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Guest Mets � Willets Point
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Posted


It's been 54 years since a ballplayer named "Rube" has played in major league baseball.



Guest The Second Spitter
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Posted


Rube Walker's real name wasn't Rube. List should clarify this?


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted


The Second Spitter wrote:
Rube Walker's real name wasn't Rube. List should clarify this?


Very few would have been.

I like Grimm's suggestion and will start using it on the regular.


Guest The Second Spitter
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Posted


His younger brother was also known as Rube, but I don't think he made it the Bigs as a player.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted


Lots of Indians called Chief, and deaf guys known as Dummy in the old days too.


Posted


Baby-faced guys named "Babe," red-head guys named "Red," and lefthanded guys named "Lefty," etc.

[list:2lei2e7a][*:2lei2e7a]The last "Babe" was Babe Birna, finishing up in 1958.

[/*:m:2lei2e7a]
[*:2lei2e7a]The last "Chief" was Chief Hogsett, finishing up in 1944. (Freddie Garcia and Geronimo Gil are both nicknamed "The Chief.")

[/*:m:2lei2e7a]
[*:2lei2e7a]The last "Dummy" was Dummy Taylor, finishing up in 1908. (Davey Johnson was nicknamed "Dummy" by his Orioles teammates, because he wasn't.)

[/*:m:2lei2e7a]
[*:2lei2e7a]The last "Lefty" was Lefty Hayden, who threw 3.67 innings over three games in 1958. (Many have borne the nickname before and since without ever being introduced as such over the PA.)

[/*:m:2lei2e7a]
[*:2lei2e7a]The last "Moe" was Moe Drabowsky, who played until 1972.

[/*:m:2lei2e7a]
[*:2lei2e7a]The last "Red" was Red Schoendeist, finishing up in 1963, three days after Red Barrett also played his last game. (Mike Hedlund, who played until 1972, was a "Red" but it was never the name on the front of his baseball card. Other similar quasi-Reds are also out there.)

[/*:m:2lei2e7a]
[*:2lei2e7a]The last "Rube" was Rube Fischer, who played until 1946.[/*:m:2lei2e7a][/list:u:2lei2e7a]


Posted


The last "Swede" was Swede Larson who had three appearances and one trip to the plate in 1936. Only three men played under that name, but nine others carried it as a less official nickname. Walter Johnson was "The Big Swede" before he was "The Big Train," even though he wasn't a bit Swedish.


Guest Mets � Willets Point
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Posted


Edgy DC wrote:
[*]The last "Dummy" was Dummy Taylor, finishing up in 1908. (Davey Johnson was nicknamed "Dummy" by his Orioles teammates, because he wasn't.)


The same logic behind the nickname of my father's fraternity brother, a massive man in both height and girth, who was called "Tiny."

Edgy DC wrote:
[*]The last "Rube" was Rube Fischer, who played until 1946.[/list]


Check the chart at the top of this thread. It was Rube Walker who played until 1958.


Guest Mets � Willets Point
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Posted


Pittsburgh and it's environs contain a high-density of Rubes.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted


Lotta Rubes looked to baseball as an alternative to coal mines.


Posted


Dutch -- a name frequently slathered on anyone of German and/or Dutch descent -- is also most often found in the early part of the 20th century.

Of players listed with that as their main baseball name, the most recent are All-Star hurler Dutch Leonard who played through 1953 and the brief career of Dutch Romberger who pitched 15 IPs in 1954
Darren 'Dutch' Dalton played into the 1990s but that was only an occasional nickname as were many of those who appear at BB-Ref when you type in 'Dutch'

On the minor league side there are 40 entries as 'Dutch'. Of those two appeared in the 1970s but I suspect every one of the rest is dead at the present time.


Posted


  • The last "Rube" was Rube Fischer, who played until 1946.


Check the chart at the top of this thread. It was Rube Walker who played until 1958.

Indeed, and shame on me for missing out on my Rube Walker lore.


Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:
Dutch -- a name frequently slathered on anyone of German and/or Dutch descent -- is also most often found in the early part of the 20th century.

Of players listed with that as their main baseball name, the most recent are All-Star hurler Dutch Leonard who played through 1953 and the brief career of Dutch Romberger who pitched 15 IPs in 1954
Darren 'Dutch' Dalton played into the 1990s but that was only an occasional nickname as were many of those who appear at BB-Ref when you type in 'Dutch'

On the minor league side there are 40 entries as 'Dutch'. Of those two appeared in the 1970s but I suspect every one of the rest is dead at the present time.




Posted


I suppose if Bert Blyleven or Robert Eenhorn (or even Hensley Meulens or that fat Orioles pitcher-- Ponson?-- from a few years back) played a half century earlier they'd all be called "Dutch."

Thankfully, no more Hymies.


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
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Posted


I kinda like "Dutch" Tejada.


Guest holychicken
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Posted


I just looked it up: Thole is a synonym for rube.


Posted


    [*:1nnoozl0]Rube Tejada, ss[/*:m:1nnoozl0]
    [*:1nnoozl0]Irish Murphy, 3b[/*:m:1nnoozl0]
    [*:1nnoozl0]Red Turner, 2b[/*:m:1nnoozl0]
    [*:1nnoozl0]Moe Davis, 1b[/*:m:1nnoozl0]
    [*:1nnoozl0]Dizzy Bay, lf[/*:m:1nnoozl0]
    [*:1nnoozl0]Moose Duda, rf[/*:m:1nnoozl0]
    [*:1nnoozl0]Noodles Thole, c[/*:m:1nnoozl0]
    [*:1nnoozl0]Dutch Niuwenhuis, cf[/*:m:1nnoozl0]
    [*:1nnoozl0]Knucksie Dickey, sp[/*:m:1nnoozl0][/list:o:1nnoozl0]


Posted


SB Nation wrote:
The Yankees and Red Sox are playing at Fenway today, just as they did on this day 100 years ago. In honor of this anniversary, we present first names of some of the players on those 1912 Boston and New York teams:

Tris, Duffy, Olaf, Pinch, Smoky, Hick, Heinie, Hack, Birdie, Dutch, Gabby, Ezra, Cozy, Klondike, Homer, Hippo, Iron, Red.


Posted


Going the other way, there were no major leaguers named Jason until Jason Thompson showed up in 1976. The next Jason after him was White Sox flash in the pan Jason Bere in 1993.

Now? 25 active major league Jasons. And that's not counting Jaysons like Werth.


Guest Mets � Willets Point
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Posted


Last season, the Twins' Liam Hendriks became the first Major League Ballplayer who shares my first name. Interestingly, he is from Australia. With the rise in popularity of the name in the US since the 1990s, I expect the first American-born Liam in the majors should debut in the next decade or so.


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