- Tommy Dowd (baseball)
Thomas Jefferson Dowd (
April 20 ,1869 ,Holyoke, Massachusetts -July 2 ,1933 , Holyoke), was a United States major-league baseball player. Nicknamed "Buttermilk Tommy", Dowd was a star player atBrown University and played ten seasons in the major leagues, from 1891 to 1901.According to an article in the "Brown Alumni Magazine":
Nineteenth-century baseball authority Tim Murnane of the Boston Globe proclaimed Dowd the best center fielder he'd ever seen, especially for his skill at sprinting back on a ball over his head and then turning left or right for the catch. For years Dowd held the unofficial record time for circling the bases.
Dowd made his major-league debut on
April 8 ,1891 , in the American Association. He later played with the Washington Senators, St. Louis Browns,Philadelphia Phillies andCleveland Spiders in theNational League and theBoston Americans in the newAmerican League (1901). He was a right-handed batter with a career average of .271. He stole 366 bases in his major-league career. His final game wasSeptember 28 ,1901 .After his career, he coached at Amherst College and Williams College, and managed in several minor and independent leagues. In 1908 he was managing at Hartford, and signed
Chick Evans to a contract.Dowd also studied law at
Georgetown University .He was given credit for discovering
Rabbit Maranville .His body was found in the Connecticut River in July 1933; his death was ruled accidental.
1901 Boston Americans Opening Day lineup
References
*This article is based on the article [http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Tommy_Dowd Tommy Dowd] at the baseball-reference.com Bullpen, accessed
October 20 ,2006 . The article is available under theGNU Free Documentation License .ee also
*
Hitting for the cycle External links
* [http://www.baseball-reference.com/d/dowdto01.shtml His statistics] at baseball-reference.com
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