Doubles : 1915 Federal League Top 25

Finding the American or National League leader in virtually every hitting & pitching statistic is easy-to-do. Finding the top 25 players during any given season is far more challenging. Baseball Almanac has taken away that difficult problem and is pleased to present the data you requested:

"The baseball season - six months & 2,106 games - is flat out long, and it's a rare one of those games that doesn't ramble or sputter or digress or somehow violate the rules of dramatic narrative. Baseball takes its own sweet time reaching its conclusions." - Dwight Allen in Reds, Yanks and O's (1989)
 

1915 Doubles Leaders

Top 25 in the Federal League

Steve Evans 34 Brooklyn Tip-Tops 1
Baltimore Terrapins  
Dutch Zwilling 32 Chicago Whales 2
Hal Chase 31 Buffalo Buffeds 3
Ed Konetchy 31 Pittsburgh Rebels  
Bill Kenworthy 30 Kansas City Packers 5
Bill Rariden 30 Newark Peppers  
Frank LaPorte 28 Newark Peppers 7
Claude Cooper 26 Brooklyn Tip-Tops 8
Mike Mowrey 26 Pittsburgh Rebels  
Jack Tobin 26 St. Louis Terriers  
Al Scheer 25 Newark Peppers 11
Rebel Oakes 24 Pittsburgh Rebels 12
George Anderson 23 Brooklyn Tip-Tops 13
Delos Drake 23 St. Louis Terriers  
Benny Kauff 23 Brooklyn Tip-Tops  
George Perring 23 Kansas City Packers  
Clyde Engle 22 Buffalo Buffeds 17
Grover Gilmore 22 Kansas City Packers  
Al Halt 22 Brooklyn Tip-Tops  
Bill McKechnie 22 Newark Peppers  
Al Shaw 22 Kansas City Packers  
Rollie Zeider 22 Chicago Whales  
Grover Hartley 21 St. Louis Terriers 23
George Stovall 21 Kansas City Packers  
Jimmy Walsh 21 Baltimore Terrapins  
St. Louis Terriers  



Did you know that more than forty players have worn the number twenty-five for the Boston Red Sox — including Jack Clark, Denny Galehouse, Dizzy Trout and Tony Conigliaro.

The most recognizable Detroit Tiger to wear the number twenty-five was probably Norm Cash (who wore it from 1960 through 1974), but did you know that Hall of Famer Larry Doby also wore it during his single season with Detroit?

Jim Thome wore number twenty-five since he first came up with the Cleveland Indians making him the franchise record holder for that particular number (Mike Garcia is second).