gold star for USAHOF

8. Sherry Magee

8. Sherry Magee
  1. General
  2. Awards
  3. Career Stats
  • Born: August 6, 1884 in Clarendon, PA USA
  • Weight: 179 lbs.
  • Height: 5'11"
  • Bats: R
  • Throws: R
  • Debut: June 29, 1904
  • Final Game: September 27, 1919
  • Baseball Magazine All-Star - 1910
  • Baseball Magazine All-Star - 1910
  • Baseball Magazine All-Star - 1912
  • Baseball Magazine All-Star - 1914
  • MVP - 1914
 
ABRHHRRBISBAVG
14882222443381662352882 0.291
 

When Sherry Magee emerged as a 19-year-old rookie during the summer of 1904, the Philadelphia Phillies quickly recognized they had discovered a rare, energetic talent. Coming directly from the minor leagues, the right-handed outfielder made an immediate impact, establishing himself as a leading offensive powerhouse of the dead-ball era. In an era when offense was suppressed by heavily scuffed baseballs and large ballparks, Magee leveraged a unique combination of sharp line-drive hitting and exceptional speed on the bases.

Magee was a mainstay in Philadelphia for over ten years, consistently near the top of the National League leaderboards. During his eleven seasons with the team, he surpassed a .300 batting average five times, demonstrating both excellent contact skills and a talent for accumulating numerous extra-base hits. Six times, he ranked in the league’s top five for total hits, often frustrating pitchers at Baker Bowl by hitting doubles and triples into the gaps. In 1914, he led the National League in doubles and recorded five straight second-place finishes from 1906 to 1910. He also finished second three times in triples. Once on base, Magee was a formidable threat, finishing in the top five for stolen bases six times, including consecutive second-place finishes in 1906 and 1907.

Magee’s offensive peak was demonstrated in a historic 1910 showcase, where he would have easily won the modern MVP award. He dominated the senior circuit by leading in slash line categories and winning the National League batting title with a .331 average. Additionally, he led the league in runs scored (110) and RBIs (123), making him a formidable force for the Philadelphia offense.

All of this is impressive but it wasn’t all roses for Sherry Magee.

Yet, for all his undeniable brilliance on the diamond, Magee’s legacy carries some of the darkest, most volatile chapters in early baseball lore. He was a notoriously miserable, hot-tempered individual who seemed perpetually trapped under a dark cloud, entirely incapable of finding joy in his own success. That explosive fuse detonated permanently on July 10, 1911. Furious over a called third strike, Magee turned on umpire Bill Finneran and leveled him with a single, vicious punch, knocking the official completely unconscious on the field. The league initially handed down a severe season-ending suspension, though it was eventually scaled back to just over a month following a frantic appeal. In an era predating 24-hour media scrutiny, his toxic reputation was a constant headache for management; under modern social media floodlights, it would have been an absolute firestorm.

The organization traded the volatile star to the Boston Braves before the 1915 season, just a summer before Grover Cleveland Alexander led the team to the pennant. He left Philadelphia with 2,068 hits, 75 home runs, 430 stolen bases, 886 RBIs, and a .299 batting average.

Regardless of that, Magee was one of the greatest Philadelphia Phillies of all time.  Not that he would have smiled about it.  The organization placed Magee's name on the Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame in 2002.

The Bullet Points

  • Position: First Base, Outfield
  • Acquired: Signed as an Amateur Free Agent 6/27/04.
  • Departed: Traded to the Boston Braves for Players to be Named Later (which would be Oscar Dugey and Possum Whitted) 12/24/14.
  • Games Played: 1521
  • Notable Statistics: 898 Runs Scored
    1,647 Hits
    337 Doubles
    127 Triples
    75 Home Runs
    886 Runs Batted In
    387 Stolen Bases
    .299/.371/.447 Slash Line
    48.9 bWAR

    No Playoff Games
  • Major Accolades and Awards:

    Highest bWAR for Position Players (1910)
    Highest Offensive bWAR (1910)
    Highest Batting Average (1910)
    Highest On Base Percentage (1910)
    Highest Slugging Percentage (1910 & 1914)
    Highest OPS (1910)
    Most Runs Scored (1910)
    Most Hits (1914)
    Most Total Bases (1910 & 1914)
    Most Doubles (1914)
    Most Runs Batted In (1907, 1910 & 1914)
    Highest OPS+ (1910)
    Most Extra Base Hits (1906, 1910 & 1914)
    Highest Power-Speed # (1914)
    Most Putouts by a Leftfielder (1905 & 1906)
    Most Assists by a Leftfielder (1906)
    Most Double Plays Turned by a Leftfielder (1905 & 1907)
    Highest Range Factor per Game by a Leftfielder (1905, 1906 & 1907)
    Highest Fielding Percentage by a Leftfielder (1911)
    Highest Fielding Percentage by an Outfielder (1911)

  • Other Points of Note: Top Ten MVP Finishes:
    7th in 1914

Comments powered by CComment