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Red Ruffing Stats & Facts

 

VINTAGE BASEBALL MEMORABILIA

Vintage Baseball Memorabilia

Red Ruffing

Positions: Pitcher and Pinch Hitter
Bats: Right  •  Throws: Right
6-1, 205lb (185cm, 92kg)
Born: May 3, 1905 in Granville, IL
Died: February 17, 1986  in Mayfield Heights, OH
Buried: Hillcrest Memorial Park, Bedford Heights, OH
Debut: May 31, 1924 (5,427th in MLB history)
vs. WSH 2.0 IP, 5 H, 2 SO, 0 BB, 3 ER
Last Game: September 15, 1947
vs. BOS 7.0 IP, 12 H, 2 SO, 2 BB, 7 ER, L
Hall of Fame: Inducted as Player in 1967. (Voted by BBWAA in Runoff Election on 266/306 ballots)
View Red Ruffing’s Page at the Baseball Hall of Fame (plaque, photos, videos).
Full Name: Charles Herbert Ruffing
View Player Bio from the SABR BioProject

 

Nine Players Who Debuted in 1924


Charlie Gehringer
Al Simmons
Earle Combs
Freddy Lindstrom
Chick Hafey
Red Ruffing
Hughie Critz
Max Bishop
Glenn Wright

Notable Events and Chronology for Red Ruffing Career

Ruffing’s career was made by a change of scenery. He joined the Red Sox at age 19, and from 1924 through May 1930, toiled for consistently last-place Boston clubs, compiling an unimpressive 39-96 record. The right-hander led the AL in losses in both 1928 (25) and 1929 (22), as his team was always last in batting and averaged a meager 35 HR annually.

Yankee manager Miller Huggins was interested in him, seeing his strength, foreseeing durability and effectiveness, and knowing that Yankee power could give Ruffing the support he deserved. In 1930, Boston ownership, badly in need of money, sold Ruffing to New York for backup outfielder Cedric Durst and $50,000.

Ruffing went 15-5 for the Yankees that first year, though his ERA remained high. In the 15 seasons that followed, the Yankees won seven pennants and six World Series, averaging .276 with 146 homers a year. Ruffing contributed a 231-124 record and had four straight 20-win seasons, coinciding with four Yankee championships, from 1936-39. He threw 42 of his 48 career shutouts’Zh)”for New York. In 1938 his 21 wins topped the AL, as did his .750 (21-7) winning percentage and four shutouts.

In World Series competition, he was 7-2, tying him for second place in wins behind Whitey Ford.

Ruffing was also one of the best-hitting pitchers of all time, with lifetime marks of .269 (10th among pitchers with 500 at-bats), 36 HR (3rd), 273 RBI, and 58 hits in 228 pinch-hitting appearances. He batted over .300 eight times, his .364 (40-for-110) in 1930 standing as the second-best single-season average for a pitcher (Walter Johnson hit .433 in 1925).

The determined Ruffing accomplished what he did despite having lost four toes on his left foot in a mine accident as a youngster. The injury cut down on his speed, and the pain, he said, never ceased.

He spent three years in the army in WWII, but lasted for only three injury-plagued seasons upon his return. After retiring at age 43, he managed in the minors, scouted, and in 1962 became the Mets’ first pitching coach. He was admitted to the Hall of Fame in 1967 by the BBWAA in his last year of eligibility.