Tillie Shafer

Arthur Joseph "Tillie" Shafer (March 22, 1889 – January 10, 1962) was a Major League Baseball infielder with the New York Giants from 1909 to 1913.

Tillie Shafer
Infielder
Born: (1889-03-22)March 22, 1889
Los Angeles, California
Died: January 10, 1962(1962-01-10) (aged 72)
Los Angeles, California
Batted: Switch Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 24, 1909, for the New York Giants
Last MLB appearance
October 4, 1913, for the New York Giants
MLB statistics
Batting average.273
Home runs5
Runs batted in84
Teams

Career

While attending Santa Clara University, Shafer was one of the most accomplished college athletes on the west coast, winning numerous track and field medals, in addition for playing baseball for the then-Missionites of Santa Clara. He was once timed at 3.2 seconds running from the batter's box to first base.

However, his time in Major League Baseball wasn't very happy for him. A young, shy man from a wealthy family, Shafer was hassled from the moment he first entered the Giants' clubhouse as a rookie. Outfielder Cy Seymour gave him the feminine nickname "Tillie", which stuck. Throughout his tenure in New York, Shafer was branded as a "momma's boy" and razzed by his teammates.[1]

After two seasons of sitting on the bench, Shafer took 1911 off to go home and also to play baseball in Japan. He returned the following season, and in 1913, he was a regular in the Giants' starting line-up for the first time. He got to play in the 1912 and 1913 World Series.

In 283 games over four seasons, Shafer posted a .273 batting average (212-for-776) with 138 runs, 5 home runs, 84 RBI, 60 stolen bases and 105 bases on balls.

On December 16, 1913, Shafer announced his retirement. He summed up his time with the Giants with: "I have satisfied every ambition in a baseball way. Now I want to forget I was ever in it. It is an episode in my life that I am trying hard to forget."[1]

gollark: It might actually be useful to have some kind of neural network file format detector for bad formats without clear headers. Or to help recover damaged files.
gollark: Can't wait for the `file` command to take several seconds of heavy GPU load.
gollark: You would still want to have information about the geese though.
gollark: I think a useful component of AGI would be being able to efficiently offload subtasks to specialised algorithms instead of just doing them inefficiently in neural networks, but I have no idea if this is very practical or anyone's doing it.
gollark: There are tons of non-learning algorithms which are good for logical reasoning. The fuzzier stuff which humans do easily seems to be what's harder to implement.

References

  1. "Tillie Shafer". bioproj.sabr.org. Retrieved 2010-10-23.


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