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Michael Joseph "King" Kelly (December 31, 1857 - November 8, 1894) was an American star Major League Baseball player during the late 19th century born in Troy, New York. more...
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He is often credited with popularizing the hit and run, the hook slide, and the catcher's practice of backing up first base. He is the subject of the hit 1893 song entitled "Slide Kelly, Slide" and a 1927 movie of the same name.
Career
Kelly entered the National League with the Cincinnati Reds in 1878 and became a star with the Chicago White Stockings in 1880. As a member of the White Stockings until 1886, he was annually among the league leaders in most offensive categories, including leading the league in runs from 1884 through 1886 (120, 124 and 155 respectively), and batting in 1884 and 1886 (.354 and .388). The White Stockings won five league championships with Kelly on the team.
In one of the largest moves in the early history of professional baseball, Kelly was sold after the 1886 season to the Boston Beaneaters for a then-record $10,000. As a member of the Beaneaters, he continued to be a key run-producer, scoring 120 runs in 1887 and 1889.
Kelly managed and played for the Boston Reds in the year-lived Players League in 1890, and the Reds won the first and only Players League title. While managing for Boston, Kelly saw a foul ball heading for the bench and realized his fielders would miss it. Thinking quickly, he leapt off the bench, yelled "Kelly now catching for Boston," and caught the ball for out number three. In 1891 Kelly managed the Cincinnati Porkers to a seventh place finish.
Kelly retired after the 1893 season, having compiled 1357 runs, 69 home runs, 950 RBI, and a .308 batting average. Unreliable record-keeping practices of the era prevent an accurate estimate of how many stolen bases Kelly compiled over his career, but statistics kept during his later years indicate he regularly stole 50 or more bases in a season, including a high of 84 in 1887. He also managed to steal six bases in one game. His baserunning was a favorite attribute among fans, prompting the cry of "Slide Kelly Slide!". He is reputed to have directly stolen third base from first, crossing a few feet in back of the umpire (who called strikes and balls from behind the pitcher when men were on base). The term "Slide!..." referred to his need to avoid sliding to not leave marks which would have revealed Kelly as having bypassed second.
The song, "Slide, Kelly, Slide," was America's first "pop hit" record, after its release by Edison Studios. Prior to that song, most recordings (cylinders), were opera, religious or patriotic in nature. Kelly is also considered to have been the first man to popularize autographing, as fans pursued him on his way to the ballpark for his signature in the 1890s. Prints of a painting of him sliding into second hung in most Irish saloons in Boston, and he was among the first athletes to perform on the vaudeville stage. His own autobiography, "Play Ball," was the first written by a baseball player.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
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