Apr 10, 2026

Highlighted Year: Russ Ford, 1911

Pitcher, New York Highlanders



Age:  28 (April 25)

2nd season with Highlanders

Bats – Right, Throws – Right

Height: 5’11” Weight: 175 

Prior to 1911:

A native of the Canadian province of Manitoba, Ford moved with his family to Minnesota. After high school he played for several minor league teams. Following a season in the Illinois-Indiana-Iowa (or Three I) League in which he was with Springfield and Cedar Rapids, he broke out with an outstanding season for Cedar Rapids in 1906 in which he produced a 22-9 record. Moving on to the Atlanta Crackers of the Class A Southern Association in 1907 he compiled a 15-10 tally. Reliant on his spitball (a legal pitch at the time), in 1908 he began experimenting with a scuff ball, roughening the ball’s surface to cause it to dip oddly. Still with Atlanta he went 16-14 and was drafted by the Highlanders in 1909. Ford appeared in one game with New York in 1909 and pitched poorly, causing him to be sent to the Jersey City Skeeters of the Eastern League where he worked on his scuff pitch, concealing an emery board in his glove. His record for Jersey City was 13-13 with a 2.41 ERA and 189 strikeouts over 276 innings. He returned to the Highlanders in 1910 with far better results, posting a 26-6 tally with a 1.65 ERA, 29 complete games, 8 shutouts, and 209 strikeouts over 299.2 innings. In addition to his spitter and scuff ball, Ford threw a fastball and knuckleball.


1911 Season Summary

Appeared in 37 games

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

Pitching

Games – 37 [11, tied with Bob Groom]

Games Started – 33 [4, tied with Joe Wood]

Complete Games – 26 [3, tied with Jack Coombs]

Wins – 22 [7]

Losses – 11 [20, tied with four others]

PCT - .667 [7]

Saves – 0

Shutouts – 1 [19, tied with twenty others]

Innings Pitched – 281.1 [4]

Hits – 251 [6, tied with Tom Hughes]

Runs – 119 [8, tied with Walter Johnson]

Earned Runs – 71 [20, tied with Hippo Vaughn & Doc White]

Home Runs – 3 [19, tied with nine others]

Bases on Balls – 76 [11, tied with Joe Wood]

Strikeouts – 158 [5]

ERA – 2.27 [7]

Hit Batters – 4

Balks – 0

Wild Pitches – 5 [19, tied with eight others]


Midseason Snapshot: 11-5, ERA – 2.30, SO - 69 in 133 IP

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Most strikeouts, game – 9 (in 9 IP) at Cleveland 5/15, (in 9 IP) vs. St. Louis Browns 9/30

10+ strikeout games – 0

Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 2 (in 9 IP) at Detroit 5/11

Batting

PA – 112, AB – 102, R – 10, H – 20, 2B – 2, 3B – 1, HR – 0, RBI – 8, BB – 3, SO – 31, SB – 2, CS – N/A, AVG - .196, GDP – N/A, HBP – 0, SH – 4, SF – N/A

Fielding

Chances – 91

Put Outs – 16

Assists – 70

Errors – 5

DP – 0

Pct. - .945

Awards & Honors:

18th in AL MVP voting, tied with Jack Barry, PhilA (3 points – 5% share)

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The Highlanders went 76-76 to finish sixth in the AL, 44 games behind the pennant-winning Philadelphia Athletics. The pitching staff led the league in fewest shutouts (5). The Highlanders entered June at 18-21, having lost four straight games to the Athletics and Washington. A seven-game June winning streak (including one by Ford) pulled them up to third place, where they remained until July 8. The streaky club languished in fourth and stayed around .500 until they closed out the season with five straight losses.


Aftermath of 1911:

Ford slumped in 1912 and went 13-21 with a 3.55 ERA, 30 complete games, and 112 strikeouts over 291.2 innings. He topped the American League in the negative categories of earned runs surrendered (115) and home runs surrendered (11). His ERA dropped to 2.66 in 1913 but his won-lost record was a mediocre 13-18 as he dealt with a sore arm. Jumping to the Federal League in 1914, Ford produced a 21-6 tally and 1.82 ERA for Buffalo. With the emery pitch banned by the Federal League in 1915, his record dropped to 5-9 and a 4.52 ERA prior to being released in late August. He pitched for two more years in the minors before his playing career came to an end. For his major league career, Ford produced a 100-71 record with a 2.59 ERA, 126 complete games, 15 shutouts, 8 saves, and 710 strikeouts over 1487.1 innings. With the Highlanders/Yankees his totals were 74-56 with a 2.54 ERA, 100 complete games, 10 shutouts, 2 saves, and 553 strikeouts over 1112.2 innings. He died in 1960 at age 76. Ford was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 1987. His brother Gene briefly pitched for the Detroit Tigers in 1905. Thanks to his mastery of the scuff ball, Ford was an outstanding pitcher with the Highlanders for a short time.


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Highlighted Years feature players who led a major league in the following categories: batting average, home runs (with a minimum of 10), runs batted in, or stolen bases (with a minimum of 20), pitching wins, strikeouts, earned run average, or saves (with a minimum of 10), or have been participants in the annual All-Star Games between the National and American Leagues since 1933. This category will also include Misc. players who received award votes, were contributors to teams that reached the postseason, or had notable seasons in non-award years. 


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