Jim Tabor


James Reubin Tabor, nicknamed "Rawhide," was an American Major League Baseball player, a third baseman for the Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Phillies. Born in New Hope, Alabama, he batted and threw right-handed, stood tall and weighed.

Productive Major League hitter

Tabor attended the University of Alabama. He came to the Red Sox late in after two stellar minor league seasons and hit.316 in 19 games. The next year he was the Bosox' regular third baseman. He appeared in 149 games and had a.280 batting average, highest of his MLB career, with 14 home runs and 95 runs batted in.
In 1940 Tabor collected a career-high 21 home runs with 81 RBI, with 16 homers and a career-high 101 RBI in 1941. He remained with Boston until the end of the 1944 campaign, when he was inducted into the United States Army. After missing the 1945 campaign, he was discharged from military service and then sold to the Phillies on January 22, 1946. After two years in Philadelphia, Tabor was sent to the minor leagues. His Major League career was marked by numerous suspensions for "breaking training rules," and one teammate, Doc Cramer, alleged that Tabor would come to the ballpark still "half drunk" from his nights on the town; the Red Sox even hired private detectives to unsuccessfully try to control Tabor's behavior.
Tabor was a career.270 hitter with 1,021 hits, 104 home runs and 598 RBI in 1,005 games. He led American League third basemen in assists and putouts, and in errors for five consecutive seasons.
His last active seasons were spent with Los Angeles, Sacramento and Portland in the Pacific Coast League until his retirement in 1952. Tabor died of a heart attack in Sacramento, California, at age of 36.

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