Hub Pruett

American baseball player (1900-1982) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hubert Shelby "Hub" "Shucks" Pruett (September 1, 1900 in Malden, Missouri – January 28, 1982 in Ladue, Missouri), was a professional baseball left-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball from 1922 to 1932. He acquired the nickname "Shucks" because that was the strongest word in his vocabulary.

Quick facts MLB debut, Last MLB appearance ...
Hub Pruett
Pitcher
Born: (1900-09-01)September 1, 1900
Malden, Missouri, United States
Died: January 28, 1982(1982-01-28) (aged 81)
Ladue, Missouri, United States
Batted: Left
Threw: Left
MLB debut
April 26, 1922, for the St. Louis Browns
Last MLB appearance
September 20, 1932, for the Boston Braves
MLB statistics
Win–loss record29–48
Earned run average4.63
Strikeouts357
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams
As player
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Baseball career

Pruett played for the St. Louis Browns, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Giants, and Boston Braves.

Pruett's claim to fame was that he had a knack for getting out Babe Ruth. However, the fame may have been overstated because he was most successful doing so in his first year in the major leagues, and it was mentioned prominently in newspapers.[1] As time went on, Ruth had more success, and even hit home runs against Pruett. Other than his statistics against Ruth, Pruett was an ordinary pitcher, with a career won-lost record of 29–48 and an earned run average of 4.63.[2] Other pitchers also had better personal records against Ruth.

Personal life

Pruett's father was a physician who died in a horse and buggy accident while making a house call, and Pruett was raised by an aunt. He became a medical student during his early years in baseball and used his baseball pay to finance his medical education. He graduated from the St. Louis University School of Medicine and became a practicing physician. His son Don and grandson Chris also became physicians.[3] In 1948, several weeks before Ruth's death, Pruett was able to personally thank Ruth for this because he felt that his success against him was one of the main reasons he was kept on by the Browns and allowed him to save money to attend medical school. Ruth told Pruett, “If I helped you get through medical school, I’m glad of it.”[4]

Record vs. Babe Ruth

More information date, results of each of Babe Ruth's at bats in games during which both Pruett and Ruth appeared ...
date results of each of Babe Ruth's at bats in games during which both Pruett and Ruth appeared
May 22, 1922 strikeout, walk[5][6]
June 10, 1922 did not face each other[7][8]
June 12, 1922 strikeout, walk, strikeout, strikeout[9][10]
July 12, 1922 groundout (pitcher to first), strikeout, strikeout, strikeout[11][12]
August 25, 1922 (second game) strikeout[13][14]
September 17, 1922 walk, strikeout, homerun, single[15][16]
May 16, 1923 strikeout[17][18]
May 17, 1923 walk[19][20]
May 19, 1923 homerun, strikeout, sacrifice, strikeout, groundout[21][22]
June 14, 1923 single, strikeout, walk, walk[23][24]
July 8, 1923 walk, unknown type of out[25][26]
July 9, 1923 did not face each other[27][28]
August 7, 1923 did not face each other[29][30]
June 10, 1924 groundout[31][32]
August 1, 1924 bunt single[33][34]
August 2, 1924 single, single[35][36]
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For his career Babe Ruth batted .280/.438/.520 with 2 HRs and 13 strikeouts in 32 plate appearances against Shucks. For the timeframe Babe Ruth had an OPS of 1.233, so even allowing for the Babe reaching base 7 of their last 10 meetings Shucks did have greater than average success vs. Ruth.

References

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