Andy Oyler | |
---|---|
Outfielder | |
Born: May 5, 1880 Newville, Pennsylvania |
|
Died: October 24, 1970 East Pennsboro Township, Pennsylvania |
(aged 90)|
Batted: Right | Threw: Right |
MLB debut | |
May 8, 1902 for the Baltimore Orioles | |
Last MLB appearance | |
July 21, 1902 for the Baltimore Orioles | |
Career statistics | |
Batting average | .221 |
Home runs | 1 |
Runs batted in | 6 |
Teams | |
Andrew Paul (Pepper) Oyler (May 5, 1880 to October 24, 1970) was a Major League Baseball third baseman. He was born in Newville, Pennsylvania and attended Washington & Jefferson College. He played professionally for the Baltimore Orioles in the 1902. In 27 professional games that year, he had 77 at-bats with 17 hits and one home run.
He batted and threw right-handed. He was small in stature and was an excellent fielder, but not a good hitter.[1] Even so, he was difficult to pitch to, since he would crouch "pretzel-like" in the batter's box to make his strike zone smaller.[1] He died in East Pennsboro Township, Pennsylvania.
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In 1953, sportswriter Jocko Maxwell published an article in Baseball Digest describing the shortest home run in baseball history.[1] Maxwell described a baseball game where Oyler, as a shortstop for the Minneapolis Millers, was crouched in the batters' box in the bottom of the 9th and ducked to avoid a pitch thrown at his head.[1] The ball hit off of Oyler's bat, which was still resting on his shoulder, and became stuck in the mud in front of home plate.[1] Oyler was able to complete an inside the park home run before any opposing players were able to find the ball.[1] Maxwell's article indicated that the story was originally told by WWRL radio station in Woodside, New York.[1] This story was repeated by sportswriter Bill Bryson, Sr. in Baseball Digest in 1958.[2] Another version of the story, as told by Halsey Hall, had Oyler chopping at a low pitch and sticking the ball into the mud 5 1/2 feet from home plate.[3]
Baseball historian Stew Thornley is skeptical of the story of Oyler's home run, pointing out that no contemporary news reports described the incident.[4] Other modern reference sources recount the story without caveat.[5]
The story was the subject of a book of baseball lore by Michael G. Bryson called The Twenty-Four-Inch Home Run.[6] It was also the inspiration for the children's book, Mudball by Matt Tavares, which won the 2005 Parents' Choice Awards Gold Award.[7] In the "Author's Note" Tavares describes the story of Oyler's home run as being folklore.[7]
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