After last appearing in the Majors in 1923, he re-emerged with the New York Giants in 1928 as an Outfielder. O'Doul batted .311 that year in 354 At Bats. That was decent, but he was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies, and he had what could only be described as one of the best offensive seasons by a player "seemingly out of nowhere." In 1929, O'Doul led the National League in Hits (254), Batting Average (.398), and On Base Percentage (.465)) while belting 32 Home Runs with 122 RBIs. O'Doul was second in MVP voting. Proving that he was not a one-year wonder, O'Doul batted .383 with 22 Home Runs in 1930.
O’Doul was then traded to Brooklyn, and he batted .336 in 1931 and won his second Batting Title (.368) in 1932. O'Doul would be an All-Star on 1933 and was traded to the New York Giants during the season. The Giants won the World Series that year, giving O'Doul a championship, a feat that must have seemed impossible in the late 1920s.
Age caught up to O’Doul, and he last played in the Majors in 1934. He has a career Slash Line of .349/.412/.532, all of which are in the top-fifty All-Time.
O'Doul would later be a goodwill baseball ambassador of sorts in Japan, and he was a large part of helping to grow the game in that country.
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