- Chief Zimmer
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Chief Zimmer Catcher Born: November 23, 1860
Marietta, OhioDied: August 22, 1949 (aged 88)
Cleveland, OhioBatted: Right Threw: Right MLB debut July 18, 1884 for the Detroit Wolverines Last MLB appearance September 27, 1903 for the Philadelphia Phillies Career statistics Batting average .269 On base percentage .339 RBI 625 Teams - Detroit Wolverines (1884)
- New York Metropolitans (1886)
- Cleveland Blues/Spiders (1887–1899)
- Louisville Colonels (1899)
- Pittsburgh Pirates (1900–1902)
- Philadelphia Phillies (1903)
Career highlights and awards - Oldest player in the National League from 1900 to 1903.
Charles Louis Zimmer (November 23, 1860 in Marietta, Ohio – August 22, 1949 in Cleveland, Ohio) was a catcher in Major League Baseball for 19 seasons from 1884 to 1903, playing for the Detroit Wolverines (1884), New York Metropolitans (1886) Cleveland Blues/Spiders (1887–1899), Louisville Colonels (1899), Pittsburgh Pirates (1900–1902), and Philadelphia Phillies (1903). He was also the player/manager for the Phillies in 1903. Zimmer played in 1280 major league games, including 1239 as a catcher. He had a career batting average of .269 with a .339 on base percentage, 1227 hits, 617 runs scored, 222 doubles, 76 triples, 26 home runs, 625 RBIs, 151 stolen bases, and 390 bases on balls. His career fielding percentage as a catcher was .952 (16 points higher than the average catcher of his era) with 4883 putouts, 1580 assists and 135 double plays.
Zimmer is credited with being the first catcher (in 1887) to play directly behind the plate on every play. Prior to 1887, catchers typically positioned themselves farther back of the plate with runners on base. Zimmer was considered one of the finest defensive catchers of his day. He led the National League in putouts in 1891 and 1900 and in assists in 1890 and 1891. In 1895 he batted a career-high .340.
In 1894, Zimmer became one of the first hitters to get six hits in a single game, off Win Mercer. He also helped Cleveland win the 1895 Temple Cup, the equivalent at that time of the World Series.
While playing for Cleveland, Zimmer was Cy Young's catcher for the first half of Young's career, and a close friend of Young.
Despite his nickname, "Chief" Zimmer was not of American Indian descent. Zimmer said he got the nickname while playing for Poughkeepsie as captain and manager. "Since we were fleet of foot, we were called the Indians. As I was the head man of the Indians, somebody began to call me 'Chief.' It stuck."[1]
After retiring from baseball, Zimmer worked as a cabinet-maker, cigar roller, and owned and managed at least two minor league baseball teams. He is prominently featured in "Zimmer's Base Ball Game," a baseball table game that was popular in the 1890s and which is now a valuable collectible.[2] Although his name is affixed to the game, Zimmer, nor did the game-making behemoth McLoughlin Bros. It was a man named Joseph A. Meaher of Cleveland who got the idea patented in February 1893, according to Tom Shieber, senior curator for the Baseball Hall of Fame. While Meaher was likely responsible for the game’s set-up as well as the painting of the field and the children peeking over the one-and-a-half inch outfield wall, it was no doubt McLoughlin Bros. – revered for their lithographs – that created the instructions along with the image of Zimmer and 18 other portraits, including 11 Hall of Famers.[3]
While a good but not great baseball player (he was not a Hall of Famer), Zimmer was one of the first athletes to actively pursue self-marketing. In addition to the board game, Zimmer endorsed a line of cigars.
Zimmer died in Cleveland, Ohio at age 88.
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference, or Baseball-Reference (Minors)
- The Deadball Era
- Bill James (2003). The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-2722-0. http://books.google.com/books?id=mUzTJ4-8N0EC&pg=RA1-PT311&lpg=RA1-PT311&dq=%22chief+zimmer%22&source=web&ots=UDqd8WpbVw&sig=o-6M_VAJ1_E0305_6R6rDktxRYg#PRA1-PT312,M1.
Preceded by
Bill ShettslinePhiladelphia Phillies manager
1903Succeeded by
Hugh DuffyPittsburgh Pirates 1901 National League Champions Ginger Beaumont | Kitty Bransfield | Jack Chesbro | Fred Clarke | Lefty Davis | Ed Doheny | Bones Ely | Tommy Leach | Sam Leever | Jack O'Connor | Deacon Phillippe | Ed Poole | Claude Ritchey | Jesse Tannehill | Honus Wagner | Snake Wiltse | George Yeager | Chief Zimmer
Manager Fred ClarkePittsburgh Pirates 1902 National League Champions Ginger Beaumont | Kitty Bransfield | Jimmy Burke | Jack Chesbro | Fred Clarke | Wid Conroy | Lefty Davis | Ed Doheny | Tommy Leach | Sam Leever | Jack O'Connor | Deacon Phillippe | Claude Ritchey | Harry Smith | Jesse Tannehill | Honus Wagner | Chief Zimmer
Manager Fred ClarkePhiladelphia Phillies managers Ferguson • Purcell • Wright • Clements • Reach • Allen • Wright • Irwin • Nash • Stallings • Shettsline • Zimmer • Duffy • Murray • Dooin • Moran • Coombs • Cravath • Donovan • Wilhelm • Fletcher • McInnis • Shotton • Wilson • Prothro • Lobert • Harris • Fitzsimmons • Chapman • Sawyer • O'Neill • Moore • Smith • Sawyer • Cohen • Mauch • Myatt • Skinner • Myatt • Lucchesi • Owens • Ozark • Green • Corrales • Owens • Felske • Elia • Vukovich • Leyva • Fregosi • Francona • Bowa • Varsho • ManuelCategories:- 1860 births
- 1949 deaths
- Baseball players from Ohio
- Detroit Wolverines players
- New York Metropolitans players
- Cleveland Blues (1887–1888) players
- Cleveland Spiders players
- Louisville Colonels players
- Pittsburgh Pirates players
- Philadelphia Phillies players
- Philadelphia Phillies managers
- Major League Baseball catchers
- Baseball player–managers
- 19th-century baseball players
- People from Marietta, Ohio
- Minor league baseball managers
- Ironton (minor league baseball) players
- Portsmouth Riversides players
- Rochester Maroons players
- Little Rock Travelers players
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