Marty Hogan

Marty Hogan (Baseball Player), born on October 25, 1869 in Wednesbury, England. Marty Hogan's age 148 years (at death) & Zodiac Sign Scorpio, nationality English (by birth) & Race/Ethnicity is White. Let's check, How Tall is Marty Hogan?

Marty Hogan Bio

  • Birth Name:Marty Hogan
  • First Name: Marty
  • Last Name: Hogan
  • Age: 148 years (at death)
  • Died: August 15, 1923 (53 years)
  • Birth Date: October 25, 1869
  • Birth Place: Wednesbury, England
  • Country: England
  • Nationality: English
  • Birth/Zodiac Sign: Scorpio
  • Ethnicity: White
  • Eye Color: Dark brown
  • Hair Color: Dark brown
  • Feet/Shoe Size: N/A
  • Dress Size: N/A
  • Marty Hogan Height

    5 ft 9 in (173 cm/)

    Height & Weight
    Height (in Feet-Inches)5 ft 9 in
    Height (in Centimeters)173 cm
    Height (in Meters)
    Weight (in Kilograms)66 kg
    Weight (in Pounds)146 lbs

    Marty Hogan Body Measurements

    Marty Hogan's full body measurements are .

    Body Measurements
    Measurements

    Martin Francis Hogan, nicknamed “The Indianapolis Ringer”, was an Anglo-American right fielder in Major League Baseball who played for the Cincinnati Reds and St. Louis Browns . After leaving the National League, Hogan moved on to the minor league Indianapolis Hoosiers. Some sources suggest he set a national baserunning record in the 1890s. When his playing career ended, he worked as a minor league baseball manager in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. As a manager, Hogan groomed several pitchers who excelled in the major leagues. He signed future stars Stan Coveleski and Sam Jones to their first professional contracts and helped launch the career of Roy Castleton, the first native of Utah to play in the major leagues. In 1912, Hogan was among a select group of veteran managers invited to participate in the United States Baseball League, which was treated by the baseball establishment as an “outlaw league”. For reasons that are unclear, he did not actually manage a franchise in the short-lived alternative league and resumed his career as a minor league manager. Hogan eventually settled in his adopted hometown of Youngstown, Ohio, where he died in 1923.

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