In a total of 408 games he was 326-for-1186 (.275), and 93 walks and one hit by pitch pushed his on base percentage up to .328. He had 2 HR, 141 RBI, scored 140 runs, and had a slugging percentage of .340. In 312 outfield appearances and 16 at first base he handled 815 out of 826 chances successfully for a .987 fielding percentage.
McBride passed away at the age of 87 in Wichita Falls, Texas.
[edit] Trivia
- McBride made the first and final outs of the 1946 World Series
- On July 2, 1948 he set the major league record of 12 putouts in left field in an extra-inning game.
- He shares the exact same birthday (November 2, 1914) with former MLB pitchers Jesse Flores and Johnny Vander Meer.