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Quincy Trouppe

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Quincy Trouppe
Catcher
Born: (1912-12-25)December 25, 1912
Dublin, Georgia, U.S.
Died: August 10, 1993(1993-08-10) (aged 80)
Creve Coeur, Missouri, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
Professional debut
NgL: 1930, for the St. Louis Stars
MLB: April 30, 1952, for the Cleveland Indians
Last appearance
May 10, 1952, for the Cleveland Indians
Career statistics
Batting average.259
Hits127
Home runs6
Runs batted in73
Stolen bases7
Managerial record174–140–8
Teams
Negro leagues

Major League Baseball

Career highlights and awards

Quincy Thomas Trouppe (December 25, 1912 – August 10, 1993) was an American professional baseball player and an amateur boxing champion. He was a catcher in the Negro leagues from 1930 to 1949. He was a native of Dublin, Georgia.

Early life

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He was born Quincy Thomas Troupe on December 25, 1912. He later changed the spelling to Trouppe in 1946.[1]

Career

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He also played in the Mexican League, and the Canadian Provincial League. His teams included St. Louis Stars, Detroit Wolves, Homestead Grays, Kansas City Monarchs, Chicago American Giants, Indianapolis ABC's/St. Louis Stars, Cleveland Buckeyes (whom he managed to Negro American League titles in 1945 and 1947), New York Cubans, and Bismarcks (a/k/a Bismarck Churchills). He played in Latin America for fourteen winter seasons and barnstormed with black all-star teams playing against white major league players. He managed the Santurce Crabbers in the Puerto Rican winter league, winning the 1947-48 season championship.[2]

Trouppe caught six games for the 1952 Cleveland Indians of Major League Baseball and made 84 appearances with their Triple-A farm club.[3] When he made his major league debut on April 30, 1952 at Shibe Park he became one of the oldest rookies in MLB history. He was 39 years old. On May 3, he was behind the plate when relief pitcher "Toothpick Sam" Jones entered the game, forming the first black battery in American League history. Trouppe played his last game for the Indians on May 10. In his short stint with Cleveland he was 1-for-10 with a single (off Tommy Byrne of the St. Louis Browns in his last major league game), a walk and a run scored. He handled 25 chances in the field flawlessly for a fielding percentage of 1.000.

He died at the age of 80 in Creve Coeur, Missouri.

Managerial record

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Team Year Regular season Postseason
Games Won Lost Win % Finish Won Lost Win % Result
CLE 1945 95 67 25 .728 1st in NAL 4 0 1.000 Won Negro World Series (HG)
CLE 1946 79 36 40 .474 3rd in NAL
CLE 1947 70 42 25 .500 1st in NAL 1 4 .200 Lost Negro World Series (NYC)
CAG 1948 78 27 50 .351 5th in NAL
Total 322[a] 174 140 .554 5 4 .556

Bibliography

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  • Trouppe, Quincy. 20 Years Too Soon (1977). Autobiography ISBN 1-883982-07-3

References

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  1. ^ "Quincy Trouppe – Society for American Baseball Research".
  2. ^ Revel, Layton & Luis Munoz. "Forgotten Heroes: Pedro Anibal "Perucho" Cepeda" (PDF). Center for Negro League Baseball Research. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
  3. ^ Kleinknecht, Merl F. 'Quincy Trouppe', Baseball Library (2002) Archived November 23, 2005, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July 25, 2005.
  1. ^ Trouppe also managed in eight games that ended in ties
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