- Cal McVey
Infobox MLB retired
name=Cal McVey
position=First Baseman /Catcher /Outfielder
bgcolor1=black
bgcolor2=black
textcolor1=white
textcolor2=white
bats=Right
throws=Right
birthdate=August 30 ,1849
city-state|Montrose|Iowa
deathdate=death date and age|1926|8|20|1849|8|30
city-state|San Francisco|California
debutdate=May 5
debutyear= 1871
debutteam=Boston Red Stockings
finaldate=??
finalyear=1879
finalteam=Cincinnati Reds
stat1label=Batting average
stat1value=.346
stat2label=Runs scored
stat2value=555
stat3label=Runs batted in
stat3value=448
teams=
*Boston Red Stockings (1871-1872, 1874-1875)
*Baltimore Canaries (1873)
* Chicago White Stockings (1876-1877)
*Cincinnati Reds (1878-1879)
highlights=
*2-time National Association hits leader
*2-time National Association RBI leaderCalvin Alexander McVey (
August 30 ,1849 –August 20 ,1926 ) was a professionalbaseball player during the 1860s and 1870s. McVey's importance to the game stems from his play on two of the earliest professional baseball teams, the originalCincinnati Red Stockings and the National Association Boston Red Stockings. He also played on the inauguralNational League pennant-winning team, the 1876 Chicago White Stockings.He has the NA record for most career
RBIs (276)Cal McVey was born in rural
Montrose, Iowa and moved toIndianapolis at eleven, where he learned baseball and soon excelled at the game, playing for the Western and Active clubs in theNational Association of Base Ball Players (NABBP). With McVey usually pitching, the Actives in 1868 defeated local rivals, lost to the three strong Eastern teams that toured the West, and won one game in six against Cincinnati teams (Wright 2000: 211). Despite a lopsided 7-54 defeat by theCincinnati Red Stockings , that club later hired him to play in 1869 for $700 and he served as the regular right fielder for both of its storied seasons. [On a trip to Cincinnati, September 14 to 17, the Actives played four games in four days (Wright 2000: 211). The local baseball fraternity must have followed the Actives as well as the relative performances of the four local teams, all winners. Perhaps Red Stockings manager Harry Wright watched all the games himself.]Cincinnati
McVey was directly in the middle of the most controversial game of the Red Stockings' reported 84-game winning streak, 1869 and 1870. Playing the Troy Haymakers, with the game tied 17 to 17, McVey fouled off a pitch the
catcher claimed to have caught on the first bounce. That would have been an out but the umpire disagreed. In the ensuing argument, Troy left the field and the game was awarded to Cincinnati on forfeit.1871
With the Red Stockings going out of business, manager
Harry Wright signed to organize and lead a team in Boston. He hired McVey, Charlie Gould, and George Wright to join him, composing almost half the team that just missed winning the firstNational Association pennant. With some personnel changes, theBoston Red Stockings won the other four NA pennants, dominating so severely in 1875 that they helped provoke a new league. McVey served Boston two seasons as the first catcher, otherwise in the outfield, followed by one season managing in Baltimore and two more seasons in Boston, now an outfielder and second catcher. [In the 1870s many teams relied heavily on nine regular players; sharing pitcher and another position or catcher and another position between two players was common.Deacon White was hired in 1873 and played three seasons in Boston as first catcher, otherwise in the outfield. Thus he shared two positions with McVey in 1874-1875. McVey, White, and Al Spalding covered first, catcher, and pitcher in 1876; McVey,Cap Anson , and George Bradley covered third, catcher, and pitcher in 1877 after Spalding retired to first.]During the summer of 1875, Boston's four Western stars agreed to play next season for the Chicago White Stockings: McVey,
Deacon White ,Ross Barnes , andAlbert Spalding . Partly because the rules forbade such tampering, Chicago led the founding of a new National League of Professional Base Ball Clubs (NL). The Big Four andCap Anson led the team to an easy win on the field, McVey serving as regular first baseman, second pitcher to Spalding, and second catcher to White. Few pieces remained in place or the second season, when McVey worked as first catcher and second pitcher and the team slumped out of the picture.In 1878 McVey returned to Cincinnati where he completed his major league career in two seasons as manager and infielder. The new Red Stockings finished a close second in his first year but slipped to fifth in 1879 (.538 but ahead of three new teams only). The reserve rule was adopted that fall, maybe a factor in his move to California, which he had visited on the 1869 Red Stockings tour. He was still a star batsman at the major league level.
In San Francisco during the 1880s, McVey played for, managed, or organized several teams. He retired there and died 1926, just short of 77 years old. He was cremated.
Notes
ee also
*
List of Major League Baseball saves champions
*List of Major League Baseball RBI champions
*List of Major League Baseball runs scored champions
*List of Major League Baseball doubles champions References
*baseball-reference|id=m/mcveyca01
*Ellard, Harry ( [1908] 2004). "Base Ball in Cincinnati: A History". Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co. ISBN 0-7864-1726-9
*Ivor-Campbell, Frederick (1989). "Calvin Alexander McVey". "Nineteenth Century Stars". Edited by Robert L. Tiemann and Mark Rucker. Kansas City, MO: SABR. ISBN 0-910137-35-8
*Retrosheet. [http://retrosheet.org/boxesetc/Pmcvec101.htm "Cal McVey"] . Retrieved 2006-08-29.
*"SABR Biographical Research Committee Report" (December 2005). Edited by Bill Carle. Cleveland, OH: SABR.
*Wright, Marshall (2000). "The National Association of Base Ball Players, 1857-1870". Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co. ISBN 0-7864-0779-4
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