R. Marquard Stand
Dossier
Rube Marquard (1886–1980) was the lanky left-hander John McGraw paid $11,000 to pry out of Indianapolis in 1908, an unheard-of sum that bought the New York Giants one of the National League's most valuable arms of the next decade. A switch-hitter who threw left, Marquard ran off nineteen consecutive wins to open the 1912 season, a record still on the books, and went 26-11 that summer with a 2.57 ERA. The "Stand" pose is his T206 White Border card — the foundational 1909–1911 tobacco issue — depicting him in the upright posture of a pitcher waiting on a sign rather than coiled in his delivery. He pitched in five World Series across his Giants and Brooklyn Robins tenures, won 201 games over eighteen big-league seasons, and worked enough vaudeville bookings during the offseasons of his prime to remain a recognizable name long after his arm gave out. Marquard died June 1, 1980 in Baltimore. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1971 by the Veterans Committee.
Bio synthesized · claude-opus-4-7-rewrite · 2026-05-04
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