Wally Moses
Dossier
Wallace Moses (October 8, 1910 – October 10, 1990) was a left-handed right fielder from Uvalda, Georgia who spent sixteen seasons in the American League with the Philadelphia Athletics, Chicago White Sox, and Boston Red Sox. He broke into the majors on Opening Day 1935, singling off Earl Whitehill at Griffith Stadium before President Roosevelt and Vice President Garner. Moses batted over .300 in each of his seven seasons with Philadelphia, peaking at .345 in 1936. His best all-around season came in 1937, when he hit .320 with 25 home runs, 86 RBI, 113 runs, 208 hits, and 48 doubles. He remains the only player in major league history to steal home for a walk-off more than once.
Bio synthesized · claude-sonnet-xsport-lighter · 2026-06-20
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