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Revision as of 02:06, 2 December 2010 editDr who1975 (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users19,132 edits perfecto?!?!? Did Shakira write this?← Previous edit Revision as of 02:10, 2 December 2010 edit undoPM800 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers24,288 edits Undid revision 400042781 by Dr who1975 (talk) That "correction" didn't make any sense, you moron.Next edit →
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*Pitched a ] on June 12, 1880 *Pitched a ] on June 12, 1880
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'''John Lee Richmond'''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1081538/index.htm|title=The record books call him John Lee Richmond of Brown|author=Hanlon, John|date=1968-08-26|accessdate=2008-10-14|publisher=]}}</ref>, or, more commonly, '''Lee Richmond''' or '''J. Lee Richmond''' (May 5, 1857, in ] – October 1, 1929, in ]) was a ] left-handed pitcher. He pitched the first ] in baseball history. He played for the ] when he pitched his perfect. The game was played at the ] near the intersection of Sever St. and Highland St. in Worcester, which is located on the ] Campus. The game was played on June 12, 1880, and the second perfect game in history came just five days later, pitched by ]. In his perfect game, Richmond struck out five, allowed only three balls to be hit out of the infield, and, remarkably, got one of his 27 outs when the right fielder threw the batter out at first base. Worcester beat the ] 1-0, with the only run scoring on an error. That season, Richmond pitched in a ]-leading 74 games. He went 32-32 with a 2.15 earned run average. '''John Lee Richmond'''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1081538/index.htm|title=The record books call him John Lee Richmond of Brown|author=Hanlon, John|date=1968-08-26|accessdate=2008-10-14|publisher=]}}</ref>, or, more commonly, '''Lee Richmond''' or '''J. Lee Richmond''' (May 5, 1857, in ] – October 1, 1929, in ]) was a ] left-handed pitcher. He pitched the first ] in baseball history. He played for the ] when he pitched his perfecto. The game was played at the ] near the intersection of Sever St. and Highland St. in Worcester, which is located on the ] Campus. The game was played on June 12, 1880, and the second perfect game in history came just five days later, pitched by ]. In his perfect game, Richmond struck out five, allowed only three balls to be hit out of the infield, and, remarkably, got one of his 27 outs when the right fielder threw the batter out at first base. Worcester beat the ] 1-0, with the only run scoring on an error. That season, Richmond pitched in a ]-leading 74 games. He went 32-32 with a 2.15 earned run average.


During a six-year baseball career, Richmond compiled 75 wins, 552 ]s, and a 3.06 ]. Of the 179 games he started, 161 were ]s, 8 of them ]s, and one of those his famous perfect game. After leaving baseball, Richmond became a doctor and later a professor. He was buried in Forest Cemetery in Toledo, Ohio. During a six-year baseball career, Richmond compiled 75 wins, 552 ]s, and a 3.06 ]. Of the 179 games he started, 161 were ]s, 8 of them ]s, and one of those his famous perfect game. After leaving baseball, Richmond became a doctor and later a professor. He was buried in Forest Cemetery in Toledo, Ohio.

Revision as of 02:10, 2 December 2010

Scorecard for Richmond's perfect game. Abbreviations: A, B, C, for first, second and third, P and H for pitcher and catcher, S for shortstop, L, M, and R for left, center, and right field
Baseball player
Lee Richmond
Pitcher
Batted: SwitchThrew: Left
debut
September 27, 1879, for the Boston Red Caps
Last appearance
October 4, 1886, for the Cincinnati Red Stockings
Career statistics
Earned run average3.06
Win-Loss record75-100
Strikeouts552
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams
Career highlights and awards

John Lee Richmond, or, more commonly, Lee Richmond or J. Lee Richmond (May 5, 1857, in Sheffield, Ohio – October 1, 1929, in Toledo, Ohio) was a Major League Baseball left-handed pitcher. He pitched the first perfect game in baseball history. He played for the Worcester Ruby Legs when he pitched his perfecto. The game was played at the Worcester Agricultural Fairgrounds near the intersection of Sever St. and Highland St. in Worcester, which is located on the Becker College Campus. The game was played on June 12, 1880, and the second perfect game in history came just five days later, pitched by John Montgomery Ward. In his perfect game, Richmond struck out five, allowed only three balls to be hit out of the infield, and, remarkably, got one of his 27 outs when the right fielder threw the batter out at first base. Worcester beat the Cleveland Blues 1-0, with the only run scoring on an error. That season, Richmond pitched in a National League-leading 74 games. He went 32-32 with a 2.15 earned run average.

During a six-year baseball career, Richmond compiled 75 wins, 552 strike outs, and a 3.06 ERA. Of the 179 games he started, 161 were complete games, 8 of them shutouts, and one of those his famous perfect game. After leaving baseball, Richmond became a doctor and later a professor. He was buried in Forest Cemetery in Toledo, Ohio.

See also

References

  1. Hanlon, John (1968-08-26). "The record books call him John Lee Richmond of Brown". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2008-10-14.

External links

Achievements
Preceded bynone Perfect game pitcher
June 12, 1880
Succeeded byJohn Montgomery Ward
Preceded byGeorge Bradley No-hitter pitcher
June 12, 1880
Succeeded byJohn Montgomery Ward
Major League Baseball pitchers who have pitched a perfect game
Pre-1900s
Modern era
Related

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