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    • Generally considered the game’s greatest right-handed hitter

      • Rogers Hornsby was an American professional baseball player, generally considered the game’s greatest right-handed hitter. His major league career batting average of.358 is second only to Ty Cobb’s.366.
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  2. Hornsby, whose modern era season-record .424 batting average and .358 lifetime mark for 23 big league campaigns established him as the standard for right-handed batters, was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1942.

  3. Hornsby is only the second right-handed batter in history to hit over .400 three times and is considered, according to the Los Angeles Times, to be the greatest right-handed hitter in history. He led the National League in batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage, and total bases every year from 1920 to 1925.

  4. Apr 23, 2024 · Rogers Hornsby (born April 27, 1896, Winters, Texas, U.S.—died January 5, 1963, Chicago, Illinois) was an American professional baseball player, generally considered the game’s greatest right-handed hitter. His major league career batting average of .358 is second only to Ty Cobb ’s .366.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. On it, he was the greatest right-handed batter in baseball history. Hornsby, whose season-record .424 average and .358 lifetime mark for 23 big league campaigns established him as the standard for right-handed batters, was elected to the Hall of Fame on Jan. 4, 1942.

    • Was Rogers Hornsby the greatest right-handed batter in baseball history?1
    • Was Rogers Hornsby the greatest right-handed batter in baseball history?2
    • Was Rogers Hornsby the greatest right-handed batter in baseball history?3
    • Was Rogers Hornsby the greatest right-handed batter in baseball history?4
    • Baseball Hungry
    • Hitting Machine
    • Swinging at Strikes
    • Awards and Accomplishments
    • Management Problems
    • Related Biography: Manager John Mcgraw
    • Shuffling Around
    • Career Statistics
    • Further Information

    The Hornsby family came from Wales to colonial Virginia in the early 18th century, and about a century later moved to west Texas, to a settlement near Austin that became known as Hornsby's Bend. Ed Hornsby married Mary Dallas Rogers, from nearby Rogers Hill, in 1882. They had four children before moving to a homestead near Abilene. There, Rogers Ho...

    In 1918, injuries—including a groin pull, a spiked thumb, and a sore shoulder—hampered Hornsby, and he slumped to .281, the worst full-season performance of his major-league career. The season was cut short by World War I, and Hornsby was drafted to go to Wilmington, Delaware, to work in the naval shipyards and play ball for military teams. There, ...

    Hornsby had simple rules for hitting. The most important was never to swing at balls out of the strike zone. He didn't vary his stance, standing almost upright and rigid in the batters' box, left foot closer to the plate than right. He rarely pulled the ball down the left-field line, and always tried to hit the ball where it was pitched. He also pl...

    Though Hornsby always hustled and had enough speed to beat out many infield hits, he never was much of a base-stealer. As a fielder, he was inconsistent. His fielding percentage of .958 lifetime is subpar. Even after settling at second base as a regular position, he continued to play games at first base, third base, and the out-field. But he was ex...

    Hornsby and his second wife had a new son in 1925. In mid-season, he took over as manager of the Cardinals, displacing Branch Rickey, and bought one-eighth of the club's stock, as part of a three-way power struggle for control of the club that also involved owner Sam Breadon. As a manager, Hornsby drove his players hard. He told pitchers they shoul...

    Hall of Famer John McGraw is considered by many baseball experts to be the best manager in major league history. As a player with the Baltimore Orioles in the 1890s, McGraw was instrumental in perfecting an allout style of play now known as "small ball" that focused on stealing bases, bunting, and hustling. He mixed these skills with an intimidatin...

    In Boston, Hornsby again assumed the managerial reins during the season and won his final batting championship with a .387 average. He also led the league in walks and slugging percentage. But the Braves were inept and finished next to last. After the season, it was announced that Hornsby had signed a three-year contract to manage Boston, but then ...

    Hornsby will be remembered as a hitter of unequalled accomplishments and a player of exceptional drive and focus. Though not as reviled as Cobb, Hornsby was never a popular player among his teammates. But social skills don't win ball games, and Hornsby concentrated on winning. His discipline at the plate—swinging only at strikes, and not trying to ...

    Books

    Alexander, Charles C. Rogers Hornsby: A Biography. New York: Henry Holt, 1995. The Baseball Encyclopedia.New York: Macmillan, 1997. Burns, Ken, and Ward, Geoffrey C. Baseball: An Illustrated History.New York: Knopf, 1994. Thorn, John, and Palmer, Pete. Total Baseball.New York: Warner Books, 1989.

    Periodicals

    "Hail to the Rajah: Before Ted Williams, there was Rogers Hornsby, the forgotten father of the father of hitting." Sports Illustrated(June 24, 2002): R14. "Hornsby, in Death, Acclaimed for Great Hitting." New York Times(January 6, 1963). "The Rajah at 100." The Sporting News(May 6, 1996): 55. "A tale of two Hornsbys: a sweetheart back home." Baseball Research Journal(Annual, 2001).

    Other

    baseball-reference.com. http://www.baseball-reference.com(November 22, 2002). "Hornsby cared only about results." ESPN.com. http://espn.go.com/sportscentury/features/00014249.html(November 22, 2002). "Hornsby, Rogers." The Handbook of Texas Online.http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/HH/fho61.html (November 22, 2002). "Rogers Hornsby." Baseball Library.com. http://www.pubdim.net/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/H/Hornsby_Rogers.stm(November 22, 2002). "Rogers Hornsby." National...

  6. Jan 4, 2012 · Further, there is really no debate that Hornsby is the greatest right-handed hitter of all time; he is significantly ahead of such notables as Harry Heilmann (.342) and Al Simmons (.334).