"That man is the slickest fielder I have ever seen."
Ty Cobb

Early Years

Harold Joseph Traynor was born November 11, 1899, in Framingham, Massachusetts. Very early in his life, he received the nickname "Pie," referring to his preference for that particular pastry. His love of baseball developed early. When Traynor was 8, he used to retrieve foul balls for a team that played near his home. By age 10, he was a regular on the sandlots. He showed much promise in high school, and was scouted by many teams, including the Pittsburgh Pirates, who helped sign him to the Virginia League.

Major Leagues

Traynor was called up by the Pirates in 1920 to play shortstop. However, he was moved to third base in the 1921 season, and this is the position he is most remembered for. In fact, he is often regarded as the best defensive third baseman ever to play the game, recording over 2,000 putouts and 300 double plays at the position.

"He had the quickest hands and the quickest arms of any third baseman I ever saw."
Charley Grimm, teammate

At the ripe age of 23, Traynor had an incredible season in the big leagues by any standards: he batted .338, stole 27 bases, scored 108 runs, had 101 RBIs, and led the league in triples with 19. He even finished 8th in the National League in home runs - with the astounding total of 12!

Traynor twice helped lead the Pirates to the World Series, in 1925 and 1927, winning the championship in 1925 (where Pie batted .346.) Traynor had 100 RBIs or more 7 times, and like Joe Sewell, was a notoriously hard strikeout. In 1929, he only struck out 7 times in 540 at bats!

"He was a mechanically perfect third baseman, a man of intellectual worth on the field of play."
Branch Rickey

A two-time All-Star (both in 1933 and 1934), Traynor took over managing the team in 1934. He unexpectedly broke his arm in late 1934, and entered into a steady decline. He missed over 100 games in 1935, and elected to sit out the 1936 season to serve as manager full time. He served as a pinch hitter in 1937, but retired full time and resigned as manger at the end of the year.

After Baseball

Traynor stayed on as a scout for the Pirates, and in 1948 was inducted into the Major League Baseball Hall Of Fame. That same year, he was hired to do a radio show about the Pirates. Since Traynor had never learned to drive a car (fearing it would make him lazy), he walked the 10 miles from his house to the station every day. Traynor also coached at Duquesne for several years, and operated a sporting goods store with another local baseball legend, Honus Wagner.

Pie Traynor passed away March 16, 1972 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he had spent his entire illustrious baseball career.

"If I had to pick the greatest team player in baseball today - and I have some of the greats on my own club - I would have to pick Pie Traynor."
John McGraw

Lifetime Statistics:

YEAR TEAM     G   AB    R    H   D   T HR  RBI  SB CS  BB   K    BA
 1920 PIT NL  17   52    6   11   3   1  0    2   1  3   3   6  .212
 1921 PIT NL   7   19    0    5   0   0  0    2   0  0   1   2  .263
 1922 PIT NL 142  571   89  161  17  12  4   81  17  3  27  28  .282
 1923 PIT NL 153  616  108  208  19  19 12  101  28 13  34  19  .338
 1924 PIT NL 142  545   86  160  26  13  5   82  24 18  37  26  .294
 1925 PIT NL 150  591  114  189  39  14  6  106  15  9  52  19  .320
 1926 PIT NL 152  574   83  182  25  17  3   92   8  0  38  14  .317
 1927 PIT NL 149  573   93  196  32   9  5  106  11  0  22  11  .342  
 1928 PIT NL 144  569   91  192  38  12  3  124  12  0  28  10  .337
 1929 PIT NL 130  540   94  192  27  12  4  108  13  0  30   7  .356
 1930 PIT NL 130  497   90  182  22  11  9  119   7  0  48  19  .366
 1931 PIT NL 155  615   81  183  37  15  2  103   6  0  54  28  .298
 1932 PIT NL 135  513   74  169  27  10  2   68   6  0  32  20  .329
 1933 PIT NL 154  624   85  190  27   6  1   82   5  0  35  24  .304
 1934 PIT NL 119  444   62  137  22  10  1   61   3  0  21  27  .309
 1935 PIT NL  57  204   24   57  10   3  1   36   2  0  10  17  .279
 1937 PIT NL   5   12    3    2   0   0  0    0   0  0   0   1  .167
 CAREER     1941 7559 1183 2416 371 164 58 1273 158 46 472 278  .320 

* Bold denotes led league.

Sources:

Hall Of Fame Index
Joe Tinker | Dazzy Vance

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