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Honus Wagner- The Flying Dutchman is the last of the original HOF group voted in in 1936. His debut was a few years before the Replay League started, but the majority of his career was part of the league. He ended up retiring at age 42 in 1916 as a lifelong member of the Pirates. He wasn't quite to the level of a Ruth or Cobb, but he still had a great career.
Here's how his numbers looked at the end of his career-
Games Played- 2762 (67th)
At Bats- 10353 (44th)
Hits- 3179 (30th)
Batting Average- .307 (89th)
OPS- .797
Runs- 1518 (77th)
Doubles- 569 (T-42nd)
Triples- 212 (9th)
Home Runs- 82
RBI- 1388
Stolen Bases- 774 (8th)
WAR- 117.4 (12th)
Honus definitely had a great career, but he did start to drop off as he entered his 30's more than his other 1936 counterparts. His last 4 years he had a sub-.700 OPS. His best season in the Replay League portion of his career is hard to determine. He had a bunch of years where he scored 85-90 runs, had about 30 doubles, 10 triples, 4-5 HR, and 50-60 SB with a.320-.330 BA. His best WAR was 10.6 in 1904 when he hit .329/.402/.443, 30 doubles, 11 triples, 4 HR, 85 R, 58 RBI and 48 SB. Overall, his peak was very consistent and then he had a dropoff later in his career.
Because of the era he played in, even though his numbers weren't as great as a guy like the Babe, he still had some great accomplishments. He was a member of 5 World Championship teams and won the Playoff MVP 3 times. He was a 3 time Gold Glove winner, 11 time Silver Slugger, 12 time All-Star and 8 time MVP. These guys really dominated their eras with MVP awards! He was inducted to the HOF in 1922 with 98.4% of the vote.
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"The baseball mania has run its course. It has no future as a professional endeavor." — Cincinnati Gazette editorial, 1879
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