The next year, playing for the Baltimore Canaries, he hit his first career home run and picked up 44 RBIs.
The contest was the highest-scoring game in MLB history (if you consider the NA to be a Major League).
In 1874, playing for the Philadelphia Whites, he hit his second and final career home run, tying for the team lead in homers with George Bechtel.
In 1874, Radcliff was expelled from baseball for offering an umpire 175 dollars to help the Chicago White Stockings win a game.
[3] Radcliff played his last season in 1875 with the Philadelphia Centennials, appearing in only 5 games, hitting a mediocre .174 with no home runs and no RBI.