Ed Konetchy
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Ed Konetchy | ||
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First baseman | ||
Born: September 3, 1885 La Crosse, Wisconsin |
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Died: May 27, 1947 (aged 61) Fort Worth, Texas |
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Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | ||
June 29, 1907 for the St. Louis Cardinals |
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Final game | ||
October 1, 1921 for the Philadelphia Phillies |
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Career statistics | ||
Batting average | .281 | |
Hits | 2150 | |
Runs batted in | 992 | |
Teams | ||
As Player |
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Career highlights and awards | ||
Edward Joseph Konetchy (September 3, 1885 - May 27, 1947), nicknamed "Big Ed" and "The Candy Kid", was an American first baseman in Major League Baseball for a number of teams, primarily in the National League, from 1907 to 1921. He played for the St. Louis Cardinals (1907-1913), Pittsburgh Pirates (1914), Pittsburgh Rebels of the Federal League (1915), Boston Braves (1916-1918), Brooklyn Robins (1919-1921), and Philadelphia Phillies (1921). He batted and threw right-handed.
Contents |
[edit] Baseball career
Konetchy was born in La Crosse, Wisconsin. While he was considered an above-average hitter (he batted over .300 four times) he was more known around the league for his supreme consistency, his never-faltering speed, and his high degree of defensive skill at first base.
In his years with the Cardinals, who often finished in last place, Konetchy was considered a bright spot, getting 25 stolen bases in 1909, hitting .302 in 1910, and picking up 88 RBIs in 1911. He also had a 20-game hitting streak in 1910. In 1911, with the Cards only three games out of first place in early July, the team was involved in a train crash on its way from Philadelphia to Boston. 47 passengers were injured, while twelve died. None of the Cardinals were seriously injured, due to a pre-trip change in the location of their car to the rear of the train. Konetchy and Cards manager Roger Bresnahan led the rescue effort, carrying many passengers to safety, some of whom may have died. Despite posting their first winning season since 1901, the Cardinals never recovered from the incident, finishing a distant fifth; but Konetchy led the NL with 38 doubles, and his own team with six home runs and 88 RBIs. When Konetchy moved to the Pirates in 1914, he had a below-average season, followed by an above-average one in the same city, but on a different team in a different league. Playing for Pittsburgh of the Federal League, he tied his career high with a .314 average, with 10 home runs and 93 RBIs.
Soon, he was back in the National League, and he was picking up hits in droves. In 1920 with Brooklyn, Konetchy got his only shot at postseason play during his career, although Brooklyn (93-61) lost the World Series in seven games to the 98-56 Cleveland Indians. In the Series, Konetchy picked up four hits in 23 at bats, a .174 average. However, he did have 2 RBIs in the Series, and three walks.
By the end of 1920, he had surpassed 2000 career hits and was quite high on the all-time leaderboard (into the top 25). His final season was spent in Brooklyn and then Philadelphia, when the Phillies selected him off waivers on July 4, 1921.
Konetchy's major league career ended there. Besides playing first base, he had tried out pitching, having thrown in 3 games. One of them was a fairly bad start in which he pitched a complete game and allowed 8 runs (6 earned). However, in one of his two relief appearances, he went 4 and 2/3 innings and gave up no runs on one hit to get the win.
In 2085 games, he batted a solid .281 with 74 home runs and 992 RBIs. He had 2150 career hits in 7649 at bats. Konetchy also picked up 255 career stolen bases. He ended with a total of 344 doubles, and after having reached doubles figures in triples ten times, retired with 182, tying him for the 11th highest total in history.
After leaving the majors, he played with Fort Worth of the Texas League from 1922 through 1927, batting .345 with 41 home runs in 1925. After retiring, he went into business with pitching star Joe Pate.
He died in Fort Worth, Texas at the age of 62. The cause was heart disease. He was posthumously inducted into the Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in 1961.
[edit] Highlights
- Stole home twice on September 30, 1907 against Boston
- Broke up four no-hitters over the course of his career
- Hit two inside-the-park home runs against Brooklyn on August 5, 1912
- Picked up hits in 10 consecutive at bats in 1919, tying a record which would later be broken
- Led the league in total bases in 1915 (278)
- Made the Top 10 in the league in batting average six times (1909, 1910, 1912, 1915, 1919, 1920)
- Holds an MLB record with 4 consecutive seasons with 20 or more triples (1909-1912)
[edit] Quotes
- "I know I tried to play baseball as soon as I was big enough to raise a bat from the ground." - Konetchy
- "Hard work. I made it my business to study closely the pitchers who bothered me most, particularly Nap Rucker's high fastball." - Konetchy, when asked how he improved his batting
- "I suppose every player had the ambition to be a pitcher, and it may be that I might have had some chance to succeed if I had ever tried." - Konetchy
- "I'm the most traded man in baseball without getting anywhere." - Konetchy on swirling trade rumors while in St. Louis
- "The Federal League is the best league I have ever been connected with." - Konetchy
- ""Ed Koney's still a kid first baseman, just getting limbered up. You tell 'em." - Konetchy on being the oldest player in the NL
[edit] See also
- List of major league players with 2,000 hits
- List of MLB individual streaks
- List of Major League Baseball players with 100 triples
- List of Major League Baseball doubles champions
[edit] External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference