Gene Bailey
Gene Bailey | |
---|---|
Outfielder | |
Born: (1893-11-25)November 25, 1893 Pearsall, Texas, U.S. | |
Died: November 14, 1973(1973-11-14) (aged 79) Houston, Texas, U.S. | |
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | |
September 10, 1917, for the Philadelphia Athletics | |
Last MLB appearance | |
June 3, 1924, for the Brooklyn Robins | |
MLB statistics | |
Batting average | .246 |
Home runs | 2 |
Runs batted in | 52 |
Teams | |
|
Arthur Eugene Bailey (November 25, 1893 – November 14, 1973) was an American backup outfielder in Major League Baseball who played for the Philadelphia Athletics (1917), Boston Braves (1919–1920), Boston Red Sox (1920) and Brooklyn Robins (1923–1924). Bailey batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Pearsall, Texas.
In a five-season career, Bailey was a .246 hitter with two home runs and 52 RBI in 213 games played. His best season was 1923 when he hit .265 with 71 runs, 42 RBI, 109 hits, 11 doubles, seven triples and tallied nine stolen bases in 127 games – all career-highs.
Bailey died in Houston, Texas, at the age of 79.
Head coaching record
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rice Owls (Southwest Conference) (1929) | |||||||||
1929 | Rice | 9-16 | 7-14 | ||||||
Rice: | 9–16 (.360) | 7–14 (.333) | |||||||
Total: | 9–16 (.360) | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion |
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors)
- Baseball Almanac
- Retrosheet
- v
- t
- e
- Philip Arbuckle (1912–1917)
- Jack Coombs (1918)
- Pete Cawthon (1920–1921)
- Bob Countryman (1922–1923)
- Mike O'Neill (1924)
- Joe Bedenk (1925–1926)
- Dickey Kerr (1927)
- Dickey Kerr & Charley Schwartz (1928)
- Gene Bailey (1929)
- Danny Allnoch (1930)
- John Nemic (1931–1932)
- Cecil Grigg (1936–1944)
- Jess Neely (1945)
- Cecil Grigg (1946–1947)
- Jess Neely (1948)
- Harold Stockbridge (1949–1952)
- Dell Morgan (1953–1961)
- Joe Gallagher (1962)
- Doug Osburn (1963–1980)
- David Hall (1981–1991)
- Wayne Graham (1992–2018)
- Matt Bragga (2019–2021)
- José Cruz Jr. (2022–)
This biographical article relating to an American baseball outfielder born in the 1890s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e