sport.wikisort.org - AthleteHugh N. Nicol (January 1, 1858 – June 27, 1921) was a Scottish-American professional baseball player. An outfielder, Nicol played in Major League Baseball for the Chicago White Stockings, St. Louis Browns, Cincinnati Red Stockings, and Cincinnati Reds. Nicol's debut game took place on May 3, 1881. His final game took place on August 2, 1890.
American baseball player (1858–1921)
For the British bacteriologist, see Hugh Nicol (chemist).
Baseball player
Hugh Nicol |
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Right fielder |
Born: (1858-01-01)January 1, 1858 Campsie, Stirlingshire, Scotland |
Died: June 27, 1921(1921-06-27) (aged 63) Lafayette, Indiana |
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May 3, 1881, for the Chicago White Stockings |
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August 2, 1890, for the Cincinnati Reds |
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Batting average | .235 |
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Home runs | 5 |
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Runs batted in | 272 |
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Stolen bases | 383 |
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- Chicago White Stockings (1881–1882)
- St. Louis Browns (1883–1886)
- Cincinnati Red Stockings (1887–1889)
- Cincinnati Reds (1890)
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- 2× National League champion (1881, 1882)
- 2× American Association champion (1885, 1886)
- Led the American Association in stolen bases in 1887
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Nicol had 138 stolen bases in 1887, however prior to 1898 a stolen base was credited to a baserunner who reached an extra base on a hit from another player. He had 103 stolen bases in 1888. Despite the fact that he had two 100 stolen-base seasons, only 383 of his total career stolen bases are known. He also managed the Browns in 1897.
Nicol became the head baseball coach and athletic director at Purdue University for the Purdue Boilermakers. He also scouted for the Reds during the summers, beginning in 1911.[1] Nicol resigned from Purdue in 1914, after accusations that the American football team played like "rowdies."[2] He died in Lafayette, Indiana on June 27, 1921.
See also
- List of Major League Baseball career stolen bases leaders
- List of Major League Baseball annual stolen base leaders
- List of Major League Baseball stolen base records
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Hugh Nicol.
Chicago White Stockings 1881 National League champions |
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Chicago White Stockings 1882 National League champions |
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St. Louis Browns 1885 American Association champions |
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St. Louis Browns 1886 American Association champions |
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St. Louis Cardinals managers |
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Purdue Boilermakers athletic directors |
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- Oliver Cutts (1904–1905)
- Hugh Nicol (1906–1914)
- Oliver Cutts (1915–1918)
- Nelson A. Kellogg (1919–1930)
- Noble Kizer (1931–1936)
- R. C. Woodworth # (1937)
- Noble Kizer (1938–1939)
- Edward C. Elliott # (1940)
- Allen Elward (1941)
- Guy J. Mackey (1942–1971)
- George King (1971–1992)
- John W. Hicks # (1992)
- Morgan Burke (1993–2016)
- Mike Bobinski (2016– )
# denotes interim athletic director
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Purdue Boilermakers head baseball coaches |
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- No coach (1888–1891)
- W. M. Phillips (1892–1893)
- No coach (1894–1899)
- W. H. Fox (1900–1901)
- Bill Priel (1902)
- J. C. Kelsey (1903–1904)
- Philip O'Neil (1905)
- Hugh Nicol (1906–1914)
- B. P. Pattison (1915–1916)
- Ward Lambert (1917)
- John Pierce (1918)
- Ward Lambert (1919–1935)
- Dutch Fehring (1936–1942)
- C. S. Doan (1943–1944)
- Ward Lambert (1945–1946)
- Mel Taube (1947–1950)
- Hank Stram (1951–1955)
- Paul Hoffman (1956–1959)
- Joe Sexson (1960–1977)
- Dave Alexander (1978–1991)
- Steve Green (1992–1998)
- Bob Shepherd (1998)
- Doug Schreiber (1999–2016)
- Mark Wasikowski (2017–2019)
- Greg Goff (2020– )
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