Martin Whiteford Marion Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018
Martin Whiteford Marion (December 1, 1916 – March 15, 2011) was an American professional baseball player and manager. He played as a shortstop in Major League Baseball from 1940 to 1953. Marion played with the St. Louis Cardinals for the majority of his career before ending with the St. Louis Browns as a player-manager. He later became the manager of the Chicago White Sox.
Finished 7th in voting for 1942 National League MVP for leading League in Doubles (38) and having .276 Batting Average (134 for 485), 66 Runs, 5 Triples, 54 RBI, 8 Stolen Bases, 48 Walks, .343 On-base percentage, .375 Slugging Percentage, 182 Total Bases and 20 Sacrifice Hits in 147 Games.
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Finished 24th in voting for 1941 National League MVP for leading League in Games (155) and Sacrifice Hits (28). Also had .252 Batting Average (138 for 547), 50 Runs, 22 Doubles, 3 Triples, 3 Home Runs, 58 RBI, 8 Stolen Bases, 42 Walks, .308 On-base percentage, .320 Slugging Percentage and 175 Total Bases.
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Named to 8 National League All Star Teams (1943-1950).
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Member of 1942, 1944 and 1946 World Series Champion St. Louis Cardinals teams. Member of 1943 National League Champion St. Louis Cardinals team.
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Shortstop for the St. Louis Cardinals (1940-1950) and St. Louis Browns (1952-1953).
Self
Title
Year
Status
Character
ESPN 25: Who's #1?
2005
TV Series documentary
Himself
ESPN SportsCentury
2001
TV Series documentary
Himself
1954 MLB All-Star Game
1954
TV Special
Himself - AL Coach
1950 MLB All-Star Game
1950
TV Special
Himself - NL Shortstop
Archive Footage
Title
Year
Status
Character
Prime 9
2011
TV Series
Himself
Known for movies
1950 MLB All-Star Game (1950) as Himself - NL Shortstop
1954 MLB All-Star Game (1954) as Himself - AL Coach