Bill Hallahan
Dossier
William Anthony Hallahan (August 4, 1902 – July 8, 1981) was a left-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball during the 1920s and 1930s, spending most of his career with the St. Louis Cardinals. Nicknamed "Wild Bill" for his lack of control — he twice led the National League in bases on balls — Hallahan nonetheless was one of the pitching standouts of the 1931 World Series. He was also the National League's starting pitcher in the first All-Star Game in 1933, a 4–2 loss to the American League in which he surrendered a third-inning home run to Babe Ruth.
Bio synthesized · claude-sonnet-xsport-lighter · 2026-06-20
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