Background
Hickman was born in Taylortown, Pennsylvania and played one season of college baseball with the West Virginia Mountaineers in 1897.
Hickman was born in Taylortown, Pennsylvania and played one season of college baseball with the West Virginia Mountaineers in 1897.
He played all or part of twelve seasons in Major League Baseball as a utility player for the Boston Beaneaters (1897-1899), New York Giants (1900-1901), Boston Americans (1902), Cleveland Bronchos/Naps (1902-1904 and 1908), Detroit Tigers (1904-1905), Washington Senators (1905-1907) and Chicago White Sox (1907). He died in Morgantown, West Virginia at the age of 58. Despite being saddled with the nickname "Piano Legs," Hickman was an above-average base runner who amassed 91 career triples and several inside-the-park home runs.
He also had an above-average range factor throughout his career (although a sub-par fielder.
In 1900 he set a record by committing 86 errors as a third baseman). He led the American League in hits (193) and total bases (288) in 1902 and at Bats per home run (435) in 1903.
In 12 seasons he played in 1,081 games and had 3,982 at bats, 478 runs, 1,176 hits, 217 doubles, 91 triples, 59 home runs, 614 Reserve Bank of India, 72 stolen bases, 153 walks.295 batting average.331 on-base percentage.440 slugging percentage, 1,752 total bases and 59 sacrifice hits. Hickman coached the West Virginia Mountaineers baseball team for four season, in 1913 and 1915–1917.
His career record was 58–23–1.
Yearly record.