Powered by OnlyBoth
Go
A sentence is worth 1,000 data.®

What's exceptional about Monk Dubiel Philadelphia Phillies 1948 ?


Seasons:
1 out of 3 select attributes | select attitudes

many putouts; losing team; season

Monk Dubiel of the Philadelphia Phillies had the 7th-most putouts (12) of the 97 pitchers in 1948 who played on a losing team.

beat out by Ned Garver of the St. Louis Browns (19), Johnny Schmitz of the Chicago Cubs (17), Sid Hudson of the Washington Senators (15), and Dutch Leonard of the Philadelphia Phillies (15), and 2 others, ending with Ray Scarborough of the Washington Senators (13).



Share Insight:  
Email this insight to:
From (name):
From (email):
Message:
Send Email Cancel

References

  1. 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

Monk Dubiel of the 1948 Philadelphia Phillies threw right-handed, played on a losing team, played in Shibe Park, and was born in Connecticut.

  • achievement score (-0.2 see References)
  • assists (18)
  • complete games (6)
  • double plays (1)
  • games finished (10)
  • games played (37)
  • games started (17)
  • innings pitched (150.3)
  • putouts (12)
  • saves (4)
  • shutouts (2)
  • strikeouts (42)
  • strikeouts per nine innings (2.5)
  • winning percentage (44.4%)
  • wins (8)
  • balks (0)
  • earned run average (3.89)
  • earned runs (65)
  • errors (1)
  • hit by pitch (1)
  • hits (139)
  • hits per nine innings (8.3)
  • homers given up (13)
  • homers per nine innings (.8)
  • losses (10)
  • runs allowed (84)
  • walks (58)
  • walks per nine innings (3.5)
  • wild pitches (1)
  • age (30 yrs)
  • batters faced (628)
  • height (6'0")
  • innings pitched per game (4.1)
  • weight (190 lbs)

Sources


© Copyright 2016 OnlyBoth | Terms of Use | Markets | Solutions | Benchmarking