Tommy Tucker (baseball)


Thomas Joseph Tucker was a first baseman in Major League Baseball who played with six different teams between and. Listed at, 165 lb., Tucker was a switch-hitter and threw right-handed.
Tucker was born in Holyoke, Massachusetts, where he started his baseball career playing for the Springfield and Newark clubs. He was a flashy first baseman in an era when using two hands was normal, making one-handed scoops of wild throws and pick-ups with his small glove, in contrast to the big-sized gloves employed by today's first basemen. He entered the majors in 1887 with the Baltimore Orioles of the American Association, playing for them three years before joining the National League with the Boston Beaneaters, Washington Senators, Brooklyn Bridegrooms, St. Louis Browns and Cleveland Spiders. His most productive season came in 1889 with Baltimore, when he led the AA hitters with a.372 batting average and 196 hits. His.372 average was 118 points above the Baltimore team average of.254.
In a 13-season career, Tucker was a.290 hitter with 42 home runs and 932 RBI in 1687 games, including 1084 runs, 240 doubles, 85 triples, 352 stolen bases, and a.364 on-base percentage.
Tucker had the reputation of being one of the toughest players of his era. He was notorious for hip-checking a base runner off first base, and then tagging them out.
Tucker died in Montague, Massachusetts.

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