- Joe Hauser
Infobox MLB retired
name=Joe Hauser
position=First baseman
caption=Joe Hauser as a baseball player
bats=Switch
throws=Right
birthdate=birth date|1899|1|12|mf=y
city-state|Milwaukee|Wisconsin
deathdate=death date and age|1997|7|11|1899|1|12
city-state|Sheboygan|Wisconsin
debutdate=April 18
debutyear=by|1922
debutteam=Philadelphia Athletics
finaldate=October 6
finalyear=by|1929
finalteam=Cleveland Indians
stat1label=Batting average
stat1value=.284
stat2label=Home runs
stat2value=80
stat3label=Runs batted in
stat3value=356
teams=
*Philadelphia Athletics (1922-24, 1926, 1928)
*Cleveland Indians (1929)
highlights=Joseph John "Unser Choe" Hauser (
January 21 ,1899 in Milwaukee,Wisconsin -July 11 ,1997 in Sheboygan, Wisconsin) is a former professionalbaseball player who playedfirst baseman in the Major Leagues from 1922-1929, with the Philadelphia Athletics andCleveland Indians . Hauser's major league career was undistinguished, but he made a name for himself in the minor leagues, where he became the first player ever to hit 60 or morehome run s twice in a professional career: 63 in 1930, and 69 in 1933.cite web|url=http://www.baseballlibrary.com/ballplayers/player.php?name=Joe_Hauser_1899|title=The Ballplayers - Joe Hauser - BaseballLibrary.com|accessdate=2007-08-08]Biography
Hauser began with Providence of the Eastern League in 1918, and found himself back in his hometown two years later, with the
Milwaukee Brewers of the American Association. There he acquired the nickname "Unser Choe". As he told it, the predominantly German-immigrant fans would support him. If he was having a bad day at the plate and some fans were booing, others would admonish them with, "Das ist unser Choe!" -- German and German-English for "That is "our" Joe!"He had his best major league year statistically in 1924, but a broken leg and slow recovery hampered his career in 1925 and 1926. In 1928 he seemed to get back on track, but his ability to hit major league pitching somehow vanished, and after 1929 he was through in the majors. He later blamed A's player-coach
Ty Cobb for over-analyzing and impairing his hitting style.Back in the minors in 1930, Hauser played for the
Baltimore Orioles of theInternational League and regained his hitting touch, slamming a then-professional record of 63 home runs in one season, in the cozy confines ofOriole Park . He also led the minors in homers in 1931. TheMinneapolis Millers of the American Association thought Hauser would be a good addition to the even-cozierNicollet Park , home of the Millers, and they were right. They bought his contract just before the 1932 season. After a slow start, Hauser hit 49 long ones to lead the Association in home runs. He might have hit more, and challenged the league record of 54 (set by Nick Cullop of the Millers in 1930), but he was rested to allow an injury to heal so that he would be healthy for theJunior World Series .1933 was Hauser's career year. The league decided to cut its schedule from 168 to 154 games, and Hauser went homer-less in his first nine games, so his prospects for even reaching his previous year's total were in doubt. However, in the home opener, Hauser hit one out in his first at-bat, and then three more the next day, and the long balls began to accumulate. By the end of June, he had reached 32. He hit his 50th on
July 27 , in Milwaukee. He hit his 54th and 55th in Toledo a couple of weeks later, setting a new league mark. OnAugust 20 , he hit his 60th, the first player to hit 60 twice in a professional career. He tied and broke his own professional record by hitting his 63rd and 64th in St. Paul'sLexington Park onLabor Day . He pushed the total to 69, with his chance at 70 rained out. Hauser also collected 182RBI s and a record-setting 439 total bases.Hauser got off to a good start in 1934, but a fractured kneecap ended his season, and his career wound down after that. He played off and on for the Millers and then
Sheboygan before hanging them up in 1943. Following his playing career, he ran a sporting goods shop in Sheboygan until retiring in 1984.Hauser's 69 was eventually matched by
Bob Crues in 1948 and surpassed by the 72 ofJoe Bauman in 1954. He remained the only player to hit 60 or more twice untilMark McGwire andSammy Sosa accomplished the feat in 1998 and 1999.ee also
*
Major League Baseball hitters with three home runs in one game
*History of baseball in the United States References
*"Before the Dome", edited by David Anderson, Nodin Press, Minneapolis, 1993, pp.75-77.
External links
*baseball-reference|id=h/hausejo01
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