Babe Ruth

Right Fielder

Class of 1936

Babe Ruth

Right Fielder

Class of 1936
Babe Ruth changed baseball on and off the field.

Games

Birth year

About Babe Ruth

Babe Ruth put up monumental statistics during his playing career. But the Bambino was more than numbers – especially to those who knew him, like former teammate Joe Dugan, who once said: “To understand him you had to understand this: He wasn’t human.”

Sports writer Tommy Holmes, winner of the 1979 BBWAA Career Excellence Award, was more succinct: “Some 20 years ago, I stopped talking about the Babe for the simple reason that I realized that those who had never seen him didn’t believe me.”

The Basics

Year inducted
1936
Birth Place
Baltimore, Maryland
Birth Year
1895
Died
1948, New York New York

Career at a Glance

Primary Team
New York Yankees
Primary Position
Right Fielder
Played For
Boston Red Sox, 1914-1919
New York Yankees, 1920-1934
Boston Braves, 1935

Career MLB Stats

Games
2,503
At bats
8,399
Hits
2,873
Walks
2,062
Runs
2,174
Doubles
506
Triples
136
Home Runs
714
RBI
2,214
Stolen Bases
123
Batting Average
.342
Ops
1.164
On Base %
.474
Slugging %
.690

Babe Ruth Stories

Explore the archives and go deep into the lives, careers, and stories of the Hall of Fame's honorees.

Back to Babe: The Nat Fein photo

1934 Japan Tour Footage

At Home on the Road

The Babe of Fenway

Babe Ruth made history with help from Ernie Shore

Babe’s on Film

Greatness Defined

He Called It

Insuring the Babe

Babe Ruth clubs his first major league homer

A Mighty Blast into History

Two of a Kind

Scorecard from Babe Ruth’s debut preserved at Museum

A message for Babe

The deal that changed the game

A notch in Babe’s bat

#Shortstops: Waite Hoyt Remembers The Babe

#ShortStops: The Sultan of Southpaw Shutouts

The Voice of Babe Ruth

The Babe, a chicken and a record for both

In 1916, the Babe began a historic streak on the mound

Babe Ruth hits his 30th home run of the season, breaking his own single-season record

Babe Ruth of the Red Sox out-duels Walter Johnson 1-0 in 13 innings

One hundred years later, sale of Ruth to Yankees remains pivotal point in history

Scientists explored secrets behind Ruth’s epic 1921 season

#Shortstops: Picture the Future

Satchel Paige

Pitcher

Class of 1971

Satchel Paige

Pitcher

Class of 1971
Leroy “Satchel” Paige was bigger than mere numbers.

Games

Birth year

About Satchel Paige

The numbers do not do justice to his legend.

The stories, however, keep alive the memory of a man who became bigger than the game. Leroy “Satchel” Paige was bigger than mere numbers.

Apocryphal stories surround Paige, who was born July 7, 1906 in Mobile, Ala. He began his professional career in the Negro Leagues in the 1920s after being discharged from reform school in Alabama. The lanky 6-foot-3 right-hander quickly became the biggest drawing card in Negro baseball, able to overpower batters with a buggy-whipped fastball.

The Basics

Year inducted
1971
Birth Place
Mobile, Alabama
Birth Year
1906
Died
1982, Kansas City Missouri

Career at a Glance

Primary Team
Kansas City Monarchs
Primary Position
Pitcher
Played For
Birmingham Black Barons, 1927-1930
Cleveland Cubs, 1931
Pittsburgh Crawfords, 1933-1934
Pittsburgh Crawfords, 1936
Kansas City Monarchs, 1941-1947
Memphis Red Sox, 1943
Cleveland Indians, 1948-1949
St. Louis Browns, 1951-1953
Kansas City Athletics, 1965

Career MLB Stats

Games
391
Wins
118
Losses
80
Winning %
.596
Saves
44
Hits
1,411
Walks
440
Runs
635
Games Started
189
Innings Pitched
1,695
Completed Games
93
Shutouts
22
Earned Runs
508
Strikeouts
1,438
ERA
2.70
WHIP
1.092

Satchel Paige Stories

Explore the archives and go deep into the lives, careers, and stories of the Hall of Fame's honorees.

#Shortstops: Sign of a legend

Satchel Paige, at 46, fires shutout

Satchel Paige pitches for A’s at age 59

Negro Leagues Researchers and Authors Group

Paige debuts with Indians at 42

Feller, Paige teamed up for 1946 barnstorming tour

In 1971, Satchel Paige came to Cooperstown

Hilton Smith crafted legendary Negro Leagues career

Black newspapers preserved Negro Leagues history