Doc Farrell Baseball player

Edward Stephen "Doc" Farrell (December 26, 1901 – December 20, 1966) was a utility infielder in Major League Baseball, playing mainly as a shortstop between 1925 and 1935 for the New York Giants (1925–1927, 1929), Boston Braves (1927–1929), St. Louis Cardinals (1930), Chicago Cubs (1930), New York Yankees (1932–1933), and Boston Red Sox (1935). Listed at 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m), 160 lb., Farrell batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Johnson City, New York.Farrell was the captain of the University of Pennsylvania baseball team before signing with the New York Giants prior to the 1925 season. A well-traveled utility, he played with six different teams in a span of nine years, including two stints for the Giants. His most productive season came in 1927, when he posted career-highs with a .316 batting average, 92 RBI, 57 runs, and 152 games while playing three different infield positions for the Giants and Braves, being considered in the National League MVP vote at the end of the season. He played exclusively at shortstop 132 games for the 1928 Braves and also won a World Series ring with the Yankees 1932 World Champions, despite he did not play in the Series.In a nine-season career, Farrell was a .260 hitter (467-for-1799) with ten home runs and 213 RBI in 591 games, including 181 runs, 63 doubles, eight triples, and 14 stolen bases. As a fielder, he appeared in 553 games at shortstop (376), second base (118), third base (56) and first base (3).Farrell died in Livingston, New Jersey, just six days shy of his 65th birthday.

Personal facts

Doc Farrell
Birth dateDecember 26, 1901
Date of deathDecember 20, 1966

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Baseball player

Career startJune 15, 1925
Career endMay 01, 1935
batting sideRight
former teams
Boston Red Sox
San Francisco Giants
position
Infielder
teams
Atlanta Braves
Boston Red Sox
Chicago Cubs
San Francisco Giants
St. Louis Cardinals
New York Yankees
throwing sideRight

Doc Farrell on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.baseball-reference.com/f/farredo01.shtml