You Are Here > Baseball-Reference.com > Bullpen > Will Smalley - BR Bullpen

Will Smalley

From BR Bullpen

Jump to: navigation, search

William Darwin Smalley (Deacon)

  • Bats Right, Throws Right

BR page

[edit] Biographical Information

Will Smalley was the starting third baseman for the 1890 Cleveland Spiders at age 19. He hit .213 in 1890, on a team that hit .232. George Davis, another outfielder on the team and a future Hall of Famer, was the same age as Smalley and hit .264 with a slugging average that was 76 points higher than the team slugging percentage.

Although Smalley made 64 errors in the field, his fielding was better than average for those days, and he was the only player on the team who appeared at third base that year. As a comparison, the team used six players at second base, but only Smalley at third.

In spite of that, Smalley lost his job. That was undoubtedly due to the fact that the regular third baseman in 1889 for Cleveland, Patsy Tebeau, had gone off to play for the Cleveland entry in the Players League, and when the Players League folded, he came back to play for the 1891 Cleveland Spiders. Tebeau would stay with Cleveland through 1898, but would switch to first base during most of the years.

Smalley joined the Washington Statesmen in 1891 and appeared in 11 games, hitting .158. He was one of nine players tried at third base, and for some reason was not effectively defensively, making 10 errors in 9 games. Billy Alvord, who had tried that same year in 13 games to win the third base job with the 1891 Cleveland Spiders, became the regular third baseman with the 1891 Statesmen.

Smalley fell ill sometime in 1891 and died that October at age 20. Smalley is the second youngest major leaguer to die: only Jay Dahl was younger.

[edit] Related Sites

Personal tools