Fred Hatfield Explained

Fred Hatfield
Position:Third baseman
Birth Date:18 March 1925
Birth Place:Lanett, Alabama, U.S.
Death Place:Tallahassee, Florida, U.S.
Bats:Left
Throws:Right
Debutleague:MLB
Debutdate:August 31
Debutyear:1950
Debutteam:Boston Red Sox
Finalleague:MLB
Finaldate:May 13
Finalyear:1958
Finalteam:Cincinnati Redlegs
Statleague:MLB
Stat1label:Batting average
Stat1value:.242
Stat2label:Home runs
Stat2value:23
Stat3label:Runs batted in
Stat3value:165
Teams:

Fred James Hatfield (March 18, 1925 – May 22, 1998), nicknamed "Scrap Iron",[1] was an American Major League Baseball infielder who played nine seasons in the Major Leagues with the Boston Red Sox (1950–52), Detroit Tigers (1952–56), Chicago White Sox (1956–57), Cleveland Indians (1958) and Cincinnati Redlegs (1958). He batted left-handed, threw right-handed, and was listed as 6feet tall and .

Playing career

Born in Lanett, Alabama, Hatfield attended Birmingham–Southern College and Troy State College before Hatfield was signed by the Red Sox as an amateur free agent in 1942. As a big-leaguer, Hatfield played in 722 games and had a career batting average of .242 with an on-base percentage of .332. He had 493 hits, 248 bases on balls, and 165 RBIs.

Hatfield played in the infield, with 408 games at third base, 179 games at second base, and 27 games at shortstop.

Hatfield was among the American League leaders in being hit by pitch in 1952, 1954, 1956, and 1957. He was also among the league leaders in 1955 for sacrifice hits and intentional walks.

Coaching career

As his playing career wound down in the minor leagues in the late 1950s, Hatfield became a professional baseball manager and coach, and a college baseball coach. He skippered teams in the minors for 16 years between 1960 and 1986, spent two seasons (1977–78) as the third-base coach on Ralph Houk's Detroit Tigers staff, and five years (1964–68) as head baseball coach of the Florida State Seminoles, where he posted a 161–57 (.739) record. He was posthumously inducted into the Florida State University Hall of Fame in 1999.[2]

Hatfield died in 1998 at age 73 in Tallahassee, Florida.

External links

, or Retrosheet, or SABR Biography Project, or DeadBall Era Obituary

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fred Hatfield Baseball Stats | Baseball Almanac .
  2. https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/7c8c6915 Akin, William. Fred Hatfield.