Joe Kernan (baseball) explained

Joe Kernan
Position:Utility player
Bats:Unknown
Throws:Unknown
Birth Place:Baltimore, Maryland
Debutleague:MLB
Debutdate:April 14
Debutyear:1873
Debutteam:Baltimore Marylands
Finalleague:MLB
Finaldate:April 15
Finalyear:1873
Finalteam:Baltimore Marylands
Statleague:MLB
Stat1label:At bats
Stat1value:8
Stat2label:RBIs
Stat2value:1
Stat3label:Home Runs
Stat3value:0
Stat4label:Batting average
Stat4value:.375
Teams:
 National Association of Base Ball Players
 National Association of Professional BBP

Joseph Kernan was an American professional baseball player. He played second base and center field in two games for the 1873 Baltimore Marylands. He was a Baltimore native like most of his Maryland teammates.

Kernan previously played for the Marylands in the second of their three professional seasons, 1870. While the team won 2 and lost 14 pro matches, he appeared at third base and second base in five of the eleven games on record, and he scored four runs, the lowest rate on the team.[1]

Little is known about baseball in the 1870s, outside the leagues, but it seems sure that many NABBP clubs continued to operate; thus adult players outside the leagues, such as Joe Kernan, continued to play competitively. Kernan may have played for the Marylands between 1870 and 1873.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Wright, Marshall D. The National Association of Base Ball Players, 1857 - 1870. Jefferson NC: McFarland & Co. 2000. Page 305. (Record in pro matches only.)
    Coverage of NABBP play, even the list of a player's teams, is generally limited to the record that Wright has published, which is compiled from various sources and commonly limited to regular and important substitute players.
  2. The Maryland club of Baltimore is one of the strongest candidates for continuation, of course, because a club of that name tried league membership in 1873. Among 19 men who played at least one of the Marylands six league games that season, five had played for the Maryland club in the NABBP including Kernan and three regulars from the 1870 team.