Grover Cleveland Alexander
Grover Cleveland Alexander | ||
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Pitcher | ||
Born: February 26, 1887 | ||
Died: November 4, 1950 (aged 63) | ||
Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | ||
April 15, 1911 for the Philadelphia Phillies |
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Final game | ||
May 28, 1930 for the Philadelphia Phillies |
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Career statistics | ||
Record | 373-208 | |
ERA | 2.56 | |
K | 2198 | |
Teams | ||
Career highlights and awards | ||
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Member of the National | ||
Baseball Hall of Fame | ||
Elected | 1938 | |
Vote | 80.92% |
Grover Cleveland "Pete" Alexander (February 26, 1887 - November 4, 1950) was a Major League Baseball pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs, and St. Louis Cardinals. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1938.
Alexander was born in Elba, Nebraska. Alexander was one of thirteen children and played semi-pro ball in his youth. He signed his first professional contract at age 20 in 1907 for $50 per month. He had a good first season, but it was marred by a beaning that probably contributed to later bouts with epilepsy. This incident set his career back, but he had recovered by 1910, became a star pitcher again, and was sold to the Philadelphia Phillies for $750.
Alexander set the league on fire in his 1911 debut, leading the league with 28 wins (a modern-day rookie record), 31 complete games, 367 innings pitched, and seven shutouts while finishing second in strikeouts and fourth in ERA. The best, however, was yet to come. Alexander was the dominant pitcher in the National League from 1915 to 1917, becoming the only pitcher to win pitching's Triple Crown three years in a row, and from 1912 to 1920, Alexander led the league in ERA four times (1915, 1916, 1919, 1920), wins five times (1914-17, 1920), innings six times (1912, 1914-17, 1920), strikeouts six times (1912, 1914-1917, 1920), complete games five times (1914-1917, 1920), and shutouts six times (1913, 1915, 1916 [a single season record 16], 1917, 1919). In 1915, he was instrumental in leading the Phillies to their first pennant, and he also pitched a record four one-hitters.
After the 1917 season, the Phillies sold Alexander to the Cubs, ostensibly fearful that he would be lost to the army in World War I, but as Phillies owner William Baker admitted later, "I needed the money". Sure enough Alexander was drafted, and spent most of the 1918 season in France as an artillery officer, where he suffered from shell shock, partial hearing loss, and increasingly worse seizures. Always a drinker, Alexander hit the bottle particularly hard after the war. He still gave Chicago several successful years, however, and grabbed another pitching triple crown in 1920. Finally tiring of his increasing drunkenness and insubordination, the Cubs sold him to the Cardinals in the middle of the 1926 season for the waiver price.
The Cardinals won the National League pennant that year and met the New York Yankees in the World Series, where Alexander had his finest moment. He pitched complete game victories in Games 2 and 6 before coming into the seventh inning of Game 7, after Jesse Haines developed a blister, with the Cardinals up 3-2 the bases loaded and two outs. Facing Yankee slugger Tony Lazzeri, Alexander got him to strike out and then held the Yankees scoreless for two more innings to preserve the win and give St. Louis the championship. Alexander had one last 20-win season for the Cardinals in 1927, but his continued drinking finally did him in. He left baseball after a brief return to the Phillies in 1930 and pitched for the House of David until 1938. Alexander died on November 4, 1950 in St. Paul, Nebraska at the age of 63.
Alexander's 90 shutouts is a National League record and his 373 wins is tied with Christy Mathewson for first in the National League record book. He is also third all time in wins, tenth in innings pitched (5190), second in shutouts, and eighth in hits allowed (4868).
In 1999, he ranked number 12 on The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players, and was a nominee for the Major League Baseball All-Century Team.
Contents |
Nickname
The origin of Alexander's nickname of "Old Pete" has always been something of a mystery. The most plausible explanation seems to be that Alexander, always known as a heavy drinker, acquired the nickname during the Prohibition era because of his fondness for illicit or bootleg liquor, sometimes known in those days as "Sneaky Pete." In recent years it has become common to call him "Pete Alexander," as if it were an actual first name, but there is no evidence that he was ever referred to that way in his own lifetime. This is a misuse of the nickname—rather like referring to President Andrew Jackson as "Hickory Jackson" or General George Patton as "Blood and Guts Patton"—and should be discouraged.
Legacy
Alexander is the first player mentioned in Ogden Nash's poem "Line-Up for Yesterday":
A for Alex
The great Alexander
More goose eggs he pitched
Than a popular gander.
Alexander was the subject of the 1952 biographical film The Winning Team, in which he was played by Ronald Reagan. Baseball commentator Bill James called the film "an awful movie, a Reader's Digest movie, reducing the events of Alexander's life to a cliché." Nevertheless, Alexander has the unique distinction of being the namesake of one President of the United States who was portrayed on film by an actor who was later to become President of the United States.
See also
- 300 win club
- List of Major League Baseball leaders in career wins
- Triple Crown
- List of Major League Baseball ERA champions
- List of Major League Baseball strikeout champions
- List of Major League Baseball wins champions
- Top 100 strikeout pitchers of all time
- Major League Baseball titles leaders
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference
- baseballhalloffame.org – Hall of Fame biography page
- The Deadball Era
Accomplishments | |||||||||
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C. Young | W. Johnson | C. Mathewson | G. Alexander | W. Spahn | P. Galvin | K. Nichols | R. Clemens* | T. Keefe | G. Maddux* | S. Carlton | J. Clarkson | E. Plank | N. Ryan | D. Sutton | P. Niekro | G. Perry | T. Seaver | C. Radbourn | M. Welch | L. Grove | E. Wynn | T. Glavine* |