Erskine Mayer Baseball player

Jacob Erskine Mayer (born James Erskine Mayer, January 16, 1889 – March 10, 1957) was an American baseball player who played for three different Major League Baseball teams during the 1910s. In his eight-year career, Mayer played for the Philadelphia Phillies, the Pittsburgh Pirates, and the Chicago White Sox.A right-handed pitcher, Mayer's repertoire of pitches included a curve ball which he threw from a sidearm angle. As a result of his curve ball, then Brooklyn Dodgers manager Wilbert Robinson called Mayer "Eelskine" because the pitch was "so slippery."Mayer won 20 games in a single season in both 1914 and 1915. He appeared in the 1915 World Series as a member of the Phillies and in the 1919 World Series as a member of the White Sox, a series noted for the Black Sox Scandal.He was 91–70 in his career, with a 2.96 ERA. He was one of the all-time best Jewish pitchers in major league history through 2010, 3rd career-wise in ERA (behind only Barney Pelty and Sandy Koufax), 7th in wins, and 10th in strikeouts (482).

Personal facts

Erskine Mayer
Birth dateJanuary 16, 1889
Birth place
Atlanta
Date of deathMarch 10, 1957
Place of death
Los Angeles

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Baseball player

Career startSeptember 04, 1912
Career endSeptember 27, 1919
batting sideRight
former teams
Chicago White Sox
Philadelphia Phillies
position
Pitcher
teams
Chicago White Sox
Philadelphia Phillies
Pittsburgh Pirates
throwing sideRight

Erskine Mayer on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://jewishmajorleaguers.org/crrldrs/crrldrs.html
  2. http://www.jewsinsports.org/profile.asp?sport=baseball&ID=2