Otto Hess
| Otto Hess | |||
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| Pitcher | |||
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Born: October 10, 1878 Bern, Switzerland | |||
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Died: February 25, 1926 (aged 47) Tucson, Arizona, United States | |||
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| MLB debut | |||
| August 3, 1902, for the Cleveland Bronchos | |||
| Last MLB appearance | |||
| June 13, 1915, for the Boston Braves | |||
| MLB statistics | |||
| Pitching record | 70–90 | ||
| Earned run average | 2.98 | ||
| Strikeouts | 580 | ||
| Teams | |||
| Career highlights and awards | |||
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Otto C. Hess (October 10, 1878 – February 25, 1926) born in Bern, Switzerland was a pitcher for the Cleveland Bronchos/Cleveland Naps (1902 and 1904–08) and Boston Braves (1912–15).
In 1914, Hess was a member of the Braves team that went from last place to first place in two months, becoming the first team to win a pennant after being in last place on the Fourth of July.[1] He is the first person born in Switzerland to play Major League Baseball.
In 10 seasons he had a 70–90 win-loss record in 198 games, with 165 games started, 129 complete games, 18 shutouts, 5 saves, 1,418 innings pitched, 1,355 hits allowed, 663 runs allowed, 25 home runs allowed, 448 walks allowed, 580 strikeouts, 83 hit batsmen, 38 wild pitches and a 2.98 ERA. He died in Tucson, Arizona at the age of 47.
See also
- List of Major League Baseball annual saves leaders
- List of Major League Baseball career hit batsmen leaders
References
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference, or Fangraphs, or The Baseball Cube, or Baseball-Reference (Minors)
