Al Bridwell
Albert Henry Bridwell
- Bats Left, Throws Right
- Height 5' 9", Weight 170 lb.
- Debut April 16, 1905
- Final Game September 23, 1915
- Born January 4, 1884 in Friendship, OH USA
- Died January 23, 1969 in Portsmouth, OH USA
Biographical Information[edit]
“Bridwell is not fluking. He is pulling the same fast stuff every day, making quick pick-ups and throws from awkward positions and getting his share of bingles. Few of his hits travel for extra bases, but any of the opposing pitchers will tell you that Bridwell in a pinch is one of the most dangerous men in the National League at bat.” - Chicago Day Book, 1913
"For Fred's sake, I wish it had never happened; it caused him so much grief. Let me amend what I said a minute ago: there's one thing that happened in baseball I would change if I could do it all over again. I wish I'd never gotten that hit that set off the whole Merkle incident. I wish I'd struck out instead. If I'd done that, then it would have spared Fred a lot of unfair humiliation. Yes, I wish I'd struck out. It would have been better all around." - Al Bridwell, to Lawrence Ritter, The Glory of Their Times
Infielder Al Bridwell is best remembered as a central figure of one of baseball's most lasting controversies. On September 23, 1908, with two outs in the 9th, he dug in for the New York Giants against Jack Pfiester of the Giants' bitterest rivals, the Chicago Cubs, and laced a clean single that set in motion the events by which Fred Merkle became known for one of history's largest "Boners". Naturally, with a catastrophe so cataclysmic, the season came down to a tie between the Cubs and the Giants in the standings, with the Cubs pressing forward and winning their last World Series for 108 years.
Outside of that moment, Bridwell put together a solid big league career, playing eleven seasons (1905 to 1915) with the bulk of his success coming with John McGraw's Giants. He was a good on-base man in a deadball era, finishing with a .255/.347/.295 line in 1,252 games, and stole 136 bases. 1909 may have been his finest season as a regular, when he batted .294/.386/.338 with 32 steals in 145 games, finishing 5th in the NL in average and 3rd in the loop in on-base percentage. Additionally, he was considered a tremendous fielder.
Bridwell was a colorful sort on and off the diamond. A former boxer, he once slugged McGraw and left the Hall of Famer sprawled on his ass in the dugout. He also launched a bat at Hall of Fame umpire Hank O'Day during a frank disagreement in a game, but did not make it two for two in laying out future Cooperstown enshrinees. Fred Snodgrass recalled (in The Glory of Their Times) Bridwell's skill with firearms during spring training one year; Al putting a bullet right through a pocket watch that pitcher Bugs Raymond had tossed in the air.
Al lived into the 1960s, when he was one of the few players in Ritter's book to put over the modern ballplayers, particularly Willie Mays. He died at 85 in Portsmouth, OH.
Sources for this article include: The Glory of Their Times by Lawrence Ritter
Year-by-Year Managerial Record[edit]
Year | Team | League | Record | Finish | Playoffs | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1919 | Houston Buffaloes | Texas League | 89-71 | 2nd | ||
1920 | Rocky Mount Tar Heels | Virginia League | -- | -- | replaced by Phifer Fullenwider | |
1921 | Spartanburg Pioneers | South Atlantic League | -- | -- | replaced by Mike Kelly |
Further Reading[edit]
- Lawrence Ritter: The Glory of Their Times, The Macmillan Company, New York, NY, 1966, pp. 116-130.
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