Jumbo Schoeneck
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Louis W. "Jumbo" Schoeneck (March 3, 1862 – January 20, 1930) was a Major League Baseball first baseman. He played for the Chicago Browns/Pittsburgh Stogies (1884) and Baltimore Monumentals (1884), both of the Union Association, and for the National League Indianapolis Hoosiers (1888–1889). He received the nickname "Jumbo" because he was Script error: No such module "convert".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and weighed 223 pounds.
Schoeneck was an average fielder and a good hitter during his major league career. His best season was 1884 when he finished in the league top ten in several offensive categories, including hits (131), batting average (.308), on-base percentage (.320), and slugging percentage (.387). Schoeneck's inflated statistics in 1884 are at least partly due to the weak competition of the Union Association, as compared to all of the other major leagues.
In his three major league seasons (170 games), Schoeneck was 186-for-657 (.283) with 79 runs scored. He pitched in two games for the 1888 Hoosiers and finished both, for a total of 4.1 innings, and allowed no earned runs.
Schoeneck died in his hometown of Chicago at the age of 67, and was buried at Mount Emblem Cemetery in Elmhurst, Illinois.
External links
- Career statistics from Script error: No such module "String".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
- Baseball Almanac
- Pages with script errors
- 1862 births
- 1930 deaths
- 19th-century baseball players
- 19th-century American sportsmen
- Major League Baseball first basemen
- Chicago Browns/Pittsburgh Stogies players
- Baltimore Monumentals players
- Indianapolis Hoosiers (NL) players
- Springfield, Illinois (minor league baseball) players
- Newark Domestics players
- Milwaukee Brewers (minor league) players
- Portland (minor league baseball) players
- Chicago Maroons players
- New Haven (minor league baseball) players
- Seattle (minor league baseball) players
- Green Bay Bays players
- Rochester Flour Cities players
- Baseball players from Chicago