Age: 29 (Apr. 17)
4th season
with Superbas/Dodgers
Bats – Left,
Throws – Left
Height: 5’10” Weight: 160
Prior to 1913:
A native of
Shamokin, Pennsylvania, Daubert appeared to be destined to a life of working in
the local coal mines until he joined a semipro baseball team in nearby Lykens.
Initially a pitcher, he was shifted to first base. In 1907 he joined a team in
the Interstate League and moved on to Marion of the Ohio-Pennsylvania League
later in the year. Following a trial with Cleveland in 1908 and found to still
be unready for the major leagues, he was released and moved on to Nashville of
the Class A Southern Association, where he batted .262. Daubert split 1909
between Toledo of the American Association and Memphis of the Southern
Association, where he hit .314. He signed a $2000 contract with Brooklyn in
1910 and hit .264 as a rookie with 15 triples, 8 home runs and 50 RBIs. A swift
runner and outstanding fielder at first base Daubert improved his batting
average to .307 in 1911 and finished ninth in NL MVP voting. A slashing hitter
with excellent bat control and good power by “dead ball era” standards, Daubert
was a fine bunter and very good fielder. In 1912 he hit .308 with 19 doubles,
16 triples, 3 home runs, and 66 RBIs while also stealing 29 bases and leading
all NL first basemen with a .993 fielding percentage. He tied for eighth in the
NL MVP balloting. Intelligent, highly respected, and an early advocate for
player rights, he was widely considered to be one of the best first basemen in
the league and was also notably modest regarding his accomplishments.
1913 Season Summary
Appeared in 139
games
1B – 138, PH –
1
[Bracketed
numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]
Batting
Plate
Appearances – 572
At Bats – 508
Runs – 76 [15,
tied with Art Fletcher]
Hits – 178 [2]
Doubles – 17
Triples – 7
Home Runs – 2
RBI – 52
Bases on Balls
– 44
Int. BB – N/A
Strikeouts – 40
Stolen Bases – 25
[16, tied with Rabbit Maranville]
Caught Stealing
– 21 [8, tied with Hans Lobert & Joe Connolly]
Average - .350
[1]
OBP - .405 [3]
Slugging Pct. -
.423 [11]
Total Bases – 215
[14, tied with Ed Konetchy]
GDP – N/A
Hit by Pitches
– 3
Sac Hits – 17
[19, tied with Art Fletcher, Frank Schulte & Rabbit Maranville]
Sac Flies – N/A
League-leading
batting average was +.009 ahead of runner-up Gavvy Cravath
Midseason
snapshot: HR - 2, RBI - 27, SB – 13, AVG - .348, OBP – .418
---
Most hits, game
– 4 (in 4 AB) vs. Chi. Cubs 7/14, (in 5 AB) vs. Chi. Cubs 7/16 – 11 innings
Longest hitting
streak – 11 games
HR at home – 2
HR on road – 0
Most home runs,
game – 1 (in 3 AB) vs. Cincinnati 5/12, (in 3 AB) vs. St. Louis Cards 5/15
Multi-HR games
– 0
Most RBIs, game
– 3 at Phila. Phillies 4/10, vs. St. Louis Cards 7/23
Pinch-hitting –
N/A
Fielding
Chances – 1372
Put Outs – 1279
Assists – 80
Errors – 13
DP – 91
Pct. - .991
Awards & Honors:
NL MVP: Chalmers
Award
Top 5 in NL MVP
Voting:
Jake Daubert,
Brook.: 50 pts. - 78% share
Gavvy Cravath,
PhilaP.: 40 pts. – 63% share
Rabbit
Maranville, BosB.: 23 pts. – 36% share
Christy
Mathewson, NYG: 21 pts. – 33% share
Chief Meyers,
NYG: 20 pts. – 31% share
---
---
Superbas went 65-84
to finish sixth in the NL, 34.5 games behind the pennant-winning New York
Giants while leading the league in fewest walks drawn (361) and playing their first
season at Ebbets Field.
Aftermath of 1913:
In 1914
Daubert’s bunting prowess came to the forefront as he set major league records
with four sacrifice hits in a game and six in a doubleheader. For the year he
once again topped the NL in batting with a .329 average and further accumulated
17 doubles, 7 triples, 6 home runs, 45 RBIs, and 25 stolen bases. Daubert hit
.301 in 1915 and led NL first basemen with 102 assists. Brooklyn won the NL
pennant in 1916 and Daubert contributed a .316 batting average and a .993
fielding percentage that led the league’s first basemen. But he batted just
.176 in the World Series loss to the Red Sox. Daubert’s average dropped to .261
in 1917 but he bounced back to hit .308 in 1918 with a league-leading 15
triples. The season was cut short due to US participation in World War I and
when Brooklyn owner Charles Ebbets refused to pay the remainder of Daubert’s
contract (he had signed a four-year contract in 1914 to keep him out of the
clutches of the rival Federal League) Daubert sued Ebbets and, although the
case was settled out of court, Daubert was traded to the Cincinnati Reds in
1919. Named team captain in Cincinnati, he contributed a .276 batting average,
12 triples, and a league-leading 39 sacrifice hits to the club’s championship
season. He was back over .300 in 1920, ’21, and ’22 and was still with the Reds
in 1924 when, suffering from abdominal pain that was diagnosed as gallstones or
appendicitis, surgery was performed from which he failed to recover, dying in
October at the age of 40. Overall for his major league career, Daubert batted
.303 with 2326 hits that included 250 doubles, 165 triples, and 56 home runs.
He also compiled 722 RBIs and 251 stolen bases. Of those totals, 1387 hits, for
a .305 average with 138 doubles, 87 triples, 33 home runs, 415 RBIs, and 187 stolen
bases came while playing for Brooklyn. His 392 career sacrifice hits remain a
NL record.
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MVP Profiles feature players in the National or
American leagues who were winners of the Chalmers Award (1911-14), League Award
(1922-29), or Baseball Writers’ Association of America Award (1931 to present)
as Most Valuable Player.