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What's exceptional about Amby Murray Boston Bees 1936 ?


Seasons:
1 out of 4 select attributes | select attitudes

shorter; season

Amby Murray of the Boston Bees was the shortest (5'7") of all 205 pitchers in 1936.

outdid Bill Weir of the Boston Bees (5'8"), Roy Henshaw of the Chicago Cubs (5'8"), Tony Freitas of the Cincinnati Reds (5'8"), and Earl Whitehill of the Washington Senators (5'9"), and 200 others, ending with Paul Kardow of the Cleveland Indians (6'6").



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References

  1. Player heights and weights have a single value for their entire career. The data come from the archive at seanlahman.com. This database is copyright 1996-2014 by Sean Lahman. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. For details see: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
  2. Batting, pitching, fielding, personal, team, and awards data come from the archive at seanlahman.com. This database is copyright 1996-2014 by Sean Lahman. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. For details see: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/

Profile

Amby Murray of the 1936 Boston Bees threw left-handed, was debuting in the majors, played on a losing team, attended Brown University, played in Braves Field, and was born in Massachusetts.

  • achievement score (.000 see References)
  • assists (3)
  • complete games (0)
  • double plays (0)
  • games finished (1)
  • games played (4)
  • games started (1)
  • innings pitched (11.0)
  • putouts (0)
  • saves (0)
  • shutouts (0)
  • strikeouts (2)
  • wins (0)
  • balks (0)
  • earned runs (5)
  • errors (0)
  • hit by pitch (0)
  • hits (15)
  • homers given up (1)
  • losses (0)
  • runs allowed (5)
  • walks (3)
  • wild pitches (0)
  • age (23 yrs)
  • batters faced (51)
  • height (5'7")
  • weight (150 lbs)

Sources


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