Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 24, 2000 · He was out of the major leagues only twice over the next fifteen years — both times at his own choice. Baker’s easygoing temperament and an aversion to tobacco, alcohol, and abusive language quickly endeared him to many fellow players and fans.

  2. Baker enjoyed working on his father's farm, but he aspired to become a professional baseball player from the age of ten. In Trappe, most of the residents attended the local baseball team's games on Saturdays. Frank's older brother, Norman, was well known in the town for his playing ability.

  3. Jan 4, 2012 · In an era characterized by urbanization and rapid industrial growth, Frank “Home Run” Baker epitomized the rustic virtues that were becoming essential to baseball’s emerging bucolic mythology.

  4. Baker agreed to report to the Yankees in 1916, and spent the next four seasons as New York’s third baseman, averaging eight home runs a year. He retired prior to the 1920 season following the death of his first wife, but returned to the Yankees in 1921 and 1922 before ending his big league career.

  5. Oct 27, 2008 · Baker was born on March 13, 1886 on his family's farm in Trappe, Maryland. Baker was given the nickname "Home Run" in the 1911 World Series. But he didn't begin his career...

  6. Oct 30, 2013 · The story of how Frank Baker, the Philadelphia Athletics star third baseman, earned the nickname of “Home Run” is well known to even casual fans of baseball. As his Hall of Fame plaque states, he “won two World Series games from [the] Giants in 1911 with home-runs thus getting name ‘Home Run’ Baker.”. Baker’s two home runs would ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Apr 3, 2024 · So how did Frank Baker, a third baseman whose career began in 1908 with the Philadelphia A’s and ended with the Yankees in 1922, earn the nickname “Home Run Baker?” Because before Ruth came along, Baker was as prolific as any home run hitter in baseball as he led the AL four consecutive years between 1911 and 1914.