Ed Bailey signed with the Reds in
1950 as an amateur
free agent. He reached the Majors in
1953 and in
1955 he was given a chance as the Redlegs' (the Cincinnati team's nickname from 1953 to 1958) starting catcher, replacing
Andy Seminick. When his offensive production floundered, the Redlegs traded Seminick for catcher
Smoky Burgess and Bailey was sent down to the
San Diego Padres of the
Pacific Coast League. His hitting performance earned him a place as the starting catcher for the National League in the
1956 All-Star Game. The Redlegs stayed in the pennant race until the last day of the season, ending up with a 91–63 record, two games behind the
Brooklyn Dodgers. Bailey earned his second consecutive start for the National League
All-Star Team, led National League catchers with a 46.2 Caught Stealing percentage and finished second to
Roy Campanella with a .992
fielding percentage. He remained as the Reds' starting catcher for the rest of the 1950s up until 12 games into the
1961 season, when he was traded to the
San Francisco Giants for
second baseman Don Blasingame and catcher
Bob Schmidt. In
1962, Bailey
platooned with catcher
Tom Haller, as the two players—both left-handed hitters—combined to give the Giants 35 home runs and 100 runs batted in from the catcher's position. In June of that year, Bailey had a streak of 3
clutch home runs in four games that propelled the Giants into first place. The Giants battled the
Los Angeles Dodgers in a tight pennant race as the two teams ended the season tied for first place and met in the
1962 National League tie-breaker series. The Giants won the three-game series to clinch the National League championship. Bailey appeared in six games of the
1962 World Series, hitting a home run in Game 3 as the Giants lost to the
New York Yankees in seven games. He had another strong year in
1963, hitting 21 home runs with 68 runs batted in, earning his fifth and final All-Star berth. In December 1963, Bailey was traded along with
Felipe Alou and
Billy Hoeft to the
Milwaukee Braves for
Del Crandall,
Bob Hendley and
Bob Shaw. After the season, he was traded to the
California Angels and was released after appearing in only five games of the
1966 season. ==Career statistics==