Saturday, August 28, 2010

The Best of All Time: 1940s, Part II

No list of baseball greats can be made without the inclusion of Jackie Robinson. Not only did he break the color barrier in the Major Leagues in 1947, but he also played like everyone else mentioned in this compilation. From 1947-1956 he batted .311 with 1,518 hits, 734 RBI and 197 stolen bases, many of home, which he was known for. Robinson was named Rookie of the Year in 1947 and went on to become a six-time All Star and Hall of Fame member in 1962. His number 42 is the only number retired universally across baseball.


I have to include a Negro League player on this list who was one of the best to play the game across the board. The “Black Babe Ruth,” Josh Gibson reportedly batted .359 with a .648 slugging percentage in his 17 seasons, although some say his career batting average was as high as .384. The Hall of Fame, into which he was inducted in 1972, says he hit nearly 800 homeruns. He also was chosen as an All Star ten times.


Back in the Majors, Johnny Mize hit .312 with a .562 slugging percentage, 359 homeruns, 2,011 hits and 1,337 RBI from 1936-1953. He holds the MLB record for the most games with three homeruns, which he did six times. Mize was a ten-time All Star, five-time World Series champ, even with a break from baseball to serve in WWII from 1943-1945, and he made it into Cooperstown in 1981.


Lou Boudreau played from 1938-1952 and ended with a batting average at .295 with 1,779 hits. He led the league in doubles in 1941, 1944 and 1947 and holds the record for consecutive doubles in a game when he hit four-in-a-row in 1946. He made the All Star team eight times, was named MVP in 1948 and became a Hall of Famer in 1970.


11-year pro Joe Gordon was one of the best offensive second baseman of his time. He had a career .268 batting average, 253 homeruns, 1,530 hits and a .925 fielding percentage. Gordon was a nine-time All Star, helped his team win five World Series rings and was league MVP in 1942. He holds the AL record for homeruns for a second baseman, too. Just recently, in 2009 he was elected into the Hall of Fame.


Enos Slaughter had a 19-year career from 1938-1959 with a three-year interruption beginning in 1943 because of WWII. In that time, he batted an even .300 including 2,383 hits (413 of them doubles), 1,304 RBI and a .980 fielding percentage. He was a ten-time All Star, four-time World Series champion and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1985.

No comments:

Post a Comment