Frank Baker
It isn’t easy living up to the nickname “Home Run”, but Frank Baker did so as the best home run hitter of the pre-World War I era. In the 1911 World Series he hit clutch game-winning or game-tying home runs in back-to-back games against the Giants, and he led his league in the category four straight seasons. |
Full bio ⇓
| Career Batting Stats |
| G |
AB |
H |
R |
HR |
RBI |
SB |
AVG |
SLG |
OBP |
OPS |
OPS+ |
| 1575 |
5984 |
1838 |
887 |
96 |
987 |
235 |
.307 |
.442 |
.363 |
.805 |
121.0 |
|
Frank Baker in Minor League Baseball
Where does Frank Baker rank among baseball greats?
Frank Baker ranks #5 among the Top 50 all-time at 3B. Rankings ⇒
Best Season: 1912
The slugging third sacker led the AL in homers (10) and RBI (130), while slugging .541. He batted .347 (6th) and posted a .404 OBP (6th). He swiped 40 bases, had 40 doubles, and 21 triples. Though it was the only year the A's failed to win the pennant between 1910 and 1914, Baker's efforts were not the reason.
Full Bio
Frank Baker was one of the best World Series performers in history. In 25 World Series games he collected 33 hits, batted .363, slugged .538, hit three home runs, scored 15 runs, and batted in 18. He played on four Philadelphia A’s pennant winners, winning three World Series titles with Connie Mack. Baker collected nine hits in three straight Series.
Baker was the cleanup hitter on the great A’s teams that included Eddie Collins, Jack Barry, Stuffy McInnis, Harry Davis, Chief Bender and Eddie Plank. Along with Collins, McInnis, and Barry, he formed the famed $100,000 Infield.
In the 1911 Series, Baker earned his famous moniker. In Game Two he hit a two-run blast off Rube Marquard in the sixth inning that beat the Giants 3-1. The next day in Game Three he hit a solo-homer in the ninth off Christy Mathewson, tying the game, which the A’s eventually won in the 11th. Baker's homers on back-to-back days was quite unusual in an era when 7-12 homers was a league-leading figure for an entire season. The A’s won the 1911 World Series and the 1913 Fall Classic as well. Baker batted .450 in the 1913 set.
Following the disappointing 1914 sweep at the hands of the Braves in the World Series, Mack broke up his team and sold off his stars. Baker was the only man Mack kept, but he refused to report and sat out the entire 1915 season in a contract dispute. Instead he played for Upland, Pennsylvania’s semipro team. In 1916 he was sent to the New York Yankees, where he finished in the top five in home runs each season from 1916 to 1919.
In 1920, Baker’s first wife died, leaving him with two daughters to care for. He chose to sit out the entire season but returned in 1921 to help the Yankees win their first pennant. He appeared as a utility player in both the 1921 and 1922 World Series. He retired after the ’22 campaign with a .307 lifetime average and a modest (by today’s standards) 96 career home runs. Yet, from 1909 to 1919, no player in the AL hit more homers than Baker, and only Ty Cobb had more RBI.
Home Run Leaders, 1908-1922
Babe Ruth... 197
Gavy Cravath... 119
Tilly Walker... 116
Cy Williams... 108
Rogers Hornsby... 99
Frank Baker... 96
Where He Played
Third base (1,548 games). Baker never appeared at another position in the regular season. He was the best third baseman of the first 25 years of the 20th century.
Born
John Franklin Baker was born on March 13, 1886, in Trappe, MD.
Died
June 28, 1963, Trappe, MD
Batted: Left
Threw: Right
Major League Debut
9 21,
Nine Other Players Who Debuted in 1908
Donie Bush
Larry Gardner
Frank Baker
Amos Strunk
Buck Herzog
Rube Marquard
Slim Sallee
Hippo Vaughn
Joe Jackson
Nicknames
Home Run
"Home Run" was earned after his performance in the 1911 World Series, hitting homers in back-to-back games against the Giants.
Similar Players
None
Related Players
Eddie Collins, Stuffy McInnis
| Hall of Fame Voting |
| Year |
Election |
Votes |
Pct |
| 1936 |
BBWAA |
1 |
.4% |
1937 |
BBWAA |
13 |
6.5% |
1938 |
BBWAA |
32 |
12.2% |
1939 |
BBWAA |
30 |
10.9% |
1942 |
BBWAA |
39 |
16.7% |
1945 |
BBWAA |
26 |
10.5% |
1946 |
Nominating Vote |
39 |
19.3% |
1946 |
BBWAA |
36 |
13.7% |
1947 |
BBWAA |
49 |
30.4% |
1948 |
BBWAA |
4 |
3.3% |
1950 |
BBWAA |
4 |
2.4% |
1951 |
BBWAA |
8 |
3.5% |
1955 |
Veterans |
|
% |
|
Post-Season Appearances
1910 World Series
1911 World Series
1913 World Series
1914 World Series
1921 World Series
1922 World Series
Batting Feats
Notes
Baker finished in the top ten in MVP voting three times. Had there been a World Series MVP he most likely would have won two of them.
Transactions
February 15, 1916: Purchased by the New York Yankees from the Philadelphia Athletics.
Replaced
38-year old Jimmy Collins, who retired following the 1908 season. That means, Baker, a future Hall of Famer, replaced another Hall of Fame third baseman.
Replaced By
"Jumping" Joe Dugan
Best Strength as a Player
Hitting for extra bases and hitting in the clutch.
Largest Weakness as a Player
Base stealing. Baker was, like many players with average or less-than-average speed in his era, a poor percentage base stealer.
Learn More about Frank Baker
Search Amazon.com for Books about Frank Baker ⇒
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View a map of his hometown at Mapquest ⇒