Ed McKean was a very solid, very consistent player for 13 years. Save for his final season, he never played in under 123 games in a season and he never had under 500 at-bats. He never scored less than 76 runs and he never collected less than 139 hits in a season.
His 162 game averages are as follows:
162 G
675 AB
120 R
204 H
27 2B
15 3B
6 HR
110 RBI
32 SB
.302 AVG
That's pretty impressive.
His "normal" averages:
127 G
530 AB
94 R
160 H
21 2B
12 3B
5 HR
86 RBI
25 SB
.302 AVG
He was consistently on the at-bats, total bases, triples, hits and RBI leaderboards. He led the league in games in 1891 and 1896, in at-bats in 1891 and 1895, and in AB/K in 1896.
A shortstop by trade, McKean was also a solid postseason performer. Although he appeared in only one Championship Series (which his team lost), he hit .440 in 25 at-bats, driving in six of his teams 13 RBI.
From 1891 to 1896, he scored more than 100 five times. He drove in 100 or more runs every year from 1893 to 1896.
One knock against McKean is he wasn't the greatest fielder in the world, as he led the league in errors more than once.
One of only four pre-1900 players to have 2000 career hits, 1000 career runs, 1000 career RBI and 300 career stolen bases, McKean is statistically similar to four Hall of Famers: King Kelly, Jimmy Collins, Arky Vaughan and Joe Sewell.
An interesting bit of information: McKean was the first NL player ever to reach 600 at-bats in a season.
So, should Ed McKean be in the Hall of Fame?
His 162 game averages are as follows:
162 G
675 AB
120 R
204 H
27 2B
15 3B
6 HR
110 RBI
32 SB
.302 AVG
That's pretty impressive.
His "normal" averages:
127 G
530 AB
94 R
160 H
21 2B
12 3B
5 HR
86 RBI
25 SB
.302 AVG
He was consistently on the at-bats, total bases, triples, hits and RBI leaderboards. He led the league in games in 1891 and 1896, in at-bats in 1891 and 1895, and in AB/K in 1896.
A shortstop by trade, McKean was also a solid postseason performer. Although he appeared in only one Championship Series (which his team lost), he hit .440 in 25 at-bats, driving in six of his teams 13 RBI.
From 1891 to 1896, he scored more than 100 five times. He drove in 100 or more runs every year from 1893 to 1896.
One knock against McKean is he wasn't the greatest fielder in the world, as he led the league in errors more than once.
One of only four pre-1900 players to have 2000 career hits, 1000 career runs, 1000 career RBI and 300 career stolen bases, McKean is statistically similar to four Hall of Famers: King Kelly, Jimmy Collins, Arky Vaughan and Joe Sewell.
An interesting bit of information: McKean was the first NL player ever to reach 600 at-bats in a season.
So, should Ed McKean be in the Hall of Fame?
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