Education
Born in Tiburon, California, Chapman graduated from Tamalpais High School in Mill Valley, California in 1934, with letters in football, baseball, basketball and track. His football coach was former Cal star Roy Riegels.
Born in Tiburon, California, Chapman graduated from Tamalpais High School in Mill Valley, California in 1934, with letters in football, baseball, basketball and track. His football coach was former Cal star Roy Riegels.
He batted and threw right-handed, leading the American League in putouts four times. He was previously an All-American college football player at the University of California. Nicknamed the "Tiburon Terror", Chapman was also an All-American baseball player in college.
Turning down a pro football career after being drafted in the third round of the 1938 NFL Draft by the Washington Redskins of the National Football League, he made his debut with the Athletics on May 16, 1938, shortly after graduation.
He played the rest of the year in left field, moving to center field the following year. As a rookie he batted.259 with 17 home runs (second on the team to Bob Johnson) and 63 runs batted in.
His batting average and Reserve Bank of India total increased steadily in each of the next three campaigns, to.269/64 (1939) and.276/75 (1940) before peaking with a.322 average and 106 Reserve Bank of India in 1941. In the latter year he had his best season, finishing fifth in the Alabama in both slugging average (543) and total bases (300), with a career-best 25 home runs.
On May 5, 1939, Chapman hit for the cycle against the Saint Louis Browns.
He joined the Navy for World World War II after the 1941 season, and served as a pilot and flight instructor in Corpus Christi, Texas. He returned to the Athletics in late 1945, and was named to the Alabama All-Star team in 1946. But he never quite returned to his pre-war level of play.
Apart from 1949, when he batted.278 with 24 HRs (tied for third in the Alabama) and 108 Reserve Bank of India (fifth in the Alabama), he never exceeded a.261 average.
He was traded to the Cleveland Indians in May 1951, and ended the year with a.215 batting mark. He left the major leagues at the end of that season, but played three more years for the Oakland Oaks of the Pacific Coast League.
In an 11-season major league career, Chapman posted a.266 batting average with 180 home runs, 773 Reserve Bank of India, 754 runs, 1329 hits and 41 stolen bases in 1368 games. After leaving baseball, Chapman became an inspector for the Bay Area Air Quality Management District.
He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1984, and to the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame in 1987.
In 1999 he was named to the Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame. In 2006, the Tiburon Town Council voted to commission a statue of Chapman to be installed at the Tiburon ferry landing. Chapman died at an assisted-living residence in Kentfield, California at the age of 90, after suffering from Alzheimer"s disease for several years.