Skip to main content

Sunday School: History Lesson 57

Virgil "Spud" Davis was a catcher with the Phillies from 1928-1933 and again from 1938-1939. Acquired in May 1928 from St. Louis, along with Homer Peel for Jimmie Wilson, Davis quickly built a reputation as one of the best hitting catchers in the game. Beginning in 1929, Davis hit over .300 for 7 straight seasons, the first 5 of which were for the Phils.

Davis, a native of Birmingham Alabama, was more of a doubles hitter than he was a homerun basher. His single season high in homers was 14, which he did twice with the Phillies.

One of the 14 homer seasons came in 1932, when Davis drove in 70 runs and had a .336 batting average. He followed that up with an equally impressive season in 1933 when he batted .349 with 9 homers and 65 RBI in 141 games. That season, Davis also received votes for the National League MVP award. The only reason Spud Davis would have won the NL batting title that season, if not for his teammate Chuck Klein who had a .368 batting average.

Unfortunately for Davis, his success was his very likely undoing with the Phillies. Spud, more or less, priced himself out of Philadelphia. Unable and/or unwilling to re-sign Davis to a bigger contract, the Phillies dealt Davis back to St. Louis, with Eddie Delker, for familiar catcher Jimmie Wilson.

Davis would spend the next five seasons with the Cardinals, winning the World Series with St. Louis in 1934, before his contract was purchased by the Reds following the 1936 season. The Reds returned him to the Phillies, as part of a trade, in June 1938.

In 87 games played with Philadelphia in 1939, Spud Davis had another season with a batting average above .300, when he batted .307 for the Phillies.

Davis finished his playing days with 4 season in Pittsburgh, although his career in baseball lasted plenty longer as he would go on to work mainly as a scout and even briefly managed the Pirates in 1946 for three games.

---------------------------------------

Follow PhoulBallz.com on Twitter HERE.

BallHype: hype it up!
Share on Facebook

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Rappers in Phillies Caps

Weekend greetings to you phine pholks out there. Today's post features pictures of rappers wearing Phillies caps. Why rappers in Phillies caps, you ask? Because... Any other questions? We will start things off properly by going with a highly recognizable hip hop star. 50 Cent stays constantly relavant by consistantly creating radio friendly material to help sell (G) units, while he "keeps it real" by still rapping about the thug life he lived before becoming the 2nd highest earning black entertainer in America. 50 is seen here in a recent interview rocking a throw-back Phillies cap. Next up we'll use a throw-back screen cap from what may be the very first major appearance by a rapper wearing Phillies gear. Chuck D, of legendary rap group Public Enemy, wore a Phillies cap in the music video for rap anthem Fight The Power in 1989. The song was the lead single from the soundtrack for Spike Lee's film Do The Right Thing . Next up we'll go with some home grown tal...

Michael Taylor Q&A

Michael Taylor is currently leading the Reading Phillies' offense and is near the top of the Eastern League in most stat categories (3rd in batting avg- .342, 3rd in HR- 14, tied for second in RBI- 55, 2nd in OPS.- .994, tied for 1st in runs scored- 49, tied for 1st in hits...). The 23 year old Taylor is 6 feet 6 inches tall and has quickly grabbed the attention of phans and media alike as a top prospect to watch. I spoke with Mike Taylor over the weekend, and here is that interview. With all the big stats and being among the league leaders in so many categories, do you think you're ready for the next step? It's kind of a difficult question. Do you have anything left to prove here? There's always something to prove. There's stuff to prove every game. I mean that's one thing that's very interesting about this game. It's such a numbers oriented game. You're only as good as your last "whatever statistical category that someone's valuing". ...

PhoulBallz Interview: Off-season check in with 1B Kyle Martin

Kyle Martin, image- Jay Floyd First base prospect Kyle Martin grew up in South Carolina as a Phillies fan, admiring slugger Jim Thome , so it was a dream come true for his entire family when the organization made him their 4th round draft choice this year. A lefty batting power threat, Martin quickly made his professional debut with Class A Lakewood. The transition to the minors seemed easy, as the 23-year-old tallied a .279 average with five home runs and 37 RBI in 65 games for the BlueClaws. I recently spoke with the University of South Carolina product about his remarkable 2015 as a whole and he ranked how playing in the Phillies organization ranks against playing for Team USA in this year's Premiere 12 tournament. Read ahead for that interview and click here for my previous feature on the six-foot-two 240-pounder. -Are you still enjoying downtime right now or have you reached the stage of your off-season where you are back to baseball activities and knocking the ru...