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  1. 11 de abr. de 2018 · Goudey not only printed a new set in 1934, but they also printed the long-awaited No. 106 card of Lajoie to fill the hole in the 1933 set. That is confirmed with one of the 1934 uncut sheets shown here with the Lajoie card printed last in the second row. The company was not said to have included these in the 1934 packs.

  2. Napoléon Lajoie (ur. 5 września 1874 , zm. 7 lutego 1959 ) – amerykański baseballista, który występował na pozycji drugobazowego przez 21 sezonów w Major League Baseball .

  3. 1908 Napoleon Lajoie. Photographer: Louis Van Oeyen. Source: The A. G. Spalding Baseball Collection, New York Public Library. Image Subject: Hall of Fame baseball player Nap Lajoie sitting in the dugout with bat. Fun Fact: 1902 was the year that Napoleon Lajoie (pronounced lazh-uh-way) first played for Cleveland, and for the next twelve years ...

  4. 25 de fev. de 2023 · Nap Lajoie was an American professional baseball second baseman and player-manager. He played for the Philadelphia Phillies, Athletics and Cleveland Naps, and managed the Naps from 1905 through 1909. Lajoie set the all-time American League single-season mark for the highest batting average (.426) in 1901. He was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in 1937.

  5. 9 de mar. de 2023 · When the series opened on Saturday, July 27, the home team won, 4-3, but Philadelphia’s Napoleon “Nap” Lajoie was 3-for-5, boosting his batting average to a league-leading .429 in the American League’s inaugural season; this was his fourth straight game with three hits.

  6. Lajoie was part of the second class elected to the Hall of Fame and lived to the ripe old age of 89. With a .338 lifetime batting average, over 3,200 hits, three uncontested batting titles, a Triple Crown, as well as solid defensive play, Nap Lajoie could be considered one of the three or four greatest second basemen of all time.

  7. LAJOIE, NAPOLEON "NAP" (5 Sept. 1875-7 Feb. 1959), BASEBALL player with Cleveland (1902-14), was born in Woonsocket, R.I., to John and Celina Guerton Lajoie. He worked in cotton mills and completed his education to the 9th grade. Playing semipro baseball in 1895, Lajoie signed with the Fall River team in the New England League.