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Athletes - Lena Blackburne


Russell Aubrey "Lena" Blackburne (October 23 1886 - February 29 1968) was an American infielder, manager, coach and scout in Major League Baseball.

Between 1910 and 1927, Blackburne played for the Chicago White Sox (1910, 1912, 1914-1915, 1927), Cincinnati Reds (1918), Boston Braves (1919) and Philadelphia Phillies (1919). He batted and threw right-handed. Following his playing career, Blackburne managed the White Sox (1928-29) and coached for the Philadelphia Athletics (1933-1954).

A native of Clifton Heights, Pennsylvania, Blackburne is best remembered for his eponymous rubbing mud, used by umpires in new baseballs to remove their slippery finish.

Blackburne broke into the majors with the White Sox in 1910, appearing in part of five seasons, and split the 1919 season with the Braves and Phillies. After playing, managing and coaching the White Sox from 1927-32, he went on to become a coach in 1933 with the Philadelphia Athletics of Connie Mack
. Blackburne stayed with the Athletics as a scout when the club moved to Kansas City.

In an eight-season playing career, Blackburne was a .214 hitter with four home runs and 139 RBI in 550 games played. As a fielder, he appeared in 539 games at shortstop (213), third base (180) and second (144) and first (2), and also relieved in one game. As a manager, he posted a 99-133 record for a .427 winning percentage.

Blackburne died in Riverside, New Jersey at age 81.

Lena Blackburne Rubbing Mud

  • Blackburne made an unusual and valuable contribution to baseball when he discovered a special use for the clay from the Delaware River to take the shine off of baseballs before each game. At the time, the mid-1930s, baseball teams used a variety of substances to rub baseballs: tobacco juice, shoe polish, dirt from the baseball field or a combination, but nothing they tried gave the balls the right look or feel. Blackburne searched for the perfect rubbing compound until one day, according to legend, he found mud he liked in a secret body of water. He marketed his idea, and by 1938, he was supplying the mud to all American League teams; because Blackburne was a die-hard American League fan, he refused to sell the mud to National League teams until the mid-1950s. Since then, every major and minor league team has used only his product. One container, a little more than 16 ounces, will usually last a season.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Lena Blackburne ]



Some related entries: Merkin Valdéz | Miller Huggins | Rick Roufus | Al Wallace | Claude Bloodgood | Pat Day | Bulldog Turner | Leroy Hill | Bill Willis | Trot Nixon | Rick Goltz

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Lena Blackburne; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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