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  1. Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown. Jew Score: 4. I 0. O 1. K 3. October 19, 1876 – February 14, 1948. While all of us get uber-excited for 100mph fastballs, if the pitch is straight as string, all that velocity just makes the ball leave the park faster. No, it's movement that gets the guys out, wins the big game, earns you the big money, and beds ...

  2. Mordecai Peter Centennial Brown (October 19, 1876 – February 14, 1948), nicknamed "Three Finger Brown" or "Miner", was an American Major League Baseball pitcher and manager during the first two decades of the 20th century (known as the "dead-ball era").

    • 2.06
    • 239–130
    • 1,375
    • 1949
  3. 4 de jan. de 2012 · Mordecais most familiar nickname was Three Finger, although he actually had four and a half fingers on his pitching hand. Because of childhood curiosity, Mordecai lost most of his right index finger in a piece of farming equipment.

  4. 7 de jun. de 2023 · For any other pitcher, a right-hand mangled in a childhood accident might have derailed a career before it started. But for MordecaiThree-FingeredBrown, the incident on a local farm became the genesis of a Hall of Fame career.

  5. 9 de mai. de 2020 · To Brown, the answer was simple in his Hall of Fame bio: “I always felt if I had a normal hand, I would have been a greater pitcher.” Three Finger Brown was elite.

  6. The broken fingers healed badly, and the pinky finger remained permanently paralyzed. The hand was crippled for the rest of his life. Years later, as a professional baseball player, the deformity earned him the nickname "Three-Finger Brown."

  7. 29 de out. de 2008 · Reports later found that he actually had three fingersnot four. When he had the injury on the corn shredder, he injured another finger! Brown kept quiet about it until he was well into...