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Fred Dunlap

Frederick C. "Sure Shot" Dunlap (May 21, 1859 – December 1, 1902) was a second baseman and manager in Major League Baseball from 1880 to 1891. He was the highest paid player in Major League Baseball from 1884 to 1889. He has also been rated by some contemporary and modern sources as the greatest overall second baseman of the 19th century. He earned the nickname "Sure Shot" for the strength and accuracy of his throws to first base, and was also sometimes referred to in the 1880s as the "King of Second Basemen."

Fred Dunlap
1888 baseball card of Dunlap
Second baseman
Born: (1859-05-21)May 21, 1859
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died: December 1, 1902(1902-12-01) (aged 43)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
May 1, 1880, for the Cleveland Blues
Last MLB appearance
April 20, 1891, for the Washington Statesmen
MLB statistics
Batting average.292
Home runs41
Runs batted in366
Teams
As player

As manager

Career highlights and awards

Dunlap played for the Cleveland Blues from 1880 to 1883, where he secured his reputation as one of the best players in the game. As a rookie in 1880, he led the National League in doubles and ranked second in extra base hits. While playing for Cleveland, he also compiled batting averages of .325 and .326 in 1881 and 1883 and led the league in assists by a second baseman and range factor. When the Union Association was formed in 1884, Dunlap was lured to play for the St. Louis Maroons where he became the highest paid player in baseball. His .412 batting average in 1884 was the highest ever recorded to that time in Major League Baseball and 56 points higher than any other player in the major leagues in 1884 due to the lack of talent in the UA.

After three years in St. Louis, Dunlap was sold to the Detroit Wolverines and helped that team win the 1887 National League pennant. Dunlap's baseball career ended in 1891 when he broke his leg sliding into a base. He went into the construction business and bet on horses in the 1890s. At the time of his death in 1902, Dunlap was penniless and living in a rundown boarding house.

Early years edit

Dunlap was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1859. Both of his parents died when he was 10 years old. Dunlap did not attend school after his parents died and spent his youth playing baseball.[1] Lacking formal education, Dunlap remained illiterate throughout his life.[2]

Dunlap began playing semi-pro baseball at age 15 in 1874 for the Gloucester Club in Gloucester City, New Jersey. In 1875, he started the season with the Greighers of Camden, New Jersey, then joined the Kleinz Club of Philadelphia. He played for Chester at the start of the 1876 season before joining the Quicksteps of Wilmington, Delaware, as a pitcher.[3] In 1877, he began playing professional baseball as a second baseman for the Auburns of Auburn, New York. In 1878, he played for teams in Hornellsville and Albany, New York. He remained with Albany in 1879.[4][5]

Major League Baseball edit

Cleveland Blues edit

In May 1880, Dunlap began a 12-year career in Major League Baseball with the Cleveland Blues. In his first season, Dunlap immediately established himself as one of the game's best players. For the 1880 season, Dunlap led the National League (NL) in doubles (27) and ranked second in extra base hits (40) and times on base (132) while serving as the team's leadoff hitter.[6][7] He also made a strong debut on defense, leading the National League in assists by a second baseman (290). Dunlap remained with the Blues for four seasons and consistently ranked as one of the leading hitters and defensive second basemen in the National League. In 1881, he compiled 156 total bases, the second most in the NL, and had a .325 batting average and .444 slugging percentage, ranking fifth in the NL in both categories. In 1882, he led the NL's second basemen with 297 assists and a range factor of 6.73.[6]

In his final year in Cleveland, Dunlap had a .326 batting average, .361 on-base percentage, and .452 slugging percentage, ranking among the league's leaders in each of those categories. Defensively, he led the league's second basemen in putouts (304) and ranked third in assists (290) and fielding percentage (.911).[6] Dunlap was the star of the Cleveland team in the early 1880s. So key was he to the Blues that one writer observed, "The Maroons without Dunlap are like the play of Hamlet without the melancholy Dane."[8]

"Sure Shot" edit

Dunlap was known during his baseball career by the nicknames "Sure Shot" and "King of Second Basemen".[2][9][10] Most accounts indicate that the "Sure Shot" nickname arose from Dunlap's powerful and accurate throws to first base.[11] King Kelly reportedly gave Dunlap the "Sure Shot" nickname after watching him throw.[1] One account described Dunlap's throwing prowess as follows: "[E]ndless practice made him adept as a monkey at grabbing a sizzling ground ball in either hand and firing it off from the very spot he seized it. His whistling throws, which seemed to clear the grass by no more than half a foot, never seemed to lose more than an inch or two."[2]

Alfred Henry Spink, who saw Dunlap play, wrote that Dunlap could chase down a ball in the outfield and throw it to home plate "with such fearful speed and accuracy that the ball seemed to sing as it flew."[1] Dunlap was known for his range in getting to balls that others of his era could not, and he was reportedly able to dive for a ball and throw while lying on the ground with enough velocity to sting the first baseman's hand.[2] Dunlap was ambidextrous and was able to catch and throw a baseball with the same skill and accuracy with either hand. Moreover, Dunlap reportedly never wore a glove.[1]

One source gives an entirely different account of how Dunlap obtained the "Sure Shot" nickname. In his book on the history of the home run, Mark Ribowsky wrote that the nickname dated back to a game against the Chicago White Stockings on July 10, 1880. The White Stockings had won 21 straight games until Dunlap hit a walk-off two-run home run in the bottom of the ninth inning. According to Ribowsky, "For this Shot Heard 'Round Cleveland, Dunlap won the nickname 'Sure Shot.'"[12]

St. Louis Maroons edit

In November 1883, Dunlap signed a contract to play for the St. Louis Maroons in the new Union Association. He was the biggest star lured to the new league. His contract paid Dunlap a salary of $3,400 (including $1,000 paid in advance),[13] the highest salary paid to any baseball player at that time.[4] He remained the highest paid baseball player every year from 1884 to 1889.[14]

Dunlap played second base for the St. Louis Maroons from 1884 to 1886 and also served as the team's manager for portions of those seasons. During the 1884 season, the Maroons and Dunlap dominated the Union Association. The team compiled a record of 94-19, and Dunlap led the new league in most significant offensive and defensive categories. His .412 batting average was 56 points higher than any other player in the Union Association, the National League, or the American Association. He also led the league in on-base percentage (.448), slugging percentage (.621), runs scored (160), hits (185), total bases (279), home runs (13), extra base hits (60), assists by a second baseman (300), putouts by a second baseman (341), range factor at second base (6.41), and fielding percentage at second base (.926).[6] Dunlap's .412 batting average in 1884 was the highest ever recorded in any of the major leagues up to that time.[15] His 160 runs scored in 1884 remains one of the highest single-season totals in major league history.[4]

Some baseball historians have suggested that Dunlap's accomplishments during the 1884 season should be discounted due to the lesser talent pool in the Union Association.[16] In 1885, the Union Association was disbanded after only one year, and the St. Louis Maroons joined the National League. Although his batting average dropped 142 points to .270 in 1885, Dunlap continued to be one of the best defensive second basemen in the major leagues. He led the National League's second basemen in 1885 with a .934 fielding percentage and ranked second in assists (374), putouts (314), and range factor (6.49).[6] Dunlap spent a third season with the Maroons in 1886, and hit for the cycle on May 24. However, the Maroons were in financial distress, and rumors spread that the team might disband.[17]

Detroit Wolverines edit

 
1888 baseball card of Dunlap

In early August 1886, Dunlap was sold to the Detroit Wolverines for $4,700, the most expensive purchase price at the time.[17][18][19] In addition to the sum paid to the Maroons to grant the release, the Detroit team signed a contract to pay Dunlap $4,500 a season for two seasons, with an advance of $1,500 on the first day of November 1886 and 1887, respectively.[17] The mid-season sale led to concerns about the Maroons: "The transfer of Dunlap to Detroit is a small thing in itself, but its bearing on the entire base ball world is so great as to almost revolutionize the present order of things. He was the king pin of the St. Louis Club and his sale makes a certainty of the dissolution of the Maroons."[20] The Detroit management was praised for their "pluck and enterprise" in making the bold "business stroke."[20]The Sporting News wrote at the time:

"Dunlap has joined the Detroits and now that team will fly the League pennant just as sure as time flies and the world grows. From the day the old St. Louis Union team went out of existence Dunlap has been anything but a favorite in St. Louis. Still there was no one in the world but was willing to concede that he was the greatest second baseman America has ever known."[21]

Dunlap, too, expressed delight at the move, noting that he had "tried for two seasons to get away from the Maroons."[20] While the reaction to the acquisition was overwhelmingly positive in Detroit, the Detroit Free Press expressed some concern over Dunlap's reputation as a "disorganizer" and "mischief maker."[17] For the 1886 season, Dunlap led the National League with a career high 393 assists, more than any NL player at any position. In 1887, Dunlap's defensive play at second base helped lead the Detroit Wolverines to the NL pennant with a record of 79-45. Dunlap again led the NL's second basemen in fielding percentage (.948) while also ranking second in range factor (6.72).[6] He also played in 11 games of the 1887 World Series against the American Association champions, the St. Louis Browns. Detroit won the series 10 games to 5. At the end of the 1887 season, Sporting Life praised Dunlap's contributions to Detroit's championship team: "Dunlap is the king of second basemen, and a first-class all-round player. His fielding average in 1886 was .931, ranking third. This season he ranks first, with .949. ... Dunlap is one of the most active men on the field, and is of great value to a team on account of his ability as a kicker and coacher."[3]

Before the last game of the World Series had been played, rumors spread that Detroit (which had amassed an all-star lineup with a commensurate payroll) was in negotiations to unload Dunlap's high salary by selling him to Pittsburgh.[22] Dunlap announced in November 1887 that he would not consent unless the Detroit club paid him half of the sum it was to receive from Pittsburgh to secure his release. He said at the time, "I am sick and tired of being sold without gaining anything by it, and it is about time that my bank account was benefited by these transfers."[23] He told a reporter for The New York Times that he was not penniless and would refuse to play unless his demands were met. He told the reporter that the Detroit club had three choices -- "give me half of the money secured for my release, allow me to go where I please, or fulfill the contract made with me last year."[23]

In January 1888, Dunlap finally consented to the sale and received $2,000 of the $5,000 sales price paid to Detroit.[24] His total annual compensation on signing with Pittsburgh was $6,000, making him the highest paid player in baseball history to that time.[25] The Detroit Free Press congratulated the "cranks" of Pittsburgh for their team's acquisition of "no less than the king second baseman of the country."[26]

Pittsburgh Alleghenys edit

Dunlap played for the Pittsburgh Alleghenys from 1888 to 1890, and served as manager of the Alleghenys for a portion of the 1889 season. During his three years in Pittsburgh, Dunlap's offensive performance declined. His batting average for the Alleghenys went from .262 in 1888 to .235 in 1889. At the same time, he remained one of the leading defensive second basemen in the game. In 1888, Dunlap ranked second among the league's second basemen in fielding percentage (.940) and range factor (6.33), and in 1889, Dunlap's last full season in the major leagues, his .950 fielding percentage led the National League and was a career high for Dunlap.[6]

Before the start of the 1890 season, Dunlap engaged in protracted salary negotiations with President Nimick of the Alleghenys. In late March 1890, the Pittsburg Dispatch reported that the two sides had reached a resolution, "and it now seems certain that Dunlap will play his old position in the Pittsburg league club."[27] Nimick said at the time: "I had a long talk with Mr. Dunlap, and we agreed to terms for him to play with us this season. Of course the terms were below those of last year, that is, he will play for much less than $5,000. He did not sign a contract, for reasons that were quite satisfactory to me ... We know he is a good player and he is quite willing to remain with us."[27]

In the first 17 games of the 1890 season, Dunlap's batting average fell to .172, and as a result he was released by the Alleghenys on May 15. Aside from his batting average, disagreements with Pittsburgh's manager, Guy Hecker, reportedly contributed to the decision. The Pittsburgh Dispatch quoted manager Hecker as saying, "Dunlap is certainly the worst man to get along with that I ever met. He has had everybody in hot water during our entire western trip."[28] Others speculated that Dunlap's release was motivated by his $3,500 salary and the fact that Pittsburgh's backup second baseman, Henry Youngman, had signed for a salary of only $1,050.[28]

Giants and Statesmen edit

Dunlap jumped to the New York Giants of the Players' League in late May 1890.[6] At the time, the Washington correspondent for Sporting Life predicted that Dunlap would bring bad luck to his new team. He wrote: "Fred is a great player, but the hoo-doo that seems to shadow him will make itself felt wherever he may go. There are a number of people in this vicinity who have watched his course with more than ordinary interest, and they do not hesitate to declare him a Jonah."[29] Dunlap appeared in only one game for the Giants and announced in July that he would play no more in 1890 and that he would spend the remainder of the summer at Atlantic City, New Jersey, with plans to return in 1891 "and play the game of his life."[30]

Dunlap concluded his baseball career in 1891 with the Washington Statesmen in the American Association. He appeared in only eight games for the Statesmen before breaking his leg sliding into a base on April 20, 1891.[6][9] In early June 1891, the Washington management notified him that it would discontinue his salary payments. Dunlap returned the notice and filed a grievance, contending he should have been continued at least on half pay since he was disabled while sliding into a base. Washington refused to pay, and he never played professional baseball again.[31]

Career Statistics edit

In 965 games over 12 seasons, Dunlap posted a .292 batting average (1159-for-3974) with 759 runs, 224 doubles, 53 triples, 41 home runs, 366 RBI, 85 stolen bases, 283 bases on balls, .340 on-base percentage and .406 slugging percentage. He finished his career with a .924 fielding percentage.[6]

Later life edit

When he retired from baseball, Dunlap was reported to have $100,000 in savings. He went into the building business in Philadelphia during the 1890s, and owned various properties in the city.[2][10] The Sporting Life reported that Dunlap "dropped out of the game in 1892 to follow the racing game, at which he lost the respectable fortune he accumulated in base ball."[32] Another account indicated that Dunlap lost everything on stock market investments.[25] In July 1902, the Philadelphia Times reported that Dunlap was "clean broke."[33]

In December 1902, Dunlap died penniless and alone at age 43. According to the Sporting Life, the "last two years of his life were spent in abject poverty and mental gloom" in a Philadelphia boarding house.[32] According to several accounts, a policeman at the morgue saw the body and believed it to be Dunlap. Lave Cross was called to the morgue and confirmed that the body was Dunlap.[2][34] His funeral was poorly attended by his former baseball colleagues, and one former player who did attend observed, "There were not enough friends of Dunlap at his funeral to bury him and we had to call on the hack drivers to make up the list of active pall-bearers."[1] Following Dunlap's death, William A. Phelon, Jr., editor of Sporting Life wrote:

"So Fred Dunlap has passed into the great beyond, and the man whose salary figure marked the high-water limit of the long ago is gone! ... What a ball player this Dunlap was and what an artist in getting the fat salaries! ... Dunlap was a real infielder of the type so popular ten years ago -- one of the solid, bulky style through whom no grounder seemed able to pass, but who could nevertheless wave the hot ones goodbye with graceful ease when occasion demanded. With the gloves now in use to aid, Dunny would have been even a bigger wonder now than then."[35]

Legacy edit

Dunlap has been rated by some contemporary and modern sources as the greatest overall second baseman of the 19th century. In his 1910 book on the history of baseball, Alfred Henry Spink, the founder of The Sporting News, was unequivocal: "I have seen all the great second basemen ... I am free to say that Dunlap was far and away the greatest second baseman that ever lived."[1] Stanley Robinson, who owned and managed major league teams in St. Louis and Cleveland, went even further: "He was not only the greatest second baseman, but take him in all the departments of the game, he was perhaps the greatest player that ever lived."[1] Another of Dunlap's contemporaries, Sam Crane, also picked Dunlap as the greatest second baseman in a newspaper column published in 1912. Crane wrote: "Fred Dunlap was acknowledged to be the best second baseman of his day, and was excellent from every angle. I think he excelled Fred Pfeffer."[36] In 1910, John Montgomery Ward, a Hall of Fame inductee who played from 1878 to 1894, published an article about the greatest infielders in baseball history. While picking Fred Pfeffer as a shade better than Dunlap", Ward observed: "Fred Dunlap was the king. Dunlap had the record average of .953 in 64 games with the Detroit club in 1887, and was the personification of ease and grace. He was something of a grandstand player, because of his tendency to make one-handed catches and stops but he got there just the same and was a big favorite wherever he showed."[37]

In a 2008 book using modern sabermetric methods, author William F. McNeil concluded that Dunlap was the best offensive second baseman, the second best defensive second baseman, and the best overall second baseman of the 19th century.[11] Dunlap's career range factor of 6.31 at second base still ranks as the fifth highest in the history of Major League Baseball.[38] However, Bill James, in his 2001 book The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract, ranked Dunlap as the 89th greatest second baseman of all time (and the 8th best of those who played the majority of their careers in the 19th century). James wrote that Dunlap was "never a legitimate star in a legitimate major league, but a good second baseman and a .275 hitter."[39]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Alfred Henry Spink (1910). The National Game. The National Game Publishing Co. pp. 196, 198. ISBN 0-8093-2304-4.
  2. ^ a b c d e f John Thorn (1997). The Complete Armchair book of Baseball. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. pp. 762–764. ISBN 1-57866-004-1.
  3. ^ a b "The Victors: Sketch of the Men Who Now Wear the Dauvray Medals" (PDF). Sporting Life. November 1877.
  4. ^ a b c David L. Porter (2000). Biographical Dictionary of American Sports: A-F. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 420–421. ISBN 9780313311741.
  5. ^ "Fred Dunlap Minor League Statistics". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 9, 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Fred Dunlap Statistics and History". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 9, 2014.
  7. ^ "In And Out-Door Sports. Turf, Field, Stream and Table". The Plain Dealer. June 28, 1880. p. 1.
  8. ^ David Nemec, Mark Rucker (2004). The Beer and Whisky League. Globe Pequot. p. 82. ISBN 1-59228-188-5.
  9. ^ a b Tiemann, Robert L. (2012). Nineteenth Century Stars. Society for American Baseball Research. pp. 82–83. ISBN 9781933599298.
  10. ^ a b "Fred Dunlap Buried: The Former "King of Second Basemen" Laid To Rest". Mansfield News. December 5, 1902.(accessible through newspapers.com)
  11. ^ a b William F. McNeil (2008). All-Stars for All Time: A Sabermetric Ranking of the Major League Best, 1876–2007. McFarland. pp. 47–50. ISBN 978-0-7864-3500-5.
  12. ^ Mark Ribowsky (2003). The Complete History of the Home Run. Citadel Press. p. 19. ISBN 0-8065-2433-2.
  13. ^ "Sporting Matters: Fred Dunlap Leaves the Cleveland Base Ball Club To Weep and To Mourn" (PDF). Detroit Free Press. November 30, 1893.
  14. ^ William H. Dunbar. "July 1918" (PDF). Baseball Magazine. p. 291.
  15. ^ James M. Egan (2008). Base Ball on the Western Reserve. McFarland. p. 97.
  16. ^ Bill James (2003). The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract. Simon and Schuster. pp. 29–32. ISBN 0-7432-2722-0.
  17. ^ a b c d "Dunlap for Detroit: The Famous Player Secured by President Marsh". Detroit Free Press. August 7, 1886.
  18. ^ "Dunlap's New Position" (PDF). The New York Times. August 7, 1886.
  19. ^ "A Prince of Ball Players: Fred Dunlap Released By St. Louis For $4,700". The Sporting News. August 16, 1886. p. 1.
  20. ^ a b c "What Next? the Detroit Management Cause a Tumult in the Base Ball World; Rumored That St. Louis Will Drop Out and Pittsburgh Come Into the League". Detroit Free Press. August 9, 1886.
  21. ^ "untitled". The Sporting News. August 16, 1886. p. 4.
  22. ^ "First and Last: The Games of the World's Championship Series Lost in St. Louis; President Stearns Denies the Story That Dunlap Is Sold". Detroit Free Press. October 27, 1887.
  23. ^ a b "Dunlap on His Mettle" (PDF). The New York Times. November 17, 1887. p. 3.
  24. ^ "Dunlap Goes to Pittsburg" (PDF). The New York Times. January 4, 1888.
  25. ^ a b John Shiffert (2006). Base Ball in Philadelphia: A History of the Early Game, 1831–1900. McFarland. pp. 197–199. ISBN 0-7864-2795-7.
  26. ^ "Dunny To Leave Us: The Fine Second Baseman to be Transferred to Pittsburgh; The Cranks of That City Delighted with the Deal". Detroit Free Press. November 5, 1887.
  27. ^ a b "Sporting Matters: Base Ball; Dunlap and Conway". Detroit Free Press (reprinting article from Pittsburg Dispatch). March 26, 1890.
  28. ^ a b "Dunlap Released by Pittsburg". Detroit Free Press (quoting article from Pittsburg Dispatch). May 17, 1890.
  29. ^ R.M. Larner (May 31, 1890). "Dunlap a Jonah?" (PDF). Sporting Life. p. 10.
  30. ^ "Notes and Gossip (column 2)" (PDF). Sporting News. July 19, 1890.
  31. ^ "Fred Dunlap Released by Washington: Dunny Has a Grievance". The Sporting News. June 20, 1891. p. 1.
  32. ^ a b "Dunlap Dead: The Once Famous Star Second Baseman Ends His Days After Years of Gloom and Poverty in a Hospital" (PDF). Sporting Life. December 1902.
  33. ^ Francis Richter (July 12, 1902). "Quaker Quips" (PDF). Sporting Life. p. 6.
  34. ^ "Famous Baseball Player Is Dead". Detroit Free Press. December 4, 1902.("Fred Dunlap, at one time the best second baseman in the country, and a bright star in Detroit's famous big team, was buried here to-day. Although he drew as high as $5,000 per season, he died penniless.")
  35. ^ W.A. Phelon Jr. (December 27, 1902). "Fred Dunlap's Death Recalls Memories of the Old Days to Every Fan -- How the Old Second Baseman Ranked With McPhee, Pfeffer and the Other Stars" (PDF). Sporting Life. p. 6.
  36. ^ Sam Crane (January 6, 1912). "Comiskey's Immortals" (PDF). Sporting Life. p. 11.
  37. ^ John M. Ward (March 6, 1910). "Were Star Infielders: Players of Older Generation Have Not Been Excelled". The Washington Post.
  38. ^ "Career Leaders & Records for Range Factor/Game as 2B". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
  39. ^ Bill James (2001). The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract. The Free Press. p. 530. ISBN 0-684-80697-5.

External links edit

  • Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet
Achievements
Preceded by Hitting for the cycle
May 24, 1886
Succeeded by

fred, dunlap, frederick, sure, shot, dunlap, 1859, december, 1902, second, baseman, manager, major, league, baseball, from, 1880, 1891, highest, paid, player, major, league, baseball, from, 1884, 1889, also, been, rated, some, contemporary, modern, sources, gr. Frederick C Sure Shot Dunlap May 21 1859 December 1 1902 was a second baseman and manager in Major League Baseball from 1880 to 1891 He was the highest paid player in Major League Baseball from 1884 to 1889 He has also been rated by some contemporary and modern sources as the greatest overall second baseman of the 19th century He earned the nickname Sure Shot for the strength and accuracy of his throws to first base and was also sometimes referred to in the 1880s as the King of Second Basemen Fred Dunlap1888 baseball card of DunlapSecond basemanBorn 1859 05 21 May 21 1859Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S Died December 1 1902 1902 12 01 aged 43 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S Batted RightThrew RightMLB debutMay 1 1880 for the Cleveland BluesLast MLB appearanceApril 20 1891 for the Washington StatesmenMLB statisticsBatting average 292Home runs41Runs batted in366TeamsAs playerCleveland Blues 1880 1883 St Louis Maroons 1884 1886 Detroit Wolverines 1886 1887 Pittsburgh Alleghenys 1888 1890 New York Giants 1890 Washington Statesmen 1891 As manager Cleveland Blues 1882 St Louis Maroons 1884 1885 Pittsburgh Alleghenys 1889 Career highlights and awardsUnion Association batting champion 1884 Union Association home run leader 1884 Dunlap played for the Cleveland Blues from 1880 to 1883 where he secured his reputation as one of the best players in the game As a rookie in 1880 he led the National League in doubles and ranked second in extra base hits While playing for Cleveland he also compiled batting averages of 325 and 326 in 1881 and 1883 and led the league in assists by a second baseman and range factor When the Union Association was formed in 1884 Dunlap was lured to play for the St Louis Maroons where he became the highest paid player in baseball His 412 batting average in 1884 was the highest ever recorded to that time in Major League Baseball and 56 points higher than any other player in the major leagues in 1884 due to the lack of talent in the UA After three years in St Louis Dunlap was sold to the Detroit Wolverines and helped that team win the 1887 National League pennant Dunlap s baseball career ended in 1891 when he broke his leg sliding into a base He went into the construction business and bet on horses in the 1890s At the time of his death in 1902 Dunlap was penniless and living in a rundown boarding house Contents 1 Early years 2 Major League Baseball 2 1 Cleveland Blues 2 2 Sure Shot 2 3 St Louis Maroons 2 4 Detroit Wolverines 2 5 Pittsburgh Alleghenys 2 6 Giants and Statesmen 2 7 Career Statistics 3 Later life 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly years editDunlap was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania in 1859 Both of his parents died when he was 10 years old Dunlap did not attend school after his parents died and spent his youth playing baseball 1 Lacking formal education Dunlap remained illiterate throughout his life 2 Dunlap began playing semi pro baseball at age 15 in 1874 for the Gloucester Club in Gloucester City New Jersey In 1875 he started the season with the Greighers of Camden New Jersey then joined the Kleinz Club of Philadelphia He played for Chester at the start of the 1876 season before joining the Quicksteps of Wilmington Delaware as a pitcher 3 In 1877 he began playing professional baseball as a second baseman for the Auburns of Auburn New York In 1878 he played for teams in Hornellsville and Albany New York He remained with Albany in 1879 4 5 Major League Baseball editCleveland Blues edit In May 1880 Dunlap began a 12 year career in Major League Baseball with the Cleveland Blues In his first season Dunlap immediately established himself as one of the game s best players For the 1880 season Dunlap led the National League NL in doubles 27 and ranked second in extra base hits 40 and times on base 132 while serving as the team s leadoff hitter 6 7 He also made a strong debut on defense leading the National League in assists by a second baseman 290 Dunlap remained with the Blues for four seasons and consistently ranked as one of the leading hitters and defensive second basemen in the National League In 1881 he compiled 156 total bases the second most in the NL and had a 325 batting average and 444 slugging percentage ranking fifth in the NL in both categories In 1882 he led the NL s second basemen with 297 assists and a range factor of 6 73 6 In his final year in Cleveland Dunlap had a 326 batting average 361 on base percentage and 452 slugging percentage ranking among the league s leaders in each of those categories Defensively he led the league s second basemen in putouts 304 and ranked third in assists 290 and fielding percentage 911 6 Dunlap was the star of the Cleveland team in the early 1880s So key was he to the Blues that one writer observed The Maroons without Dunlap are like the play of Hamlet without the melancholy Dane 8 Sure Shot edit Dunlap was known during his baseball career by the nicknames Sure Shot and King of Second Basemen 2 9 10 Most accounts indicate that the Sure Shot nickname arose from Dunlap s powerful and accurate throws to first base 11 King Kelly reportedly gave Dunlap the Sure Shot nickname after watching him throw 1 One account described Dunlap s throwing prowess as follows E ndless practice made him adept as a monkey at grabbing a sizzling ground ball in either hand and firing it off from the very spot he seized it His whistling throws which seemed to clear the grass by no more than half a foot never seemed to lose more than an inch or two 2 Alfred Henry Spink who saw Dunlap play wrote that Dunlap could chase down a ball in the outfield and throw it to home plate with such fearful speed and accuracy that the ball seemed to sing as it flew 1 Dunlap was known for his range in getting to balls that others of his era could not and he was reportedly able to dive for a ball and throw while lying on the ground with enough velocity to sting the first baseman s hand 2 Dunlap was ambidextrous and was able to catch and throw a baseball with the same skill and accuracy with either hand Moreover Dunlap reportedly never wore a glove 1 One source gives an entirely different account of how Dunlap obtained the Sure Shot nickname In his book on the history of the home run Mark Ribowsky wrote that the nickname dated back to a game against the Chicago White Stockings on July 10 1880 The White Stockings had won 21 straight games until Dunlap hit a walk off two run home run in the bottom of the ninth inning According to Ribowsky For this Shot Heard Round Cleveland Dunlap won the nickname Sure Shot 12 St Louis Maroons edit In November 1883 Dunlap signed a contract to play for the St Louis Maroons in the new Union Association He was the biggest star lured to the new league His contract paid Dunlap a salary of 3 400 including 1 000 paid in advance 13 the highest salary paid to any baseball player at that time 4 He remained the highest paid baseball player every year from 1884 to 1889 14 Dunlap played second base for the St Louis Maroons from 1884 to 1886 and also served as the team s manager for portions of those seasons During the 1884 season the Maroons and Dunlap dominated the Union Association The team compiled a record of 94 19 and Dunlap led the new league in most significant offensive and defensive categories His 412 batting average was 56 points higher than any other player in the Union Association the National League or the American Association He also led the league in on base percentage 448 slugging percentage 621 runs scored 160 hits 185 total bases 279 home runs 13 extra base hits 60 assists by a second baseman 300 putouts by a second baseman 341 range factor at second base 6 41 and fielding percentage at second base 926 6 Dunlap s 412 batting average in 1884 was the highest ever recorded in any of the major leagues up to that time 15 His 160 runs scored in 1884 remains one of the highest single season totals in major league history 4 Some baseball historians have suggested that Dunlap s accomplishments during the 1884 season should be discounted due to the lesser talent pool in the Union Association 16 In 1885 the Union Association was disbanded after only one year and the St Louis Maroons joined the National League Although his batting average dropped 142 points to 270 in 1885 Dunlap continued to be one of the best defensive second basemen in the major leagues He led the National League s second basemen in 1885 with a 934 fielding percentage and ranked second in assists 374 putouts 314 and range factor 6 49 6 Dunlap spent a third season with the Maroons in 1886 and hit for the cycle on May 24 However the Maroons were in financial distress and rumors spread that the team might disband 17 Detroit Wolverines edit nbsp 1888 baseball card of DunlapIn early August 1886 Dunlap was sold to the Detroit Wolverines for 4 700 the most expensive purchase price at the time 17 18 19 In addition to the sum paid to the Maroons to grant the release the Detroit team signed a contract to pay Dunlap 4 500 a season for two seasons with an advance of 1 500 on the first day of November 1886 and 1887 respectively 17 The mid season sale led to concerns about the Maroons The transfer of Dunlap to Detroit is a small thing in itself but its bearing on the entire base ball world is so great as to almost revolutionize the present order of things He was the king pin of the St Louis Club and his sale makes a certainty of the dissolution of the Maroons 20 The Detroit management was praised for their pluck and enterprise in making the bold business stroke 20 The Sporting News wrote at the time Dunlap has joined the Detroits and now that team will fly the League pennant just as sure as time flies and the world grows From the day the old St Louis Union team went out of existence Dunlap has been anything but a favorite in St Louis Still there was no one in the world but was willing to concede that he was the greatest second baseman America has ever known 21 Dunlap too expressed delight at the move noting that he had tried for two seasons to get away from the Maroons 20 While the reaction to the acquisition was overwhelmingly positive in Detroit the Detroit Free Press expressed some concern over Dunlap s reputation as a disorganizer and mischief maker 17 For the 1886 season Dunlap led the National League with a career high 393 assists more than any NL player at any position In 1887 Dunlap s defensive play at second base helped lead the Detroit Wolverines to the NL pennant with a record of 79 45 Dunlap again led the NL s second basemen in fielding percentage 948 while also ranking second in range factor 6 72 6 He also played in 11 games of the 1887 World Series against the American Association champions the St Louis Browns Detroit won the series 10 games to 5 At the end of the 1887 season Sporting Life praised Dunlap s contributions to Detroit s championship team Dunlap is the king of second basemen and a first class all round player His fielding average in 1886 was 931 ranking third This season he ranks first with 949 Dunlap is one of the most active men on the field and is of great value to a team on account of his ability as a kicker and coacher 3 Before the last game of the World Series had been played rumors spread that Detroit which had amassed an all star lineup with a commensurate payroll was in negotiations to unload Dunlap s high salary by selling him to Pittsburgh 22 Dunlap announced in November 1887 that he would not consent unless the Detroit club paid him half of the sum it was to receive from Pittsburgh to secure his release He said at the time I am sick and tired of being sold without gaining anything by it and it is about time that my bank account was benefited by these transfers 23 He told a reporter for The New York Times that he was not penniless and would refuse to play unless his demands were met He told the reporter that the Detroit club had three choices give me half of the money secured for my release allow me to go where I please or fulfill the contract made with me last year 23 In January 1888 Dunlap finally consented to the sale and received 2 000 of the 5 000 sales price paid to Detroit 24 His total annual compensation on signing with Pittsburgh was 6 000 making him the highest paid player in baseball history to that time 25 The Detroit Free Press congratulated the cranks of Pittsburgh for their team s acquisition of no less than the king second baseman of the country 26 Pittsburgh Alleghenys edit Dunlap played for the Pittsburgh Alleghenys from 1888 to 1890 and served as manager of the Alleghenys for a portion of the 1889 season During his three years in Pittsburgh Dunlap s offensive performance declined His batting average for the Alleghenys went from 262 in 1888 to 235 in 1889 At the same time he remained one of the leading defensive second basemen in the game In 1888 Dunlap ranked second among the league s second basemen in fielding percentage 940 and range factor 6 33 and in 1889 Dunlap s last full season in the major leagues his 950 fielding percentage led the National League and was a career high for Dunlap 6 Before the start of the 1890 season Dunlap engaged in protracted salary negotiations with President Nimick of the Alleghenys In late March 1890 the Pittsburg Dispatch reported that the two sides had reached a resolution and it now seems certain that Dunlap will play his old position in the Pittsburg league club 27 Nimick said at the time I had a long talk with Mr Dunlap and we agreed to terms for him to play with us this season Of course the terms were below those of last year that is he will play for much less than 5 000 He did not sign a contract for reasons that were quite satisfactory to me We know he is a good player and he is quite willing to remain with us 27 In the first 17 games of the 1890 season Dunlap s batting average fell to 172 and as a result he was released by the Alleghenys on May 15 Aside from his batting average disagreements with Pittsburgh s manager Guy Hecker reportedly contributed to the decision The Pittsburgh Dispatch quoted manager Hecker as saying Dunlap is certainly the worst man to get along with that I ever met He has had everybody in hot water during our entire western trip 28 Others speculated that Dunlap s release was motivated by his 3 500 salary and the fact that Pittsburgh s backup second baseman Henry Youngman had signed for a salary of only 1 050 28 Giants and Statesmen edit Dunlap jumped to the New York Giants of the Players League in late May 1890 6 At the time the Washington correspondent for Sporting Life predicted that Dunlap would bring bad luck to his new team He wrote Fred is a great player but the hoo doo that seems to shadow him will make itself felt wherever he may go There are a number of people in this vicinity who have watched his course with more than ordinary interest and they do not hesitate to declare him a Jonah 29 Dunlap appeared in only one game for the Giants and announced in July that he would play no more in 1890 and that he would spend the remainder of the summer at Atlantic City New Jersey with plans to return in 1891 and play the game of his life 30 Dunlap concluded his baseball career in 1891 with the Washington Statesmen in the American Association He appeared in only eight games for the Statesmen before breaking his leg sliding into a base on April 20 1891 6 9 In early June 1891 the Washington management notified him that it would discontinue his salary payments Dunlap returned the notice and filed a grievance contending he should have been continued at least on half pay since he was disabled while sliding into a base Washington refused to pay and he never played professional baseball again 31 Career Statistics edit In 965 games over 12 seasons Dunlap posted a 292 batting average 1159 for 3974 with 759 runs 224 doubles 53 triples 41 home runs 366 RBI 85 stolen bases 283 bases on balls 340 on base percentage and 406 slugging percentage He finished his career with a 924 fielding percentage 6 Later life editWhen he retired from baseball Dunlap was reported to have 100 000 in savings He went into the building business in Philadelphia during the 1890s and owned various properties in the city 2 10 The Sporting Life reported that Dunlap dropped out of the game in 1892 to follow the racing game at which he lost the respectable fortune he accumulated in base ball 32 Another account indicated that Dunlap lost everything on stock market investments 25 In July 1902 the Philadelphia Times reported that Dunlap was clean broke 33 In December 1902 Dunlap died penniless and alone at age 43 According to the Sporting Life the last two years of his life were spent in abject poverty and mental gloom in a Philadelphia boarding house 32 According to several accounts a policeman at the morgue saw the body and believed it to be Dunlap Lave Cross was called to the morgue and confirmed that the body was Dunlap 2 34 His funeral was poorly attended by his former baseball colleagues and one former player who did attend observed There were not enough friends of Dunlap at his funeral to bury him and we had to call on the hack drivers to make up the list of active pall bearers 1 Following Dunlap s death William A Phelon Jr editor of Sporting Life wrote So Fred Dunlap has passed into the great beyond and the man whose salary figure marked the high water limit of the long ago is gone What a ball player this Dunlap was and what an artist in getting the fat salaries Dunlap was a real infielder of the type so popular ten years ago one of the solid bulky style through whom no grounder seemed able to pass but who could nevertheless wave the hot ones goodbye with graceful ease when occasion demanded With the gloves now in use to aid Dunny would have been even a bigger wonder now than then 35 Legacy editDunlap has been rated by some contemporary and modern sources as the greatest overall second baseman of the 19th century In his 1910 book on the history of baseball Alfred Henry Spink the founder of The Sporting News was unequivocal I have seen all the great second basemen I am free to say that Dunlap was far and away the greatest second baseman that ever lived 1 Stanley Robinson who owned and managed major league teams in St Louis and Cleveland went even further He was not only the greatest second baseman but take him in all the departments of the game he was perhaps the greatest player that ever lived 1 Another of Dunlap s contemporaries Sam Crane also picked Dunlap as the greatest second baseman in a newspaper column published in 1912 Crane wrote Fred Dunlap was acknowledged to be the best second baseman of his day and was excellent from every angle I think he excelled Fred Pfeffer 36 In 1910 John Montgomery Ward a Hall of Fame inductee who played from 1878 to 1894 published an article about the greatest infielders in baseball history While picking Fred Pfeffer as a shade better than Dunlap Ward observed Fred Dunlap was the king Dunlap had the record average of 953 in 64 games with the Detroit club in 1887 and was the personification of ease and grace He was something of a grandstand player because of his tendency to make one handed catches and stops but he got there just the same and was a big favorite wherever he showed 37 In a 2008 book using modern sabermetric methods author William F McNeil concluded that Dunlap was the best offensive second baseman the second best defensive second baseman and the best overall second baseman of the 19th century 11 Dunlap s career range factor of 6 31 at second base still ranks as the fifth highest in the history of Major League Baseball 38 However Bill James in his 2001 book The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract ranked Dunlap as the 89th greatest second baseman of all time and the 8th best of those who played the majority of their careers in the 19th century James wrote that Dunlap was never a legitimate star in a legitimate major league but a good second baseman and a 275 hitter 39 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Baseball portalList of Major League Baseball annual doubles leaders List of Major League Baseball annual runs scored leaders List of Major League Baseball players to hit for the cycle List of Major League Baseball player managersReferences edit a b c d e f g Alfred Henry Spink 1910 The National Game The National Game Publishing Co pp 196 198 ISBN 0 8093 2304 4 a b c d e f John Thorn 1997 The Complete Armchair book of Baseball Sterling Publishing Company Inc pp 762 764 ISBN 1 57866 004 1 a b The Victors Sketch of the Men Who Now Wear the Dauvray Medals PDF Sporting Life November 1877 a b c David L Porter 2000 Biographical Dictionary of American Sports A F Greenwood Publishing Group pp 420 421 ISBN 9780313311741 Fred Dunlap Minor League Statistics Baseball Reference com Retrieved March 9 2014 a b c d e f g h i j Fred Dunlap Statistics and History Baseball Reference com Retrieved March 9 2014 In And Out Door Sports Turf Field Stream and Table The Plain Dealer June 28 1880 p 1 David Nemec Mark Rucker 2004 The Beer and Whisky League Globe Pequot p 82 ISBN 1 59228 188 5 a b Tiemann Robert L 2012 Nineteenth Century Stars Society for American Baseball Research pp 82 83 ISBN 9781933599298 a b Fred Dunlap Buried The Former King of Second Basemen Laid To Rest Mansfield News December 5 1902 accessible through newspapers com a b William F McNeil 2008 All Stars for All Time A Sabermetric Ranking of the Major League Best 1876 2007 McFarland pp 47 50 ISBN 978 0 7864 3500 5 Mark Ribowsky 2003 The Complete History of the Home Run Citadel Press p 19 ISBN 0 8065 2433 2 Sporting Matters Fred Dunlap Leaves the Cleveland Base Ball Club To Weep and To Mourn PDF Detroit Free Press November 30 1893 William H Dunbar July 1918 PDF Baseball Magazine p 291 James M Egan 2008 Base Ball on the Western Reserve McFarland p 97 Bill James 2003 The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract Simon and Schuster pp 29 32 ISBN 0 7432 2722 0 a b c d Dunlap for Detroit The Famous Player Secured by President Marsh Detroit Free Press August 7 1886 Dunlap s New Position PDF The New York Times August 7 1886 A Prince of Ball Players Fred Dunlap Released By St Louis For 4 700 The Sporting News August 16 1886 p 1 a b c What Next the Detroit Management Cause a Tumult in the Base Ball World Rumored That St Louis Will Drop Out and Pittsburgh Come Into the League Detroit Free Press August 9 1886 untitled The Sporting News August 16 1886 p 4 First and Last The Games of the World s Championship Series Lost in St Louis President Stearns Denies the Story That Dunlap Is Sold Detroit Free Press October 27 1887 a b Dunlap on His Mettle PDF The New York Times November 17 1887 p 3 Dunlap Goes to Pittsburg PDF The New York Times January 4 1888 a b John Shiffert 2006 Base Ball in Philadelphia A History of the Early Game 1831 1900 McFarland pp 197 199 ISBN 0 7864 2795 7 Dunny To Leave Us The Fine Second Baseman to be Transferred to Pittsburgh The Cranks of That City Delighted with the Deal Detroit Free Press November 5 1887 a b Sporting Matters Base Ball Dunlap and Conway Detroit Free Press reprinting article from Pittsburg Dispatch March 26 1890 a b Dunlap Released by Pittsburg Detroit Free Press quoting article from Pittsburg Dispatch May 17 1890 R M Larner May 31 1890 Dunlap a Jonah PDF Sporting Life p 10 Notes and Gossip column 2 PDF Sporting News July 19 1890 Fred Dunlap Released by Washington Dunny Has a Grievance The Sporting News June 20 1891 p 1 a b Dunlap Dead The Once Famous Star Second Baseman Ends His Days After Years of Gloom and Poverty in a Hospital PDF Sporting Life December 1902 Francis Richter July 12 1902 Quaker Quips PDF Sporting Life p 6 Famous Baseball Player Is Dead Detroit Free Press December 4 1902 Fred Dunlap at one time the best second baseman in the country and a bright star in Detroit s famous big team was buried here to day Although he drew as high as 5 000 per season he died penniless W A Phelon Jr December 27 1902 Fred Dunlap s Death Recalls Memories of the Old Days to Every Fan How the Old Second Baseman Ranked With McPhee Pfeffer and the Other Stars PDF Sporting Life p 6 Sam Crane January 6 1912 Comiskey s Immortals PDF Sporting Life p 11 John M Ward March 6 1910 Were Star Infielders Players of Older Generation Have Not Been Excelled The Washington Post Career Leaders amp Records for Range Factor Game as 2B Baseball Reference com Retrieved March 24 2014 Bill James 2001 The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract The Free Press p 530 ISBN 0 684 80697 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fred Dunlap Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference or Fangraphs or Baseball Reference Minors or RetrosheetAchievementsPreceded byMox McQuery Hitting for the cycleMay 24 1886 Succeeded byPete Browning Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fred Dunlap amp oldid 1160538251, wikipedia, wiki, 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