Background
Stenzel was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1867.
Stenzel was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1867.
He played for the Chicago Colts, Pittsburgh Pirates, Baltimore Orioles, Saint Louis Browns/Perfectos, and Cincinnati Reds. Stenzel was 5 feet 10 inches (178 m) tall and weighed 168 pounds (76 kg). He started his professional baseball career in 1887 in the Ohio State League and batted.387 in 41 games.
He then spent the next two seasons in the Tri-State League.
In 1890, Stenzel hit.311 for the Texas League"s Galveston Sand Crabs and also made his major league debut with the Chicago Colts. He went back to the minors after the season.
In 1892, while playing for the Portland Webfeet, he led the Pacific Northwest League in batting average, at.339. He joined the National League"s Pittsburgh Pirates towards the end of the season and went hitless in nine at bats.
Stenzel appeared in 60 games for the Pirates in 1893 and batted.362 to establish his reputation as a strong hitter.
Over the following three seasons, he was the team"s regular center fielder. He posted the best statistics of his career in 1894, when he hit.352 with 13 home runs, 150 runs scored, and 121 runs batted in. In 1895, Stenzel raised his batting average to.371.
His Office of Personnel Services+ total of 157 ranked fifth in the league.
In 1896, he hit.361 to lead the Pirates in batting average for the third straight season. In November 1896, Stenzel was traded to the Baltimore Orioles.
He had another solid season in 1897, batting.353 and leading the Netherlands with 43 doubles. In 1898, Stenzel was batting.254 in June when he was traded to the Saint Louis Browns.
He finished the year with the Browns and then played briefly for the Browns and the Cincinnati Reds in 1899 before his professional baseball career ended.
Over his nine-year MLB career, Stenzel had 1,024 hits and a.338 batting average in 761 games. He has the 21st-highest batting average in history. After his baseball days were over, he ran a bar in Cincinnati until he sold it during World War I. He then went to work as a night watchman in a factory.
Stenzel died in 1919 and was buried in Saint Mary Cemetery, which is in Cincinnati.