Bobby Burke
Robert James Burke (January 23, 1907 – February 8, 1971) was a pitcher for the Washington Senators and Philadelphia Phillies.
| Bobby Burke | |||
|---|---|---|---|
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| Pitcher | |||
| Born: January 23, 1907 Joliet, Illinois | |||
| Died: February 8, 1971 (aged 64) Joliet, Illinois | |||
| |||
| MLB debut | |||
| April 16, 1927, for the Washington Senators | |||
| Last MLB appearance | |||
| May 4, 1937, for the Philadelphia Phillies | |||
| MLB statistics | |||
| Win–loss record | 38–46 | ||
| Earned run average | 4.28 | ||
| Strikeouts | 299 | ||
| Teams | |||
| Career highlights and awards | |||
| |||
Burke helped the Senators win the 1933 American League Pennant.
In 10 seasons Burke had a 38-46 win–loss record, appearing in 254 games, starting 88 of them, pitching 27 complete games, tossing 4 shutouts, finishing 93 games, earning 5 saves, 9182⁄3 innings pitched, allowing 926 hits, allowing 506 runs (437 earned), surrendering 35 home runs, walking 360, striking our 299, hitting 24 batsmen, 16 wild pitches, facing 3,985 batters, 3 balks and a 4.28 ERA.
On August 8, 1931, while with the Senators, Burke no-hit the Boston Red Sox 5–0 at Griffith Stadium. It was the last no-hitter by a Washington-area Major League Baseball team until Jordan Zimmermann on September 28, 2014.[1]
Burke died on February 8, 1971, aged 64.[2]
References
- "Washington Senators 5, Boston Red Sox 0". retrosheet.org. August 8, 1931. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
- Wolf, Gregory H. "Bobby Burke". sabr.org. Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
External links
- Career statistics and player information from MLB, or Baseball-Reference, or Baseball-Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet
- Bobby Burke at Find a Grave
| Preceded by Wes Ferrell |
No-hitter pitcher August 8, 1931 |
Succeeded by Paul Dean |
