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Negro League Baseball Stats
 
Batting Stats
GamesAt BatsHitsAverageSlugging %
74248620.2500.000
 
Pitching Stats
GamesInningsWinsLosesTiesW/L%ERA
54446.00292000.5922.440
 
 
Notable Accomplishments (Top 10 Rankings)
Pitching No-Hitters (Individual): 5th All-Time (1) - tie
Managing Win-Loss %: 3rd All-Time (.633)
Rube Foster
(Andrew  Foster)
Born: September 17, 1879        Died: December 9, 1930 (51 yrs.)
 
Year of Induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame
1981
 
Induction Position/Capacity
Executive
 
 
 
 
 
Bats
Right
Throws
Right
Seasons1st GameLast Game
919051917
 
Positions Played/Held
Executive
 
Teams as Player
Louisville White Sox (1914)
Chicago American Giants (1914-1917)
 
Teams as Manager
Louisville White Sox (1914)
Chicago American Giants (1914)
Chicago American Giants (1915-1923)
 
A significant amount of Negro league game box scores is lost to antiquity and thus the available stats are sketchy with large gaps in data, often excluding entire seasons.     
 
Few men have dominant careers as baseball players. Even fewer have success as a manager.
 
But Rube Foster excelled on the diamond as a manager and as an executive, earning him the recognition as the “father of black baseball.” Born on Sept. 17, 1879 in Calvert, Texas, Foster began his playing career pitching for the Fort Worth Yellow Jackets in 1897. By 1902, he was hurling for the Giants in Chicago, then jumped to the Otsego, Mich., semi-pro white team and before heading to the Philadelphia Cuban X Giants. That season he won 44 games in a row.
 
The X Giants beat the Philadelphia Giants for the 1903 “colored championship of the world” as Foster threw four of the five X Giants wins. The following season he joined the Philadelphia Giants and led them to the pennant, defeating his former team in the playoff.
 
“Do not worry. Try to appear jolly and unconcerned,” said Rube Foster about pitching out of jams. “I have smiled often with the bases full with two strikes and three balls on the batter. This seems to unnerve.”
 
The star pitcher thrived in the deadball era but had set his sights higher than just the mound. In 1911, he entered into a partnership with John Schorling, son-in-law of Charles Comiskey. Schorling had leased the old White Sox grounds and Foster provided the Chicago American Giants, a black team, to play there.
 
As an owner-manager, Foster instilled the daring, aggressive-yet-disciplined style of play for which the Negro Leagues became famous. He attracted star players but faced declining attendance. In 1920, Foster set the wheels in motion to create the Negro National League, an association of black teams modeled after Major League Baseball. Foster was named president and treasurer. The first successful league for African-American players, the NNL flourished throughout the decade. Players’ salaries rose to an unprecedented level, teams traveled on Pullman coaches and players received regular bonuses. Foster not only administered the league but continued to serve as manager and owner of the American Giants. A strict coach, Foster had high expectations for his team and they rewarded him by winning the first three pennants. In 1926, the grueling schedule got to Foster and he suffered a nervous breakdown.
 
Four years later, on Dec. 9, 1930, Foster passed away.
 
“When Rube Foster died, Negro baseball died with him,” said Joe Green, a fellow Negro Leagues player, manager and owner.  Foster was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1981. (Ref: National Baseball Hall of Fame)
 
Cards and Other Memorabilia
Rube Foster - Estimated Sets: 75 | DB Records: 10 | Images: 3
 
1974  Laughlin
Old-Time Black Stars
Rube Foster  (#35)

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2020  Paseo YMCA
Black Baseball in Living Color Commemorative Magnet
Rube Foster - Black Baseball in Living Color (February 13, 1920 - February 13, 2020) 


2020  Paseo YMCA
Negro League Baseball Magnets - Series 2
Rube Foster (Chicago American Giants - 1916)  (#74)