Nig Clarke: Difference between revisions
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==Texas League career== |
==Texas League career== |
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===Eight |
===Eight home run game=== |
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On June 15, 1902, while playing for the Corsicana Oil Citys of the [[Texas League]], Nig allegedly hit eight home runs against the Texarkana Casketmakers in a game that Corsicana won by the remarkable score of 51–3. The home runs were said to be helped by the stadium they played in that day because Corsicana's blue laws forbade Sunday baseball in [[Oil City Park]], the regular home of Corsicana. The game was played in nearby [[Ennis, Texas|Ennis]], in a facility that years later Nig estimated was only 210 feet to right field. At the time, it was considered the #2 most famous feat in [[Minor League Baseball]] history. Unfortunately, the most famous Minor League Baseball feat was not recorded. Amelia Clarke, the wife of Nig Clarke, remarked about her husband's call-up to the majors by saying: "He burst onto the scene already a legend." |
On June 15, 1902, while playing for the Corsicana Oil Citys of the [[Texas League]], Nig allegedly hit eight home runs against the Texarkana Casketmakers in a game that Corsicana won by the remarkable score of 51–3. The home runs were said to be helped by the stadium they played in that day because Corsicana's blue laws forbade Sunday baseball in [[Oil City Park]], the regular home of Corsicana. The game was played in nearby [[Ennis, Texas|Ennis]], in a facility that years later Nig estimated was only 210 feet to right field. At the time, it was considered the #2 most famous feat in [[Minor League Baseball]] history. Unfortunately, the most famous Minor League Baseball feat was not recorded. Amelia Clarke, the wife of Nig Clarke, remarked about her husband's call-up to the majors by saying: "He burst onto the scene already a legend." |
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Revision as of 20:22, 2 August 2012
Nig Clarke | |
---|---|
Born: Amherstburg, Ontario | December 15, 1882|
Died: June 15, 1949 River Rouge, Michigan | (aged 66)|
Batted: Left Threw: Right | |
debut | |
April 26, 1905, for the Detroit Tigers | |
Last appearance | |
April 24, 1920, for the Pittsburgh Pirates | |
Career statistics | |
Batting average | .254 |
Home runs | 6 |
RBI | 127 |
Stats at Baseball Reference | |
Teams | |
Career highlights and awards | |
|
Jay Justin "Nig" Clarke (December 15, 1882 in Amherstburg, Ontario – June 15, 1949 in River Rouge, Michigan) was a professional baseball player in Major League Baseball. He is best known for, in 1902 playing for Texas League's Corsicana Oil Citys, going 8 for 8 with 8 home runs. The success there did not turn into success in MLB, as in his nine-year career he hit a comparatively few 6 home runs and drove in 127 runs. Clarke died on the 47th anniversary of his historic eight-homer game, which many people believe to be more than a coincidence.
Texas League career
Eight home run game
On June 15, 1902, while playing for the Corsicana Oil Citys of the Texas League, Nig allegedly hit eight home runs against the Texarkana Casketmakers in a game that Corsicana won by the remarkable score of 51–3. The home runs were said to be helped by the stadium they played in that day because Corsicana's blue laws forbade Sunday baseball in Oil City Park, the regular home of Corsicana. The game was played in nearby Ennis, in a facility that years later Nig estimated was only 210 feet to right field. At the time, it was considered the #2 most famous feat in Minor League Baseball history. Unfortunately, the most famous Minor League Baseball feat was not recorded. Amelia Clarke, the wife of Nig Clarke, remarked about her husband's call-up to the majors by saying: "He burst onto the scene already a legend."
Dispute
Almost immediately, the home run total was subject to controversy. In a newspaper account, repeated in a column by The Dallas Morning News' Frank X. Tolbert in 1965, Corsicana manager and first baseman Mike O'Connor[disambiguation needed] was alleged to have made the totals much larger than they were. The official account reads:
"The official scorer lost his head, but the foxy manager of the Oil City boys has discovered a tabulated record which goes as the official figures. He realizes the benefits in swelling batting averages ..."
Perfect game
Clarke's other claim to fame was as the catcher of a perfect game on October 2, 1908 for Addie Joss. It was only the fourth perfect game in Major League Baseball history, and Nig Clarke later remarked, "I wish it would have been the last."
The nickname
In the first half of the 20th Century, before the game was integrated, ball players with a dark complexion were sometimes nicknamed "Nig." [1] [2] In addition to Clarke, the following other major league players bore the nickname: Johnny Beazley (1941–49), Joe Berry (1921–22), Bobby Bragan (1940–48), Nig Cuppy (1892–1901), Nig Fuller (1902), Johnny Grabowski (1923–31), Nig Lipscomb (1937), Charlie Niebergall (1921–24), Nig Perrine (1907), and Frank Smith (1904–15). However, most Americans consider the nickname "Nig" to be offensive in polite conversation today.
External links
- Career statistics from Baseball Reference, or Baseball Reference (Minors)
- Articles lacking sources from December 2008
- Articles with links needing disambiguation from June 2011
- 1882 births
- 1949 deaths
- Major League Baseball catchers
- Detroit Tigers players
- Cleveland Naps players
- St. Louis Browns players
- Philadelphia Phillies players
- Pittsburgh Pirates players
- Major League Baseball players from Canada
- Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame inductees
- Baseball people from Ontario
- Little Rock Travelers players
- Atlanta Crackers players
- Indianapolis Indians players
- San Francisco Seals (baseball) players
- Memphis Chickasaws players
- Houston Buffaloes players
- Mobile Sea Gulls players
- Reading Keystones players
- Salisbury Indians players