Tom Loftus

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

Thomas Joseph Loftus (November 15, 1856 – April 16, 1910) was a manager in the American Association, the National League, and the American League. His playing career began in 1877 with the St. Louis Brown Stockings of the National League, but he only played in nine career games in 1877 and 1883 as an outfielder. His first managerial job came in 1884 with the Milwaukee Brewers of the short-lived Union Association (it only lasted one year), in which he only managed 12 games (going 8–4). Loftus died in Dubuque, Iowa at the age of 53. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Tom Loftus
rdf:langString Tom Loftus
rdf:langString Tom Loftus
xsd:date 1910-08-16
xsd:date 1856-11-15
xsd:integer 4502211
xsd:integer 1092391712
xsd:double 0.182
rdf:langString Hits
xsd:integer 6
rdf:langString Managerial record
xsd:integer 454
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString Unknown
xsd:date 1856-11-15
rdf:langString Tom Loftus in 1902
xsd:date 1910-08-16
xsd:gMonthDay --05-13
rdf:langString As player *St. Louis Brown Stockings *St. Louis Browns As manager *Milwaukee Brewers (UA) *Cleveland Blues *Cleveland Spiders *Cincinnati Reds *Chicago Orphans *Washington Senators
rdf:langString Thomas Joseph Loftus (November 15, 1856 – April 16, 1910) was a manager in the American Association, the National League, and the American League. His playing career began in 1877 with the St. Louis Brown Stockings of the National League, but he only played in nine career games in 1877 and 1883 as an outfielder. His first managerial job came in 1884 with the Milwaukee Brewers of the short-lived Union Association (it only lasted one year), in which he only managed 12 games (going 8–4). Loftus took over as manager of the Cleveland Spiders, then known as the Blues, partway through the 1888 season after Jimmy Williams resigned. In 1890, he was hired to manage the Cincinnati Reds, who had recently made the jump from the American Association to the National League. He left the game after the 1891 season, but he came back to manage the Chicago Orphans and the Washington Senators, and in each of his managerial stops, he would have part ownership of the team. Loftus died in Dubuque, Iowa at the age of 53.
rdf:langString Right
xsd:gMonthDay --08-17
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString MLB
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3778

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