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34. Del Pratt

Had the Rookie of the Year award existed during the Deadball Era, Pratt likely would have walked away with the hardware. He burst onto the scene with a .302 average and 172 hits, following it up in 1913 with nearly identical production. It was a rare display of immediate, high-level consistency for a young player in the early 20th century.

While his batting average eventually settled into the high.  In the 200s, in 1916, he achieved a historic milestone by leading the American League with 103 RBIs—a staggering feat for a middle infielder in an era of limited run scoring. Pratt was an "Iron Man" before the term was popularized, rarely missing a game and serving as the dependable heart of the St. Louis lineup for six seasons.

His time in St. Louis ended in 1918 when he was the centerpiece of a blockbuster trade to the New York Yankees, a deal that brought five players and significant cash to the Browns—a testament to his high market value at the time. Pratt left the franchise with 957 hits, 174 stolen bases, and a reputation as one of the most productive second basemen of his generation.

Acquired from the New York Highlanders in 1904, Harry "Handsome Harry" Howell quickly established himself as the premier arm of a struggling St. Louis Browns rotation. Armed with one of the most effective—and dampest—spitballs in the history of the game, Howell embarked on a five-year run of dominance that statistical leaderboards often obscure due to his team's lack of offensive support.

Howell’s consistency was nothing short of elite. From 1904 to 1908, he was a fixture in the American League's top ten for ERA, recording three seasons with a microscopic mark under 2.00. In 1905, he led the league with 35 complete games, an incredible display of durability in which he posted a 1.98 ERA despite losing 22 games—a testament to the "floundering Browns" lineups behind him. During this peak, his WHIP remained consistently under 1.10, proving he was one of the few pitchers who could match the era's legends strike-for-strike.

Beyond the mound, Howell was a versatile athlete who began his career as a legitimate two-way threat, possessing the agility to fill in at third base or the outfield when called upon. However, his legacy took a permanent hit in 1910. Involved in the infamous "Chalmers Award" scandal, Howell was accused of attempting to bribe an official scorer with a new suit to credit a hit to Nap Lajoie, an effort to help Lajoie beat out Ty Cobb for the batting title.

The scandal effectively ended his career in the Majors. Howell left St. Louis with a record of 78–91, 712 strikeouts, and a 2.06 career ERA with the Browns—a mark that, strictly by the numbers, remains one of the lowest in the history of the franchise

Miguel Tejada arrived in Baltimore in 2004 with the pedigree of a superstar, having already secured an AL MVP award in Oakland. As the centerpiece of a high-profile free-agent class, "Miggi" immediately transformed the Orioles' lineup, providing a level of offensive production from the shortstop position that the franchise had rarely seen since the prime of Cal Ripken Jr.

Tejada’s first season in Maryland was nothing short of historic. In 2004, he shattered expectations by leading the American League with a career-high 150 RBIs—a staggering total for a middle infielder. He tied his personal best with 34 home runs that year, earning an All-Star nod and a Silver Slugger Award. This dominance wasn't a fluke; Tejada was named an All-Star in each of his first three seasons in Baltimore and secured back-to-back Silver Sluggers (2004–2005), maintaining a batting average north of .300 while serving as the durable heartbeat of the infield.

Beyond the gaudy home run and RBI totals, Tejada was a quintessential "Iron Man" in his own right, famously playing in 1,152 consecutive games—a streak that spanned his transition from Oakland to Baltimore. Though he was traded to Houston following the 2007 season and returned for a brief veteran cameo in 2010, his legacy in Baltimore is defined by that initial four-year peak of offensive brilliance.

Tejada left Baltimore with 876 hits, 109 home runs, and a stellar .305 batting average.

Milt Pappas arrived in Baltimore as a high school sensation in 1957, making his Major League debut as a teenager against the powerhouse Yankees. While most players his age were still navigating the minors, Pappas was quickly ascending the ranks of the Orioles' rotation, becoming the staff ace before he was old enough to rent a car.

Pappas’s tenure in Baltimore was a masterclass in durable, high-level consistency. A three-time All-Star (including both games in 1962 and starting the 1965 classic), he served as the bridge between the "Baby Birds" era and the championship years. He famously never posted a losing record in a Baltimore uniform, finishing in the top ten in ERA six times and top ten in WHIP four times. His 1964 campaign was particularly dominant, as he led a 97-win team with 16 victories and a career-best 1.08 WHIP.

His time in Baltimore ended in December 1965 in what remains one of the most famous trades in baseball history. Sent to Cincinnati for Frank Robinson, Pappas became the footnote to an "all-time heist" that saw Robinson win the Triple Crown. While the trade was undoubtedly lopsided in hindsight, it took a pitcher of Pappas's elite caliber—a 26-year-old with 110 wins—to pry a superstar like Robinson away from the Reds.

Pappas left the Orioles as one of the most successful pitchers in franchise history, totaling 110 wins, 944 strikeouts, and a sterling 3.24 ERA. Inducted into the Orioles Hall of Fame in 1985, he remains a symbol of the elite scouting and development that defined the early days of "Oriole Magic."