Charlie Smith Baseball player

Charles Edwin Smith (April 20, 1880 – January 3, 1929) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball who played from 1902 through 1914 for the Cleveland Bronchos (1902), Washington Senators (1906–1909), Boston Red Sox (1909–1911) and Chicago Cubs (1911–1914). Listed at 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m), 185 lb., Smith batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Cleveland, Ohio. His older brother, Fred Smith, also pitched in the majors.Smith always was a bad luck pitcher either due to injury or playing on a bad baseball team. He had a promising debut for Cleveland on August 6, 1902, defeating future Hall of Famer Rube Waddell and the Philadelphia Athletics, 5–4, at League Park. Then, working with just two day's rest, he shut out the Baltimore Orioles, 7–0, ending his rookie season with a 2–1 record in three starts. He spent three years in the minors before joining the hapless Senators in 1906. In three seasons for Washington he posted ERAs of 2.91, 2.61 and 2.41, but finished with negative records of 9–16, 10–20 and 6–12. In 1909 he went 6–12 with a 3.27 ERA for Washington, before being traded to the Red Sox for Doc Gessler late in the season. In three starts for Boston he went 3–0 with a 2.16 ERA, and resurfaced in 1910 going 11–6 with a 2.30 ERA. While pitching for the dreadful Cubs, he led the National League with six relief wins in 1912.In a 10-year career, Smith posted a 66–87 record with a 2.81 ERA in 212 appearances, including 148 starts, 87 complete games, 10 shutouts, three saves, and 1349⅓ innings of work. A fine control pitcher, he collected a 1.62 strikeout-to-walk ratio (570-to-353).Smith died at the age of 48 in Wickliffe, Ohio.

Personal facts

Charlie Smith
Birth dateApril 20, 1880
Birth place
Cleveland
Date of deathJanuary 03, 1929
Place of death
Wickliffe Ohio

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Baseball player

Career startAugust 06, 1902
Career endSeptember 19, 1914
batting sideRight
former teams
Chicago Cubs
Cleveland Indians
position
Pitcher
teams
Boston Red Sox
Chicago Cubs
Cleveland Indians
Minnesota Twins
throwing sideRight

Charlie Smith on Wikipedia