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Blondie Purcell

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Blondie Purcell
Outfielder
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
debut
May 11879, for the Syracuse Stars
Last appearance
September 161890, for the Philadelphia Athletics
Career statistics
Batting average.267
Hits1,217
Runs767
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams
As Player

As Manager

William Aloysius "Blondie" Purcell (March 16 1854February 20 1912, was an American Major League Baseball player born in Paterson, New Jersey. He played for a total of 12 seasons while playing for eight different teams in two leagues. He appeared in 1097 games, mainly in the outfield, but did pitch in 79 games throughout his career, as well as other infield positions.

On June 6, 1882, while playing for the Buffalo Bisons, he was fined $10 for slicing open a soggy baseball. He did this to compel the umpire to put a fresh ball in play so his pitcher, Pud Galvin, would be able to throw his curveball.[1]

In 1883 he was the player-manager for the Philadelphia Quakers. He took the reins of the team after just 14 games, when they were only 4–13 under player-manager Bob Ferguson, and finished the season with an equally dismal 17–81 record. The 8th-place Quakers finished 23 games behind the 7th-place Detroit Wolverines. Purcell never managed another major-league game.[2]

Purcell is one of the few players in major-league history whose death is not documented by the Society for American Baseball Research, although according to Find A Grave he has a death date of February 20, 1912, and is buried in Greenmount Cemetery located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

References

Preceded by Philadelphia Quakers Manager
1883
Succeeded by


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