Dan McClellan explained

Dan McClellan
Position:Pitcher / Manager
Bats:Left
Throws:Left
Birth Date:1878 7, mf=yes
Birth Place:Norfolk, Virginia
Death Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Debutyear:1903
Debutteam:Cuban X-Giants
Finalyear:1913
Finalteam:Paterson Smart Set
Teams:

Daniel J. McClellan (July 1, 1878 - March 10, 1962) was an American baseball pitcher and manager who starred for top-tier independent black teams before the Negro National League was founded. His career began about 1903, and he continued as a playing manager and organizer of lesser teams well into the 1920s.

With the Cuban X-Giants in 1903 he pitched the earliest known perfect game in black baseball against a semi-pro team. He switched to the Philadelphia Giants during the 1904 season and pitched for them through 1906. The X-Giants were arguably the best black team in 1903, and the Philadelphia Giants were also arguably the best black team in those three years while McClellan and Rube Foster were regular pitchers. McClellan was described as a "smart pitcher ... to offset his lack of a substantial fastball" by blackball historian Jame Riley.

Sportswriters Harry Daniels and Jimmy Smith both named McClellan to their 1909 "All American Team."[3]

McClellan was named as "Dream Team" coach in the 1952 Pittsburgh Courier poll of outstanding black baseball players.[4]

Sources

External links

and Seamheads

Notes and References

  1. https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B1Wcncq5-bHdVU1uNV9zRXpZa3M/edit "Cuban X-Giants are Champions" The Patriot, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Saturday, September 19, 1903, Page 7, Column 1
  2. https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B1Wcncq5-bHdd204aGp5c3JMcEk/edit "Philadelphia Giants Subdue Leland Giants" Indianapolis Freeman, Indianapolis, Indiana, Saturday, August 21, 1909, Page 7, Columns 3 and 4
  3. http://negroleagues.bravehost.com/pdf/001968.pdf "The Base Ball Spirit In The East." Indianapolis Freeman, Indianapolis, Indiana, Saturday, December 25, 1909, Page 7, Columns 1 and 2
  4. http://johndonaldson.bravehost.com/a.html "1952 Pittsburgh Courier Poll of Greatest Black Players"