Duster Mails

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Duster_Mails an entity of type: Thing

John Walter "Duster" Mails (October 1, 1894 – July 5, 1974) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball for the Brooklyn Robins (1915–16), Cleveland Indians (1920–22) and St. Louis Cardinals (1925–26). Mails pitched for three pennant winning teams—the 1916 Robins, the 1920 Indians and the 1926 Cardinals. He appeared in only 11 games for the 1916 Robins, with a record of 0–1, and did not appear in the 1916 World Series, which the Robins lost. He appeared in only one game for the 1926 Cardinals, posting a record of 0–1, and did not pitch in the 1926 World Series, which the Cardinals won. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Duster Mails
rdf:langString Duster Mails
rdf:langString Duster Mails
xsd:date 1974-07-05
xsd:date 1894-10-01
xsd:integer 7245921
xsd:integer 1121553385
xsd:integer 32
xsd:double 4.1
rdf:langString Strikeouts
xsd:integer 232
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString Left
rdf:langString m/mailsdu01
xsd:date 1894-10-01
rdf:langString Mails in 1916
xsd:date 1974-07-05
xsd:gMonthDay --04-29
rdf:langString * Brooklyn Robins * Cleveland Indians * St. Louis Cardinals
rdf:langString John Walter "Duster" Mails (October 1, 1894 – July 5, 1974) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball for the Brooklyn Robins (1915–16), Cleveland Indians (1920–22) and St. Louis Cardinals (1925–26). Mails pitched for three pennant winning teams—the 1916 Robins, the 1920 Indians and the 1926 Cardinals. He appeared in only 11 games for the 1916 Robins, with a record of 0–1, and did not appear in the 1916 World Series, which the Robins lost. He helped the Indians win the 1920 World Series after being acquired in a minor league trade in August 1920, appearing in 9 games while posting a record of 7-0 and an ERA of 1.85 as the Indians battled the Chicago White Sox and New York Yankees in a tight pennant race. He pitched 6.2 innings of relief in Game 3 of the World Series, allowing no runs. He pitched a 1-0 complete game shutout of Brooklyn in Game 6 and posted a 0.00 ERA for his two Series appearances. He appeared in only one game for the 1926 Cardinals, posting a record of 0–1, and did not pitch in the 1926 World Series, which the Cardinals won. In seven Major League seasons, Mails had a 32–25 win–loss record, 104 games, 59 games started, 29 complete games, 5 shutouts, 26 games finished, 2 saves, 516 innings pitched, 554 hits allowed, 281 runs allowed, 235 earned runs allowed, 27 home runs allowed, 220 walks allowed, 232 strikeouts, 13 hit batsmen, 7 wild pitches, 2288 batters faced, and a 4.10 ERA. Mails won over 200 games in the minor leagues, primarily in the Pacific Coast League during the 1920s, posting a record of 226–210. Born in San Quentin, California, Mails graduated from Christian Brothers High School (Sacramento, California) and attended Saint Mary's College of California. He died in San Francisco, California, at the age of 79.
rdf:langString Left
rdf:langString mails-001joh
xsd:gMonthDay --09-28
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString Brooklyn Robins
xsd:integer 1915
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString St. Louis Cardinals
xsd:integer 1926
rdf:langString *World Series champion
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3850

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