Bob Ferguson Baseball player

Robert Vavasour Ferguson (January 31, 1845 – May 3, 1894) was an American infielder, league official, manager and umpire in the early days of baseball, playing both before and after baseball became a professional sport. In addition to playing and managing, he served as president of the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players from 1872 through 1875, the sport's first entirely professional league. His character and unquestioned honesty were highly regarded during a period in baseball history where the game's reputation was badly damaged by gamblers and rowdy behavior by players and fans. However, his bad temper and stubbornness were traits that created trouble for him at times during his career, and caused him to be disliked by many. His nickname, "Death to Flying Things", was derived from his greatness as a defensive player.

Personal facts

Bob Ferguson
Alias (AKA)Ferguson Robert; Ferguson Robert Vavasour
Birth dateJanuary 31, 1845
Birth place
Brooklyn
Date of deathMay 03, 1894
Place of death
Brooklyn

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Baseball player

Career startMay 18, 1871
Career endJuly 01, 1884
batting sideBoth
former teams
Pittsburgh Pirates
New York Mutuals
position
Third baseman
Manager (baseball)
Umpire (baseball)
Second baseman
teams
Chicago Cubs
Philadelphia Phillies
Pittsburgh Pirates
New York Metropolitans
Brooklyn Atlantics
Troy Trojans (MLB team)
Hartford Dark Blues
New York Mutuals
throwing sideRight

Bob Ferguson on Wikipedia