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Jack Quinn

Jack Quinn
Jack Quinn pitched for 23 years, winning 247 games in three different major leagues for eight teams. He pitched against Hall of Fame shortstops George Davis and Arky Vaughan (who starred four decades apart), and he was teammates with Hall of Fame hurlers Chief Bender and Lefty Grove, who started and ended their careers 38 years apart. In 1929, Quinn started Game Four of the World Series for Connie Mack's A's at the age of 46, and the next season he again pitched in the Series, at age 47. During the regular season in 1930, he became the oldest man to hit a home run in the major leagues. The right-hander pitched his final game for Cincinnati in 1933 at the age of 50, having posted a respectable 4.02 ERA in 15 2/3 innings of relief work.

Played For
New York Yankees (1909-1912)
Boston Braves (1913)
Baltimore Terrapins (1914-1915)
Chicago White Sox (1918)
New York Yankees (1921)
Boston Red Sox (1922-1925)
Philadelphia Athletics (1925-1930)
Brooklyn Dodgers (1931-1932)
Cincinnati Reds (1933)

Minor League Experience
John Quinn Picus, later known as "Jack Quinn," worked as a coal miner in his early teens, starring for mining teams as a pitcher and outfielder. His professional career started when, as a spectator at a Connellsville, Pennsylvania game, he threw a ball back to the catcher and nailed the mitt dead center. The visiting manager for Dunbar offered Quinn $5 for a win in the next game, $2.50 for a loss. But his debut in the majors didn't come until 1909, when he was 25. Quinn had an amazing career. He threw 27 complete games in 1914, at the age of 30. Fourteen years later, at age 44, he threw 18 complete games. In 23 major league seasons, he started 444 games, threw 243 complete games and nearly 4,000 innings. On April 14, 1931, Quinn became the oldest man to start a season opener, losing 7-4 to Boston at Braves Field.

Best Season: 1928
Quinn was 18-7 for Connie Mack's A's, with a 2.90 ERA in more than 211 innings. He threw four shutouts, the fourth time he reached that total in a single season. Somehow he batted in 12 runs despite hitting .165. The guy was 44 years old.

Factoids
Jack Quinn remains the oldest man to start (46 in 1929) or appear (47 in 1930) in a World Series game... In 1932, at the age of 49, he became the oldest man to win a major league game.

Jack Quinn was the winning pitcher in the first Federal League game ever played, on April 13, 1914, in Baltimore. The rival third major league would last for two seasons before folding and being partially incorporated into the AL and NL.

Legal Spitballers
In December, 1920, the American and National Leagues voted separately to allow those pitchers who used the spitball in 1920 as their primary pitch, to continue to do so for the remainder of their professional careers. The 17 pitchers were:

American League
A.W. Ayers
Slim Caldwell
Stan Coveleski
Red Faber
Dutch Leonard
Jack Quinn
Allan Russell
Urban Shocker
Allen Sothoron
National League
Phil Douglas
Bill Doak
Dana Fillingim
Ray Fisher
Marvin Goodwin
Burleigh Grimes
Clarence Mitchell
Dick Rudolph

Where He Played
Starting pitcher (444 games), relief pitcher (312), outfield (3).

Born
John Picus Quinn was born on July 5, 1883, in Janesville, PA.

Died
April 17, 1946, Pottsville, PA

Batted:  Right
Threw:  Right

Primary Position:  P

Primary Team:  NYA

Major League Debut
April 15, 1909

Nine Other Players Who Debuted in 1909
Zack Wheat
Harry Hooper
Stuffy McInnis
Dots Miller
Jimmy Austin
Chief Meyers
Jack Quinn
Art Fletcher
Burt Shotton

Nicknames
Big Jack

Uniform Numbers
#22 (1932), #29 (1933)

Similar Players
Red Faber, Waite Hoyt, Dutch Leonard

Related Players
Babe Ruth hit his 26th home run of the season off Jack Quinn on September 8, 1919, breaking the single-season mark previously held by Buck Freeman.

Hall of Fame Voting
Year Election Votes Pct
1948 BBWAA 2 1.7%
1956 BBWAA 1 .5%
1958 BBWAA 9 3.4%
1960 BBWAA 2 .7%

Post-Season Appearances
1921 World Series
1929 World Series
1930 World Series

Transactions
Before 1914 Season: Jumped from the Boston Braves to the Baltimore Terrapins; December 20, 1921: Traded by the New York Yankees with Rip Collins, Roger Peckinpaugh, and Bill Piercy to the Boston Red Sox for Everett Scott, Joe Bush, and Sam Jones; July 10, 1925: Selected off waivers by the Philadelphia Athletics from the Boston Red Sox.

Best Strength as a Player
This guy had a rubber arm.

Largest Weakness as a Player
Lack of a strikeout pitch. Quinn, despite being relatively large, threw his fastball no faster than average. Consequently, opposing hitters put a lot of balls in play against him. Quinn gave up nearly 10 hits per nine innings, one of the higehst marks of any 200-game winner.

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