Batting
Batting Statistics
Year Team Age G AB R H 2B 3B HR TB RBI W K SB CS BA OBP SLG
1903 Pittsburgh 21 5 13 1 1 1 0 0 2 0 1 1 .077 .143 .154
1904 Des Moines 22 143 565 92 149 13 9 0 180 37 .264 .319
1905 Johnstown 23 115 451 78 151 23 7 3 200 31 .337 .443
1905 Chicago 23 14 46 7 9 2 0 0 11 1 3 4 .196 .260 .239
1906 Cincinnati 24 79 268 39 83 5 5 0 98 19 19 20 .310 .366 .366
1907 Cincinnati 25 148 537 61 132 9 12 1 168 41 37 30 .246 .299 .313
1908 Cincinnati 26 155 570 71 167 17 18 4 232 63 46 47 .293 .348 .407
1909 Cincinnati 27 122 425 50 90 13 5 4 125 52 48 30 .212 .304 .294
1910 Cincinnati 28 93 314 43 97 6 6 3 127 40 30 9 41 .309 .369 .395
1911 Philadelphia 29 147 541 94 154 20 9 9 219 72 66 31 40 .285 .368 .405
1912 Philadelphia 30 65 257 37 84 12 5 2 112 33 19 13 13 .327 .373 .436
1913 Philadelphia 31 150 573 98 172 28 11 7 243 55 42 34 41 .300 .353 .424
1914 Philadelphia 32 135 505 83 139 24 5 1 176 52 49 32 31 .275 .343 .349
1915 New York 33 106 386 46 97 18 4 0 123 38 25 24 14 15 .251 .304 .319
1916 New York 34 48 76 6 17 3 2 0 24 11 5 8 2 .224 .272 .316
1917 New York 35 50 52 4 10 1 0 1 14 5 5 5 2 .192 .276 .269
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2 yr Minor League 258 1016 170 300 36 16 3 377 68 .295 .371
14yr Major League 1317 4563 640 1252 159 82 32 1671 482 395 156 316 15 .274 .337 .366
Pitching
Pitching Statistics
Did not pitch
Fielding
Fielding Statistics
Year Team Age Pos G PO A E DP Pct
1903 Pittsburgh 21 3B 3 3 4 2 0 .778
2B 1 3 3 1 1 .857
SS 1 0 1 0 0 1.000
1904 Des Moines
1905 Johnstown
1905 Chicago 23 3B 13 20 25 4 2 .918
CF 1 0 0 0 0 .000
1906 Cincinnati 24 3B 35 47 69 5 4 .959
SS 31 49 80 13 4 .908
2B 10 21 29 2 0 .962
CF 1 1 0 0 0 1.000
1907 Cincinnati 25 SS 142 299 382 43 53 .941
3B 5 12 10 3 0 .880
1908 Cincinnati 26 3B 99 121 181 26 11 .921
SS 35 64 87 13 5 .921
LF 21 37 2 3 0 .929
1909 Cincinnati 27 3B 122 182 204 33 16 .921
1910 Cincinnati 28 3B 90 123 164 21 11 .932
1911 Philadelphia 29 3B 147 202 213 20 13 .954
1912 Philadelphia 30 3B 64 80 86 4 3 .976
1913 Philadelphia 31 3B 145 181 225 11 13 .974
SS 3 1 3 0 0 1.000
2B 1 2 0 0 0 1.000
1914 Philadelphia 32 3B 133 188 174 22 10 .943
SS 2 6 4 0 0 1.000
1915 New York 33 3B 103 109 192 16 9 .950
1916 New York 34 3B 20 14 35 2 2 .961
1917 New York 35 3B 21 10 19 3 2 .906
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2 yr Minor League
14yr Major League 3B 1000 1292 1601 172 96 .944
SS 214 419 557 69 62 .934
LF 21 37 2 3 0 .929
2B 12 26 32 3 1 .951
CF 2 1 0 0 0 1.000
Biography
Thirteenth native Delawarean to play in the major leagues. One of two Delawareans to manage in the major leagues. Brother Frank
and cousins Joe and Joe played in the major leagues.
Hans Lobert's game was built around speed. Aside from 1912, when an injury caused him to miss more than half the season, the
stocky, bowlegged third baseman stole 30 or more bases each year from 1907 to 1914. At a field day in Cincinnati on October 12,
1910, Lobert rounded the bases in 13.8 seconds, considered a record at the time. He also raced against and defeated Olympic
gold-medal winner Jim Thorpe, collegiate track-star Vince Campbell, and even a racehorse. One reporter suggested that if Hans
put his mind to it, he could be the world-record holder in the 110 and the 440. But the hardnosed Lobert was far from
one-dimensional. The lifetime .274 hitter batted over .300 four times and twice led National League third basemen in fielding
percentage.
The son of a cabinetmaker, John Bernard Lobert was born in Wilmington, Delaware, on October 18, 1881. The family eventually
included six children, and John's brothers Frank and Ollie also played professional baseball. After moving to Williamsport,
Pennsylvania, the Loberts eventually relocated to the Pittsburgh area where John began playing for the Pittsburgh Athletic
Club. After a 1903 game in Atlantic City, New Jersey, vacationing Pittsburgh Pirates owner Barney Dreyfuss invited Lobert to
try out for his team that September. When John showed up in the clubhouse at Exposition Park, Honus Wagner found out that
they lived near each other, that they shared the same name (Johannus in German, which was their common heritage), and perhaps
recognized that they bore a slight facial resemblance to each other especially in their prominent noses. The great Pirates
star dubbed the 21-year-old rookie "Hans Number Two," and called him that for the next 50 years.
The nickname stuck . . . but Lobert didn't. Having long since clinched the pennant, Pittsburgh manager Fred Clarke tried him
out at every position in the infield except first base. Hans appeared in five games for the Pirates that fall, making three
errors and only one hit in 13 at-bats. He described his lone hit in The Glory of Their Times. According to the story, late in
a game against Joe McGinnity of the New York Giants, with two strikes against him, Lobert bunted for a single. When he took
his position at third base, John McGraw, who was coaching third for the Giants, asked him who taught him to bunt with two
strikes. "Nobody did," Lobert replied, "but I like to bunt and nobody was looking for a busher to do that." McGraw responded,
"Well, you keep it up. That's the way to keep them on their toes."
The Pirates decided Lobert needed more seasoning so they sold him to Des Moines, Iowa, of the Western League. He played 143
games in 1904 and batted .264 with 37 stolen bases. That winter the Des Moines team changed hands and the new owner offered
Lobert a contract with a substantial cut in pay. Spurning the offer to play closer to home, Hans signed on with Johnstown of
the outlaw Tri-State League and batted .337 with 31 stolen bases in 115 games.
Late in the 1905 season the Chicago Cubs purchased Lobert's contract from Des Moines, which still held his rights in
organized baseball. Hans batted .196 in 14 games with the Cubs, which leads to another tale he sometimes told of his first
meeting with McGraw. According to this story, Lobert stole second base, sliding hard into Giants shortstop Bad Bill Dahlen.
The two began to argue and nearly came to blows. After the inning, when Hans returned to his position at third base, McGraw
told him, "Don't let them bluff you, young fellow. Hold your ground." Lobert did just that. Innings later Mike Donlin slid
into him, spiking him in the leg. Hans shrugged it off, but moments later he tagged Donlin out on a pickoff, spiking him as
he placed the tag.
Just before the start of the 1906 season, the Cubs traded Lobert and pitcher Jake Weimer to the Cincinnati Reds for
third-baseman Harry Steinfeldt. "If that trade hadn't been made, it would have been Chance, Evers, Tinker, and Lobert, I
guess," Hans surmised. Even though the competition wasn't quite as stiff with the Reds, he became a utility man, batting
.310 with 20 stolen bases in 79 games; 35 at third base, 31 at shortstop, and 10 at second base. In 1907 Lobert replaced
the ancient Tommy Corcoran as the everyday shortstop, batting .246 with a team-high 30 stolen bases. After starting the
1908 season at shortstop again, he moved in midseason to third base, the position he played for the rest of his career.
Soon Hans established himself as one of the NL's young stars.
Playing in all 155 games, the 26-year-old Lobert led Cincinnati in just about every offensive category in 1908: batting
average (.293), at-bats (570), runs (71), hits (167), doubles (17), triples (18), home runs (4), RBIs (63), and a
career-high 47 stolen bases. The next season the Reds pilfered 280 bases, running away with the National League lead in
that category, but Hans slumped to a .212 batting average and only 30 steals, finishing fourth on the club behind Bob
Bescher (54), Dick Egan (39), and Mike Mitchell (37). The Reds increased their league-leading stolen-base total to 310 in
1910. Despite appearing in just 90 games due to a back injury, Hans batted .309 and contributed 41 steals, tied with Egan
for third on the club behind Bescher (70) and Dode Paskert (51).
In February 1911 the Reds sent Lobert to the Philadelphia Phillies as part of an eight-player trade. Prior to that
season, all 12 of his career home runs had been of the inside-the-park variety. In 1911, however, Hans blasted a
career-high nine home runs, all of them over the fence and eight of them at Baker Bowl. He also batted .285 and led the
Phillies with 40 stolen bases. Lobert endured another injury-plagued campaign in 1912, increasing his batting average to
a career-high .327 but appearing in just 65 contests.
Probably his best year, both off and on the field, was 1913. Hans married Philadelphia resident Rachael Campbell that
year and defeated Jim Thorpe in a 100-yard dash at the Polo Grounds. He also played in all but one of the Phillies' 151
games, batting an even .300, leading all NL third basemen in fielding percentage (.974), and ranking third in the NL in
runs (98) and stolen bases (41) and fourth in hits (172) and total bases (243).
That 1913 season proved to be the apex of Hans Lobert's playing career. After one more decent season in Philadelphia --
he batted .275 in 135 games and led NL third basemen again with a .943 fielding percentage -- Lobert went to Chicago
with the intention of signing a contract with the Federal League's Chicago Whales. There he ran into his old friend John
McGraw, with whom he had barnstormed around the world during the offseason of 1913. McGraw convinced him not to sign
with the Feds, then acquired him from the Phillies in January for pitcher Al Demaree, young third-baseman Milt Stock,
and reserve catcher Bert Adams. The Giants gave Lobert a three-year contract, matching the money the Feds had offered
him. It turned out to be a steep price to pay for a player whose best days were behind him. Lobert batted .251 as the
regular third baseman in 1915 but tore ligaments in his knee, ending his season after only 106 games. He struggled for
two more years, finally calling it quits when his contract expired in 1917.
With McGraw's assistance, Lobert received an appointment as baseball coach of the US Military Academy at West Point,
where he remained for eight years. He then became a full-time scout for McGraw, and in 1928 he joined the Giants as a
coach. The following year Lobert became the manager of Bridgeport of the Eastern League, leading the team to three
consecutive second-place finishes. In 1932 he took the helm of Jersey City of the International League. Returning to
Philadelphia in 1934, Lobert worked as a Phillies coach until 1942, when he spent one year as the team's manager. He
was determined to mold the team in his own image, and the Phillies even shortened their name to the more streamlined
"Phils" to add some dash, but they still finished last in the NL in both stolen bases and victories. Lobert coached
for the Reds for two seasons, then returned to the Giants.
When Connie Mack died in 1956, Hans Lobert became the man who had been in major-league baseball longer than anybody
else. He continued to scout and work as an instructor for the Giants until his death in Philadelphia at age 87 on
September 14, 1968.