George J. "Germany" Smith was an American Major League Baseball player from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Primarily a shortstop, Smith played for five teams in 15 seasons. He made his major league debut for Altoona Mountain City of the Union Association in. After Altoona's team folded after just 25 games, he jumped to the Cleveland Blues of the National League. After the 1884 season, Cleveland then sold him, along with 6 other players, to the Brooklyn Bridegrooms for $4000. On June 17,, Smith reportedly committed seven errors intentionally, when his team decided to punish new pitcherPhenomenal Smith, losing the game 18-5. All 18 runs against the brash left-hander were unearned‚ due to a total of 14 Brooklyn "errors". "Phenomenal" gave himself his nickname before he joined the team‚ saying that he was so good that he did not need his teammates to win. The intentional misplays of his teammates caused club President Lynch to fine the guilty players $500 each‚ but he reluctantly agreed to release Smith to ensure team harmony. A reliable shortstop in the days when a fielding average below.900 could lead the league, he did lead the American Association in, with an.886 average. When the AA folded in, Smith and most of his teammates transferred to the National League's new Brooklyn franchise. In, John Montgomery Ward took over as manager and shortstop, effectively ending Smith's career with Brooklyn, so he left and joined the Cincinnati Reds. There he led NL shortstops in assists each year from 1891 to. Smith later returned in, when Cincinnati and Brooklyn swapped shortstops, with Tommy Corcoran moving to the Reds. His major league career came to end after the 1898 season, when he played just 51 games for the St. Louis Browns, and moved on to play for the Minneapolis Millers of the Northwestern League for the 1899 and 1900 seasons. Smith died at the age of 64 in Altoona, Pennsylvania, from injuries when struck by an automobile, and is interred at Calvary Cemetery in Altoona.