Vince Shupe

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Vincent William Shupe

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Biographical Information[edit]

"You ought to see this guy Vince Shupe." - the word around town in East Canton, according to a 2008 article about Shupe's career

Vince Shupe had 283 at-bats in his only major league season in 1945. Joe Mack was the regular first baseman for the first half of the season for the Boston Braves and Shupe was the regular for the second half of the season. Mack, who was also a single-season player, appeared in his last game on July 4th while Shupe made his major league debut on July 7]th. The Braves finished sixth in the National League and Shupe's batting average was two points above the team average although he had little power.

Shupe had started in the minors in 1939, and missed 1942 and 1943, possibly (see below) for the war. He regularly hit .300+ in the first few years. After his major league season he played in the minors through 1950, mostly in the Pacific Coast League. He wasn't much of a runner, and he originally started out as a pitcher in the minors.

An article called "Who Was Vince Shupe"http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_action=doc&p_docid=1249CD5A9AD34770&p_docnum=2&p_theme=gatehouse&s_site=RCOC&p_product=RCOC] states that he went to East Canton High School and signed with the Dodgers even before he graduated. Although his grave has a "U.S. Veteran" sticker, it is not entirely clear if he served in the war, since he sat out the 1942-1943 seasons due to contract issues with the Dodgers.

He dated starlet Jean Peters, also from East Canton, who went on to marry billionaire Howard Hughes. Shupe, whose father had run an orchard, drove a school bus after his playing days, then was a salesman for an oil company. He died young while bowling.

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