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  1. 28 de abr. de 2004 · Adrian Joss was among the game’s best and the rest of the best turned out to play in his honor that day. Quite simply, Addie Joss was a whale of a pitcher. In an abbreviated nine-year career he amassed 160 wins, 46 by shutout, for a solid but never championship Cleveland club.

  2. 5 de nov. de 2010 · Joss won 20 or more games, four consecutive seasons from 1905-08, including a career high 27 wins in 1907. He led the league in ERA twice, including a career low 1.16 in 1908. The right-hander completed exactly 90 percent of his 260 career starts (234 complete games) and hurled 45 shutouts. Joss displayed legendary control of his fastball and ...

  3. Toledo, Ohio, April 14.—Addie C. Joss is dead. The star pitcher of the Naps breathed his last at 1:30 o'clock this morning at his home in this city, where he had been ill and confined to his bed for several weeks. Not until the last did the doctors give up hope, for they were uncertain as to just what ailed Joss.

  4. 1 de jan. de 1998 · Addie Joss spent a relatively short baseball career with the Cleveland Indians at the turn of the 20th century. At the time of his death in 1911 of bacterial meningitis he was the first of the great baseball pitchers to pass away. Addie's career may have been at an end at the time of his death due to a torn ligament in his pitching arm.

    • Scott Longert
  5. Addie Joss, A Hall of Fame Baseball Pitcher’s Story and Gravesite visit in Toledo, Ohio. On this week’s episode, we’re going to share with you the story of B...

    • 11 min
    • 492
    • History and Relics
  6. Together, Addie Joss and Larry MacPhail changed the game – and together they were posthumously elected to the Hall of Fame. The Veterans Committee elected Joss and MacPhail on Jan. 30, 1978, finalizing the Class of 1978 that had begun with the election of Eddie Mathews by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.

  7. Addie Joss played 9 seasons for the Naps. He had 160 wins, 97 losses, an ERA of 1.89 and 920 strikeouts. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1978.