Tip O'Neill Baseball player

James Edward "Tip" O'Neill (May 25, 1858 – December 31, 1915) was a Canadian professional baseball player from approximately 1875 to 1892. He began playing organized baseball in Woodstock, Ontario, Canada, and later played 10 years in Major League Baseball, principally as a left fielder, but also as a pitcher, for four major league clubs.While playing with the St. Louis Browns (later renamed the Cardinals) from 1884 to 1889, O'Neill helped the club compile a 516–247 record while also winning four pennants and the 1886 World Series. O'Neill won two American Association batting championships during those years and became the second person in major league history to hit for a triple crown, leading the league in 1887 with a .435 batting average, 14 home runs and 123 runs batted in (RBIs). He also rewrote the major league record book, establishing new records in at least eight categories, including the highest batting average (originally .492, adjusted to .435), on-base percentage (.490) and slugging percentage (.691), and the most hits (225), runs scored (167), doubles (52), extra base hits (84), and total bases (357) in a single season. His adjusted .435 batting average in 1887 remains the second highest in major league history.O'Neill has been dubbed "Canada's Babe Ruth" and was posthumously inducted into both the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame and the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame. Each year since 1984, the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame has presented the Tip O'Neill Award to the best Canadian baseball player.

Personal facts

Tip O'Neill
Alias (AKA)Oneill James Edward
Birth dateMay 25, 1858
Date of deathDecember 31, 1915
Place of death
Montreal

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Baseball player

Career startMay 05, 1883
Career endAugust 30, 1892
batting sideRight
former teams
Cincinnati Reds
San Francisco Giants
position
Left fielder
teams
Cincinnati Reds
San Francisco Giants
St. Louis Cardinals
Chicago Pirates
throwing sideRight

Tip O'Neill on Wikipedia