Les Mallon
Les Mallon | |
---|---|
Second baseman | |
Born: (1905-11-21)November 21, 1905 Sweetwater, Texas, U.S. | |
Died: April 17, 1991(1991-04-17) (aged 85) Granbury, Texas, U.S. | |
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | |
April 14, 1931, for the Philadelphia Phillies | |
Last MLB appearance | |
September 29, 1935, for the Boston Braves | |
MLB statistics | |
Batting average | .283 |
Home runs | 8 |
Runs batted in | 119 |
Teams | |
|
Leslie Clyde Mallon (November 21, 1905 – April 17, 1991) was an American Major League Baseball second baseman for the Philadelphia Phillies and Boston Braves.
Mallon began his professional baseball career in 1927 in the Texas Valley League. In 1930, he hit .332 in the class A Texas League and was promoted to the major leagues with the Phillies. Mallon hit .309 in his rookie season.[1] However, his numbers slipped the following year, and he was sold to Toronto of the International League. He was hitting .345 midway through the 1934 season when he was purchased by the Boston Braves.
Mallon was the Braves starting second baseman in 1935, the year they lost 115 games en route to the second-worst record of any MLB team in the modern era. After the season, he was sold to the Chicago White Sox, and in 1936 he was back in the Texas League with the Dallas Steers. That season, he hit .344 and won the league MVP award. His career ended in 1939.
Mallon was inducted into the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979.[2]
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference
- Les Mallon at Find a Grave
- v
- t
- e
- 1931: Dizzy Dean
- 1932: Hank Greenberg
- 1933: Zeke Bonura
- 1934: Charlie English
- 1935: Rudy York
- 1936: Les Mallon
- 1937: Harold Hillin
- 1938: Dizzy Trout
- 1939: Nick Cullop
- 1940: Bob Muncrief
- 1941: Rip Russell
- 1942: Dick Wakefield
- 1946: Hank Schenz
- 1947: Al Rosen
- 1948: Irv Noren
- 1949: Herb Conyers
- 1950: Gil McDougald
- 1951: Jim Dyck
- 1952: Billy Hunter
- 1953: Joe Frazier
- 1954: Frank Kellert
- 1955: Ray Murray
- 1956: Ken Guettler
- 1957: Jim Frey
- 1958: Michael Lutz
- 1959: Carl Warwick
- 1960: Chuck Hiller
- 1961: Phil Linz
- 1962: Cap Peterson
- 1963: Jim Beauchamp
- 1964: Joe Morgan
- 1965: Leo Posada
- 1966: Tommy Hutton
- 1967: Nate Colbert
- 1968: Jim Spencer, Bill Sudakis
- 1969: Larry Johnson, Bobby Grich
- 1970: Mickey Rivers
- 1971: Enos Cabell
- 1972: Randy Elliott
- 1973: Héctor Cruz
- 1974: John Balaz
- 1975: Gary Alexander
- 1976: Willie Aikens
- 1977: Karl Pagel
- 1978: Bobby Clark
- 1979: Mark Brouhard
- 1980: Tim Leary
- 1981: Steve Sax
- 1982: Darryl Strawberry
- 1983: Mark Gillaspie
- 1984: Jim Steels
- 1985: Billy Jo Robidoux
- 1986: Steve Stanicek
- 1987: Gregg Jefferies
- 1988: Jeff Manto
- 1989: Ray Lankford
- 1990: Henry Rodríguez
- 1991: John Jaha
- 1992: Troy O'Leary
- 1993: Roberto Petagine
- 1994: Tim Unroe
- 1995: Johnny Damon
- 1996: Bubba Smith
- 1997: Mike Kinkade
- 1998: Tyrone Horne
- 1999: Adam Piatt
- 2000: Keith Ginter
- 2001: Jason Lane
- 2002: Chad Tracy
- 2003: Justin Leone
- 2004: Ryan Shealy
- 2005: Andre Ethier
- 2006: Alex Gordon
- 2007: Chase Headley
- 2008: Kila Kaʻaihue
- 2009: Chris Carter
- 2010: Mike Moustakas
- 2011: Matt Adams
- 2012: Oscar Taveras
- 2013: George Springer
- 2014: Alex Yarbrough
- 2015: Chad Pinder
- 2016: Matt Chapman
- 2017: Matt Beaty
- 2018: Joey Curletta
- 2019: Dylan Carlson
- 2020: none
- 2021: MJ Melendez
- 2022: Moisés Gómez
- 2023: Thomas Saggese