Patsy Donovan


Patrick Joseph Donovan was an Irish born right fielder and manager in Major League Baseball who played for several teams from to, most notably the Pittsburgh Pirates. Donovan started his career with Boston in 1890 but shuffled over to Brooklyn before the season ended, which saw him win the National League pennant. He played for Louisville and Washington of the American Association for a season each before he found himself with the Pirates in 1892, where he would play for the next seven years. In his first full season with the team, he had his first.300 season as a National League player, batting.317 with 46 stolen bases and 158 hits in 113 games. He batted.300 in each of the next five seasons with Pittsburgh before his tenure ended in 1899. He joined St. Louis in 1900 and played the next four seasons for the team, which saw him bat.300 three straight times and lead the NL in stolen bases with 45 in 1900. He played a season in Washington before sitting out 1905; he played eight combined games in 1906 and 1907 with Brooklyn to end his career.
He batted.301 lifetime and set a major league record for career games in right field, as well as retiring among the career leaders in total games, assists and double plays as an outfielder. Donovan batted and threw left-handed.

Early years

Born in Queenstown, County Cork, Donovan established himself as the most successful Irish-born major leaguer. He broke into organized baseball in with the Lawrence, Massachusetts team in the New England League.

Minor league career

In and, Donovan played outfield for the London Tecumsehs of the International Association at Tecumseh Park in London, Ontario, Canada, where, in his first season in 1888, he led the league in batting with a.359 batting average, had 201 hits, scored 103 runs and stole 80 bases. His second season with the Tecumsehs was less successful due to a leg injury.

Major league career

In 1890 he made his major league debut in the National League with the Boston Beaneaters, and moved to the Brooklyn Bridegrooms in midseason; it would be the only time in his career he played for a league champion.
In he played in the American Association for the Louisville Colonels and Washington Statesmen; he then returned to the NL in, first with the Senators before going to the Pirates for most of the year.
Donovan starred with the Pirates from through, notching six consecutive seasons batting.300 and serving as player-manager in and. The team was sold late in 1899, during a time when the league was contracting from twelve teams to eight; new owner Barney Dreyfuss brought in Fred Clarke to be manager, with Donovan being sent to the Cardinals. He played for St. Louis from -, sharing the league lead in stolen bases in his first season, also managing the team in his last three seasons with them.
By the end of the 1903 season he ranked among the NL's top ten career leaders in hits and at bats, though he would drop from among the leaders before his playing career ended. His 64 career double plays in the NL ranked one behind Jimmy Ryan's league record. He then served as player-manager for the American League's Washington Senators in 1904, his last season as a regular.
In 1903, he broke Sam Thompson's major league record of 1401 games in right field; however, Willie Keeler passed him in 1906, before Donovan played his last several games and retired with a total of 1620. In, he became manager of the Brooklyn Superbas, and made his last few playing appearances that year, along with one more game at the end of the season.
In a 17-season playing career, Donovan had 2256 hits, 1321 runs, 16 home runs and 738 runs batted in in 1824 games, along with 208 doubles and 75 triples. Donovan was one of 32 players with 2,000 career hits when he retired. Donovan collected 518 total stolen bases: 302 stolen bases happened from 1890 to 1897, and 216 occurred after the statistic was revised to its modern definition in 1898.

Post-playing career

Donovan joined the Boston Red Sox as a scout in, and managed the team in and. As a major league manager, he compiled a 684–879 record in 11 seasons. He was also instrumental in bringing Babe Ruth to the Sox in through his acquaintance with one of the Xaverian Brothers who coached Ruth at a Baltimore orphans' home. Later he went to the International League, where he led Buffalo to pennants in and, and also managed Jersey City in 1921–22 and 1925–26.
In 1929 and 1930, Donovan managed the Orleans town team in the Cape Cod Baseball League. In 1930 one of his charges at Orleans was future New York Yankees legend Red Rolfe.
In a 1930 old-timers' game at Braves Field in Boston, Donovan had a pinch hit single, at the age of 65. He finished out his career coaching High School baseball at Phillips Academy in Andover, where he coached the future 41st President, George H. W. Bush. Donovan died at the age of 88 in Lawrence, Massachusetts, on Christmas Day 1953, and is interred at St. Mary Cemetery in Lawrence.

Honors

In the Irish Baseball League, the annual award for best batter is named "The Patsy Donovan Batting Champion Award". In 2023, Donovan was inducted into the "Irish American Hall of Fame" in Chicago, some seventy years after his death.

Managerial record