- George Hildebrand
Infobox MLB retired
name=George Hildebrand
position=Left fielder
bgcolor1=black
bgcolor2=black
textcolor1=white
textcolor2=white
bats=Right
throws=Right
birthdate=September 6 1878
deathdate=death date and age|1960|5|30|1878|9|6
debutdate=April 17
debutyear=by|1902
debutteam=Brooklyn Superbas
finaldate=April 17
finalyear=by|1902
finalteam=Brooklyn Superbas
stat1label=Batting average
stat1value=.220
stat2label=Home run s
stat2value=0
stat3label=Runs batted in
stat3value=5
teams=
* Brooklyn Superbas (1902)
highlights=George Albert Hildebrand (
September 6 1878 -May 30 1960 ) was an Americanleft fielder and umpire inMajor League Baseball who played 11 games for the 1902 Brooklyn Superbas and later umpired in theAmerican League from 1913 to 1934. He is often credited as having invented thespitball while playing in the minor leagues. He was the umpire in fourWorld Series (1914, 1918, 1922, 1926), and his 3,331 games as an umpire ranked third in AL history when he retired.Born in
San Francisco, California , Hildebrand began his playing career in 1898. He was playing for Providence in the Eastern League in the spring of 1902 when he discovered the effect moisture had on a pitched ball; he encouraged pitchersFrank Corridon andElmer Stricklett to try the technique, and Stricklett was believed to be the first to use the pitch in a major league game in by|1904.cite news |title=Hildebrand, A.L. Umpire for 22 Years, Dies at 81 |work=The Sporting News |page=48 |date=1960-06-08 ]Hildebrand worked much of his umpiring career in a team with
Brick Owens . His most controversial decision came in Game 2 of the 1922 World Series, when he ended the game on account of darkness after 10 innings with the score tied 3-3, even though it did not begin to get dark until a half hour later; it was widely believed that the game could have continued for a few more innings. It was later reported that third base umpireBill Klem had expressed to Hildebrand his concern about a long game, recalling Game 2 of the 1914 Series, which had ended in almost complete darkness after 14 innings. There was such heavy criticism of Hildebrand's decision to end the game that commissionerKenesaw Mountain Landis ordered the game proceeds ($120,000) to be donated to charity.Hildebrand was behind the plate on
June 21 , by|1916, when Rube Foster of theBoston Red Sox pitched a 2-0no-hitter against theNew York Yankees . [cite book |last=Coberly |first=Rich |title=The No-Hit Hall of Fame: No-Hitters of the 20th Century |year=1985 |publisher=Triple Play |location=Newport Beach, CA |isbn=0-934289-00-X |pages=p. 43] He was also behind the plate onJuly 10 , by|1932 when Johnny Burnett of theCleveland Indians collected a record nine hits in an 18-inning game against the Philadelphia Athletics. [cite book|last=Dittmar|first=Joseph J.|title=Baseball's Benchmark Boxscores|year=1990|publisher=McFarland & Co.|location=Jefferson, NC|isbn=0-89950-488-4|pages=pp. 56-58]After retiring from baseball, Hildebrand ran a hotel in
Brawley, California , and then went into business in Los Angeles. He died of heart failure at age 81 at Reseda Hospital in Reseda, California, and was survived by his wife Sue and son Albert. He was buried inValhalla Memorial Park Cemetery .References
External links
*baseball-reference|id=h/hildege01
* [http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/H/Phildg101.htm Retrosheet]
* [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/ballplayers/player.php?name=George_Hildebrand_1878 BaseballLibrary] - profile, career highlights and [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/sabr/tbi/H/Hildebrand_George.tbi.stm SABR bibliography]
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