Ernie Johnson
Shortstop, Baseball Player
1888 – 1952
Who was Ernie Johnson?
Ernest Rudolph Johnson was a Major League Baseball shortstop. A native of Chicago, Illinois, he played for the Chicago White Sox, St. Louis Terriers, St. Louis Browns, and New York Yankees. In between, he spent 1920 with the Salt Lake City Bees as their player-manager.
Johnson took over the White Sox shortstop job from the recently banned Swede Risberg in 1921. He hit .295 and was fourth in the American League with 22 stolen bases. In 1922 his batting average dropped to .254 and he had the dubious distinction of leading the league in outs.
He was acquired by the Yankees via waivers on May 31, 1923 and he batted .447 for them in a limited role. He played in two games of the 1923 World Series against the New York Giants and scored the series-deciding run as a pinch runner in game number six. Johnson spent the next two years with New York in a part-time role, batting .353 and .282. On October 28, 1925 at age 37, Johnson was sent to the St. Paul Saints of the American Association as part of a multi-player trade.
Johnson's career totals for 813 games include 697 hits, 19 home runs, 256 runs batted in, 372 runs scored, a .266 batting average, and a slugging percentage of .350.
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- Born
- Apr 29, 1888
Chicago - Profession
- Died
- May 1, 1952
Monrovia
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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