John McCloskey played in 9 games at pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1906, starting in none of them. He made no putouts, had 10 assists, and committed no errors, equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had no double plays.
John McCloskey played in 3 games at pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1907, starting in none of them. He made no putouts, had 3 assists, and committed one error, equivalent to .333 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had no double plays.
Bill McCloskey debuted on August 18, 1884, playing for the Wilmington Quicksteps at ; he played his final game on September 9, 1884, playing for the Wilmington Quicksteps at .
McCloskey debuted on May 25, 1875, playing for the Washington Nationals at Olympics Grounds; he played his final game on July 4, 1875, playing for the Washington Nationals at Olympics Grounds.
Jim McCloskey debuted on April 21, 1936, playing for the Boston Bees at Braves Field; he played his final game on May 12, 1936, playing for the Boston Bees at Braves Field.
John McCloskey debuted on May 3, 1906, playing for the Philadelphia Phillies at Baker Bowl; he played his final game on May 31, 1907, playing for the Philadelphia Phillies at Baker Bowl.
McCloskey played in 11 games at catcher for the Washington Nationals in 1875, starting in none of them. He made 32 putouts, had 3 assists, and committed 17 errors, equivalent to 1.545 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had no double plays.
Bill McCloskey played in 5 games at outfield for the Wilmington Quicksteps in 1884, starting in none of them. He made 6 putouts, had 4 assists, and committed 7 errors, equivalent to 1.4 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had no double plays.
Bill McCloskey played in 5 games at catcher for the Wilmington Quicksteps in 1884, starting in none of them. He made 32 putouts, had 3 assists, and committed 6 errors, equivalent to 1.2 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had one double play. He had 13 passed balls, 0 wild pitches, 0 opponent stolen bases, and 0 opponent caught stealings.
Yes, usually by a catcher, pitcher or 1st baseman playing in.
William Ford played in just one game at pitcher for the Boston Bees in 1936 and did not start. He made no putouts, had no assists, equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had no double plays.
Sterling played in just one game at pitcher for the Philadelphia Athletics in 1890 and did not start. He made no putouts, had no assists, and committed no errors, equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had no double plays.