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Home > Sam Crawford


Samuel Earl (Wahoo Sam) Crawford ( April 18, 1880 - June 15, 1968) was a professional baseball player.

His nickname comes from his birthplace, Wahoo, Nebraska.

Crawford played 19 big league seasons, starting his career in 1899 with the Cincinnati Redstockings, before being traded to the Detroit Tigers in 1903, where he finished out his career.

Crawford twice led the major leagues in home runs, hitting 16 in 1901 and 7 in 1908. He retired with a career batting average of .309, and holds the career major league record for triples with 309, a record unlikely to be beaten given the difference in the style of baseball played in the modern era to the dead-ball era of Crawford.

He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1957.

On his passing in 1968, Sam Crawford was interred in the Inglewood Park Cemetery in Inglewood, CaliforniaInglewood is a city located in Los Angeles County, California, United States. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 112,580. It was incorporated on February 8, 1908. History Inglewood dates its history to the construction of the Centin

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Crawford, Sam Crawford, Sam Crawford, Sam Crawford, Sam Crawford, Sam

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