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Tom McCraw
Born: 1941

1B-OF 1963-75 White Sox , Senators, Indians, Angels

Tom McCraw's Teammates

GamesAverageHRRBI
Career 1468.24675404

Books and articles about Tom McCraw

McCraw was a journeyman hitter with speed who won the 1962 American Association batting crown (.326). He joined the White Sox in June 1963 when first baseman Joe Cunningham broke his collarbone. Much heralded as a rookie, McCraw struggled at the plate for most of his eight seasons with Chicago, only once topping the .260 mark. On May 24, 1967, he hit three home runs in one game at Minnesota, and almost had a fourth when he sent a Jim Kaat fastball to the warning track. He tied a ML first base record by committing three errors in one inning on May 3, 1968, but that year he led AL first basemen in assists, double plays, total chances per game, and errors. Ted Williams taught him to hit the ball with more authority as his manager with the 1971 Senators, and McCraw used his training as a batting coach for the Indians and Giants. (RL)
FROM THE BASEBALL CHRONOLOGY
» May 24, 1967: Tommy McCraw belts three home runs and drives in eight runs, as the first-place White Sox bury the Twins 14–1 at Minneapolis.

» May 17, 1971: Washington OF Tom McCraw "slugs" a 140-foot home run against the Cleveland Indians. SS Jack Heidemann, CF Vada Pinson, and LF John Lowenstein collide on his short pop fly to left center, and McCraw circles the bases before the ball is retrieved.