A Record with Legs: Most Double
Plays Turned in a Season
By Bob Warrington
Long-ago teams live on in the record books of major league baseball.
One such team, the Philadelphia Athletics, still holds the record
for most double plays turned in a season—217 in 1949. That
it has endured for almost 60 years, despite an increase in the regular
season from 154 to 161 games and in the number of teams playing
from 16 to 30, is a testament to the magnitude of the feat.
Only 10 teams in history have turned 200 double plays in a season.
The Philadelphia A’s performed the amazing feat of doing it
in back-to-back-to-back seasons, executing 217 twin kills in 1949,
208 in 1950, and 204 in 1951. While no team has equaled the A’s
1949 total, the 1966 Pittsburgh Pirates did come close, completing
215 double plays in 1966.
How was the Athletics’ infield able to display such defensive
prowess? A necessary ingredient—and a most unfortunate one
in terms of the team’s overall fortunes—was a poor pitching
staff. In 1949, A’s pitchers put opponents on base 36 percent
of the time, third worst in the majors. Things grew worse in 1950
when the on-base percentage grew to .376—absolute last in
the majors. A’s pitchers improved a little in 1951 by reducing
opponents’ on-base percentage to .347, but that was no better
than third worst in the American League.
With all those base runners, ground balls were more likely to become
double play balls. Still, there have been plenty of bad-pitching
teams in baseball that did not turn nearly as many double plays,
so the answer must lie to a considerable degree in the individual
talent and superior teamwork of the players who comprised the Athletics’
infield.
The A’s 1949 team featured Ferris Fain at first base, Pete
Suder at second, Eddie Joost at shortstop, with Hank Majeski rounding
out the infield at third. Joost, the only living member of that
record-setting squad, recalled in a recent interview that Fain “was
the best fielding first baseman in the American League. He had a
great arm.” Likewise, Joost remembers, Suder was as good a
second baseman as there was in the league, although he never got
the recognition he deserved for fielding skills.” Majeski,
according to Joost, was as good defensively as any third baseman
in the league. “No one did it better,” Joost observes
about his former infield mate.
Joost and Fain came to the Athletics in 1947, joining Suder and
Majeski in the infield. “We clicked as a double play unit
when we came together in 1947,” Joost states, “and it
remained a great double play unit.” There was, however, some
turnover in the makeup of the A’s infield during the three
consecutive years that the team turned over 200 double plays.
In 1949, Nellie Fox (HOF ’97) played his first full season
in the majors, substituting for Suder at second base in 77 games
and helping to complete 68 of the 217 twin kills the team performed
that year. Unfortunately for the A’s, Fox was traded after
the season to the White Sox, and he earned his Hall of Fame credentials
while playing in Chicago.
Majeski likewise was traded after the 1949 season in a second deal
with the White Sox following the Athletics’ acquisition of
third baseman Bob Dillinger from the St. Louis Browns. But, Dillinger
proved a disappointment in 1950 and was gone from the A’s
roster before season’s end. Majeski was reacquired from the
White Sox in a trade early in the 1951 season.
Suder was injured for much of the 1950 season, and Billy Hitchcock
filled in at second base for the Athletics. The personnel turmoil
of 1950 was not repeated the next year, when the A’s infield
of Fain, Suder, Joost, and Majeski remained intact for the entire
season. The remarkable double play streak ended in 1952, when the
Athletics turned the second fewest twin kills in the league that
year.
Joost and Fain were the anchors of the A’s infield when it
turned over 200 double plays in each of the years from 1949-51.
In the record-setting year of 1949, Joost played shortstop in 144
games and helped complete 126 of the team’s 217 double plays.
The durable Fain appeared in 150 games and participated in 192 of
the double plays.
Joost regards the 1949 Philadelphia Athletics as a “pretty
good ball club.” At one point during the season, as Joost
remembers, Connie Mack came up to him and said, “This is the
best infield I’ve ever had.” That’s high praise
coming from a man who once managed the “$100,000 infield”
of the Athletics “First Dynasty” period.
Joost remains grateful to Connie Mack for rescuing his career.
Joost was out of organized baseball in 1946, but Mack brought him
to the Athletics the next year and said he did so because, “I
have confidence you will help the ball club.” Mack was right
that Joost still had a lot of good baseball left in him. Joost played
with the A’s through 1954 and finished his career with the
Boston Red Sox the following year.
Despite baseball’s well-deserved reputation as a statistics-obsessed
sport, there was no recognition of the Athletics’ double-play
record following the 1949 season. “We had no idea we had set
the record,” according to Joost, “and there was no mention
of it even after the season had ended.” It was only years
later, Joost says, that he was made aware of the feat he and his
infield mates had achieved in 1949. “Perhaps it wasn’t
considered a significant record at the time,” Joost speculates.
The former shortstop notes wryly that even if setting the record
had been publicized at the time, he doubts it would have mattered
much to the notoriously tight-fisted A’s manager and owner
Connie Mack (HOF ’37) when it came time to negotiate Joost’s
salary for the next season.
Joost may be right in observing that the double play record was
not regarded as a major milestone in the era when it happened. If
so, then that is no longer the case. In the nearly 60 years that
have passed since 1949, a multitude of baseball records have fallen
as more modern players and teams climb higher plateaus of achievement
that both awe and inspire. Yet, the Philadelphia Athletics’
record of 217 double plays turned in a regular season endures, as
does the equally remarkable feat of executing over 200 double plays
in each of three consecutive seasons (1949-51).
The Athletics relocated to Kansas City after the 1954 season, but
long-ago teams live on in the record books of major league baseball.
If the past can at all be considered a prelude to the future, then
baseball’s pinnacle of double play proficiency that today
belongs to the Philadelphia A’s is likely to remain in their
possession for many years to come.

The 1949 Philadelphia Athletics Team photo

Pete Suder & Eddie Joost shown here in West Palm Beach Florida
spring training 1949 prior to setting their all time record.

Joost, Majeski, Fain and Suder the remarkable 1949 A's infield
Fain, Suder, Joost & Majeski in another famous pose

Spring Training 1949 as manager Connie Mack adresses's his group
of hopeful pennant winners. That's Joost in the back row 6th from
the right while his partner Suder is 9th in the same row. Ferris
Fain and Hank Majeski are here too.Can you find them?

Eddie Joost in an action pose during spring training 1949
Pete Suder 1949 Spring Training

The
1949 cover of the Athletics first ever yearbook. Prelude to a record
season . Click here to order your replica copy.


A's PR Director Dick Armstrong's famous poem, Joost to Suder to
Fain from the A's 1952 Yearbook

Eddie Joost & Pete Suder featured in this colorful caricature
depicting the double play record holders.
Pete Suder resting in the confines of the A's dugout circa 1942
Pete Suder at Spring training 1949 shows the form he will use to
set the record
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