Jesse Barnes

American baseball player

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jesse_Barnes

Abstract is: Jesse Lawrence Barnes (August 26, 1892 – September 9, 1961) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball. Barnes began his major league career in 1914 with the Boston Braves. In 1917, he led the National League with 21 losses. On October 2, 1917, he became the only NL pitcher to walk twice in one inning. In 1918, Barnes was traded to the New York Giants. He had three very good years with the Giants. On the last day of the 1919 season, Barnes won his National League-leading 25th victory, 6–1, over Lee Meadows and the Philadelphia Phillies at Polo Grounds. The game was played at a feverish pace and lasted a mere 51 minutes, a major league record that still stands as the shortest nine-inning game ever played. In 1920 he had 20 wins, following with 15 wins in 1921 and two victories in the 1921 World Series against the New York Yankees. Then, on May 7, 1922, he hurled a no-hitter against the Phillies; Cy Williams was the only baserunner, who walked and was erased on a double play. Barnes returned to the Braves in 1923, playing for them three years before joining the Brooklyn Robins during 1926 and 1927. For the second time, he led the league in losses (20) in 1924. His younger brother, Virgil, also pitched in the majors, and both were teammates with the Giants from 1919 to 1923. On June 26, 1924, Jesse opposed Virgil in the first pitching matchup of brothers in major league history. Virgil did not have a decision while Jesse was credited with the loss as the Giants defeated the Braves‚ 8-1. The Barnes brothers would match up four more times during their careers. Barnes was a better than average hitting pitcher in his major league career, posting a .214 batting average (195-for-913) with 71 runs, 5 triples, 1 home run, 69 RBI, and 24 bases on balls. In four World Series appearances, he batted .308 (4-for-13) with three runs scored. Defensively, he was better than average, recording a .976 fielding percentage which was 17 points higher than the league average at his position. The baseball author and analyst Bill James is also a distant relative of the brothers.

Wikimedia Commons category is Jesse Barnes

Born 1892-04-26 in Perkins (Q3240354)
Died 1961-09-09 in Santa Rosa (Q610649)

Jesse Barnes is …
instance of (P31):
humanQ5

External links are
P1825Baseball-Reference.com major league player IDb/barneje01
P1826Baseball-Reference.com minor & foreign league player IDbarnes001jes
P3574FanGraphs player ID1000566
P535Find a Grave memorial ID7713120
P646Freebase ID/m/0frkcw
P4366Kansas Sports Hall of Fame ID (archived)76
P3368Prabook ID2208531
P6976Retrosheet person IDbarnj102
P2482SABR person IDcd4085a8
P4731The Baseball Cube player ID8488
P5421Trading Card Database person ID28043

P27country of citizenshipUnited States of AmericaQ30
P734family nameBarnesQ2658970
BarnesQ2658970
BarnesQ2658970
P735given nameJesseQ2227398
JesseQ2227398
P54member of sports teamToledo Mud HensQ787652
P106occupationbaseball playerQ10871364
P413position played on team / specialitypitcherQ1048902
P21sex or gendermaleQ6581097
P641sportbaseballQ5369

The articles in Wikimedia projects and languages

      Category:Jesse Barneswikimedia
Arabic (ar / Q13955)جيسي بارنزwikipedia
Egyptian Arabic (arz / Q29919)جيسى بارنزwikipedia
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