Showing posts with label Hall of Fame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hall of Fame. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

DEACON WHITE INDUCTED INTO THE BASEBALL HALL OF FAME


DEACON WHITE INDUCTED INTO THE BASEBALL HALL OF FAME BY THE VETERANS COMMITTEE
Deacon White - Newest HOF Member

Deacon White by the Numbers
There are sound reason for the Veterans Committee to have inducted Deacon James White into the HOF based on his baseball accomplishments.  He was reputedly the first catcher to stand directly behind home plate.  He is identified by Bill James' Historical Baseball Abstract as the best player of the 1870s, and White played until he was 42, until 1890.  White was a lefthand hitter and righthanded thrower, and played catcher, 3B and OF in his career.  He led the league in several offensive categories during his career and was a key player on several championship clubs.  The JAWS system ranks him 18th overall of all catchers.  That list goes:
1) Bench (in HOF) JAWS = 59.1
2) Carter (in HOF) JAWS = 56.4
3) Pudge Rodriguez (not yet eligible) JAWS = 50.7
4) Carlton Fisk (in HOF) JAWS = 49.6
5) Mike Piazza (eligible this year) JAWS = 48.4
6) Yogi Berra (in HOF) JAWS = 45.6
7)  Joe Torre JAWS = 44.7
8) Bill Dickey (in HOF) JAWS = 42.6
9) Mickey Cochrane (in HOF) JAWS = 41.9
Johnny Bench - By the JAWS System, the Greatest Catcher of All Time.  And you wouldn't find many to disagree with that--he could hit, he could field and he was some kind of leader.  And he won, won and won.

Those are the above the line guys.  The average JAWS score for a HOF catcher is 41.0.  There are some surprises when you look at these numbers.  First is the absolute dominance of Johnny Bench among all catchers, followed closely by Gary Carter.  Next is that Pudge Rodriguez is so clearly qualified for the HOF.  Fisk we sort of knew was great, but who knew that Mike Piazza was better than Yogi Berra, Bill Dickey and Mike Cochrane?  Or that Joe Torre deserves enshrinement as a catcher because as a player, he too was better than Dickey or Cochrane?  Somehow, some way, Pudge, Piazza and Torre must all be allowed into the HOF.
Next come the below the line JAWS catchers--guys whose JAWS scores are below the average HOF catcher.  They are good, but not as good as the average HOF catcher.
10)  Ted Simmons
11)  Gabby Hartnett (in HOF)
12) Thurman Munson
13)  Gene Tenace
14) Buck Ewing (in HOF)
15) Bill Freehan
16) Joe Mauer (still active)
17) Ernie Lombardi (in HOF)
18) Deacon White (elected to HOF this year)
19) Jorge Posada (still active)
20) Jason Kendall (still active barely)
So Deacon White is roughly comparable to Ernie Lombardi, who one supposes we all agreee is a HOFer worthy of the HOF.  At least Lombardi barely got into the HOF--by a nose.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernie_Lombardi.
Ernesto Natali "Ernie" Lombardi - Winner of the NL batting title in 1942   No catcher would win a batting title until Joe Mauer in 2006, and no NL catcher again until Buster Posey in 2012, seventy years later.  Known as the "Cyrano of the Iron Mask," Lombardi was so slow and hit the ball so hard, teams would shift all four infielders to the outfield.  

There are HOF catchers rated below these guys--Roger Bresnahan is 21st, Roy Campanella is 27th, Ray Schalk is 43rd, Rick Ferrell (Wes Ferrell's brother) is 45th.  Of these, Bresnahan is reputed to have invented the catcher's mask and most of the catching equipment; Campanella only had 1/2 a career due to the color line, and thus only started at age 28; while Schalk and Ferrell probably should never have been voted in, even though they were fine defensive catchers.  
Deacon White with the NL Detroit Wolverines, mid-1880s.

Looking at the above list, voting Deacon White in now begs the question of whether the HOF needs to consider the cases of Ted Simmons, Thurmon Munson, Gene Tenace and Bill Freehan.  Freehan's numbers are dampened considerably by his career having occurred in the 1960s--if you convert them to 1990s or 2000s baseball, Freehan is something like a monstrous Mike Piazza type hitter, as well as a defensive stud with a great arm.  He was also a key member of a championship team, the 1968 Tigers, which also made runs in 1967, 1972, and other years as well.
Gene Tenace was a key member of the Oakland As dynasty that swept three straight World Series.  We didn't realize until recently that his combination of walks and power was ideal for a catcher.  Tenance helped other teams later in his career--he helped every team he was on.  
Thurman Munson was a key member of the NY Yankees team that went to three straight World Series and won two--and they never won again after he died young in a plane crash over Ohio.  Finally, Ted Simmons was the finest hitting catcher anyone has ever seen, and was the key member of the 1982 Milwakee Brewers.  In between these guys you see that Gabby Hartnett, Buck Ewing and now Deacon White have all been elected to the HOF, which means that the bar is now the top twenty catchers in JAWS, not just the top ten.  
To summarize then, the Hall needs to make room for several more catchers based on the above quant discussion.  There is a useful article on JAWS in the latest volume of collected essays from the folks at Baseball Prospectus, which argues that JAWS is the way to distinguish between merited and non-merited players in the post-steroids era.   
Extra Innings: More Baseball Between the Numbers from the Team at Baseball Prospectus
(Jay Jaffe, "How Should the Hall of Fame Respond to the Steroids Era" at pp. 98-119).  Arguing for the broad application of the JAWS system.  It's a compelling argument. 

JAWS (Jaffe War Scoring System) can be found at:

Deacon White's Contribution to the Labor Strugles of the Players
Deacon White’s case for the Hall of Fame isn’t in his numbers, which by the Jaffe JAWS system clearly show he is below the line. After all, he played in the 1870s and 1888s, when 9 balls were a walk, four strikes were an out, and pitchers threw underhanded. you couldn’t really call that baseball.
Rather, Deacon White, like Marvin Miller, was a pioneer of breaking the reserve clause in baseball. He with Cap Anson and three other players jumped their  contracts in mid-season from the National Ass’n to the National League in 1875. In the mid-1880s, Deacon White’s rights along with the the Buffalo Bisons were bought by the Detroit Wolverines from Buffalo as part of the “Big Four,” of Hardy Richardson, White, Dan Brouthers and another player.  
When he was sold to the Pittsburgh club in 1889 for $7,000 and was then offered only a much smaller sum to play for the club, he was prompted to declare:  "We appreciate the money, but we ain't worth it. Rowe's arm is gone. I'm over 40 and my fielding ain't so good, though I can still hit some. But I will say this. No man is going to sell my carcass unless I get half." 
White's quote “No Man can buy my carcass unless I get one half [the money paid]” became a rallying cry for the players union.  White bought an interest in the Buffalo Bisons with another player, held out most of the 1889 season, reported to Pittsburgh for only a portion of the season, then spent the 1890 season as a player owner with the player run Players League of 1890.  In retrospect, he must be seen as a proto-organizer of the labor union of the players, a Marvin Miller of his day.  
Finally Deacon White was one of the prime organizers with Monte Ward of the Players League revolt of 1890, and he with a partner owned and operated the Buffalo franchise of the Players League for the 1890 season.  White was pro union, pro players and anti owners all his life. He was Marvin Miller before there was Marvin Miller.
During the 1880s & 1890s White was unhappy he had been dealt to the Pittsburgh Pirates and threatened to sue to test the reserve clause.  In lieu of his suing, a number of test cases were brought by Monte Ward and Deacon White’s fellow players in the Players League in the courts, nearly all of which demonstrated that there was, in fact, no “reserve clause” and that players were free to jump contracts at the end of the term.   Even though the Players League experiment failed, it was a signal step in demonstrating that there could, in fact, be a players union, that the players could fight against the owners if they unified, and that all that was needed was effective labor and union leadership to hold the players together.  It was a lesson that would not be lost on future generations steeped in baseball and labor history led by Marvin Miller.
It is primarily for his contributions to the labor freedom of the players, and for being years ahead of his time in this respect, that we should honor Deacon White with a place in the Hall of Fame. The war between the players and the owners was no less in the 1800s than it is today, and Deacon White was a ferocious warrior for the labor rights of the players. He should be remembered for this as we induct him into the HOF. The next person logically to be honored would of course be Marvin Miller, who stands on the shoulders of men like Deacon White and Jackie Robinson.
links to articles and sources:
Deacon White's Brother, Pitcher Will White:  
Sabr Article on Deacon White reprinted below: http://research.sabr.org/journals/james-deacon-white

Deacon White: An Overlooked 19th Century Legend By Joe Williams  http://sabr.org/research/deacon-white-overlooked-19th-century-legend


Deacon White in wikipedia.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deacon_White



Deacon White - James Overfield Article in SABR Research Archives

Here's the best article on White's relationship to the Brotherhood and the Player's League by James Overfield of SABR Research at http://research.sabr.org/journals/james-deacon-white:

James "Deacon" White
By Joseph Overfield

      When James “Deacon” White died on July 7, 1939, the obituary in The Sporting News said that his end had been hastened by disappointment at not being named to the Hall of Fame along with such contemporaries as A. G. Spalding, Cap Anson, Charles Comiskey, Buck Ewing, Hoss Radbourn, and Candy Cummings.  He had not even been invited to baseball's 100th anniversary celebration at Cooperstown, N. Y. on June 12.

      Of course, it can be conjectured how the death of the 91-year--old White, baseball's oldest former player, who had been confined to his daughter's home in Aurora, Illinois for several years by the debilities of old age, was hastened.  Nevertheless, the point is well made about the Deacon's qualifications for the Hall of Fame.    In the more than 35 years since his death, Cooperstown has made room for many more of his contemporaries.   In the 1870's and 1880's, Jim White's reputation as a player matched almost all of these, and in addition, his demeanor off the field was such that he brought nothing but credit to the game.

      Henry Chadwick, faithful chronicler of baseball's early years, who often wrote of White's agility and skill as a catcher, also wrote in 1890:   "What we most admired about White was his quiet effective way of doing his work.  Kicking is unknown to him.   And let us say there is one thing in which White stands pre-eminent, and that is in the integrity of his character.   Not even a whisper of suspicion has ever been heard about Jim White.   Herein lay as much of his value to his team as his great skill as a catcher."

      It is important to note that aspect of his character, because baseball was a rough and tumble sport in those days and the Deacon was involved in most of the major controversies that came along.  He was an anachronism in that hard-bitten era in which he played in that he saved his money, made it a habit to go to church   (hence his name Deacon), neither drank nor smoked, and was never known to sit in on a game of stud poker.

       On the other hand, he was far from a shrinking violet and was well known for his ability to discourse fluently on baseball, the Bible, or farming.  In his later years, he became an articulate spokesman for players' rights and he fought particularly hard against the reserve clause.  He was one of a handful of performers whose active careers extended from the late 1860's, when professional baseball was just getting started, through the formation of the, National Association in 1871, the birth of the National League in 1876, and the Brotherhood revolt of 1890.

       White was one of the most versatile players of his day.   After first gaining fame as the game's premier catcher, he switched to third base and soon became the National League's top performer at that position.  As a catcher he was the bare-handed batterymate of some of the game's greatest pitchers.   At Cleveland he teamed with Al Pratt to form the first famous battery.   He then caught Al Spalding at Boston and Chicago.   At various other stages of his career, he was behind the bat for such greats as his brother Will, with whom he formed the first brother battery, and Tommy Bond and Jim Galvin.   It was the latter who said: "You can talk all you want about your great catchers, but the best man who ever worked behind the plate was Jim White.   I have seen all the good ones, but I place him first."

       James Laurie White was born December 2, 1847, in the small rural community of Caton in south-central New York.  He never lost his love for things rural and on several occasions he "retired" from baseball to become a full-time farmer.   But he almost always came back.

       In 1868 Jim joined the Forest City club of Cleveland, which was supposedly Simon-pure, although some players were getting paid.   The following year they became fully professional and played most of the top teams of the land, including the invincible Cincinnati Red Stockings, who drubbed them twice.   Joining Cleveland that 1869 season was Al Pratt, one of the fastest pitchers of his day.

       In those pre-league days, Jim White took an occasional turn on the mound.   Even in that regard he once became involved in a controversy.   He developed a windmill-type windup, similar to that used by modern softball pitchers, but still kept his arm stiff as required by the rules.  Some umpires refused to allow him, to use the delivery, although Henry Chadwick ruled that the delivery was entirely legal.   A year or so later the rules were amended to permit any kind of underhand pitching; a change that soon put an end to the high-scoring games so common in the late l860's, and paved the way for the development of modern pitching techniques.

       The National Association was formed in 1871.  Loose in organization though it was, it must be considered the first professional league.   When the Forest Cities played the Kekiongas of Fort Wayne, at Fort Wayne, May 4, 1871, White was given the opportunity to lay claim to a number of "firsts.”  He became the first man to come to bat in a major league game; he made the first base hit, the first extra-base hit, a double, and also gained the dubious distinction of being the first major leaguer to be extinguished in a double play.   White was 3 for 4 that day and handled 9 fielding chances, but his team lost to Fort Wayne, 2-0.

       White remained with Forest City through the 1872 season.   For some time his hitting and catching had been closely watched by Harry Wright, manager of the champion Boston Red Stockings.   Wright invited White and his pitching partner, Pratt, to come to Boston.   White signed with him for the 1873 season, but Pratt demurred, saying that such company was too fast for him.

       At Boston, in concert with such baseball immortals as Al Spalding, Jim O'Rourke, Ross Barnes, Cal McVey and the Wright brothers, Harry and George, White was to gain national prominence for the first time.   His first season he batted a lofty .389, a mark eclipsed only by the .405 of Ross Barnes.   Spalding and White became the most feared battery in the league.   Between them they worked out the "quick return," in which Deacon would sneak up close to the batter and return the ball quickly to Spalding, who would fire it back before the batter was set.

       These were glorious days for Boston baseball.  The pennant won in 1872  (the season before White joined the club) was to be the first of four in succession.   But before the last of the four flags was won in 1875, Boston was rocked to its heels by the news that its famed "Big Four" of Spalding, White, McVey and Barnes had signed with Chicago for the 1876 season.  The players had not intended this news to be revealed until the end of the season, but a Chicago Tribune sports writer got wind of it and broke the story.  The act of the "Big Four" in signing with another team before the season's end was a violation of National Association rules, although it was common practice.   There was no such thing as a reserve rule at that time and contracts were for one year only, with the regulations requiring that new ones be negotiated after the season was over.

       As could have been expected, Spalding and the three other defectors became unacceptable in Boston.  They were hissed and booed from the stands; children taunted them and pelted them with stones when they walked in the streets.  But all of this distraction had no effect on the play of the Boston team, unless it was to make them play harder, for the club went on to compile a 71-8 record, never equaled in league play.

       N. T. Appolonio, president of the Boston club, offered the four more money, but the situation had gone too far for turning back, even in the face of rumors that the seceders would be expelled from baseball.   Also in jeopardy were Cap Anson and Ezra Sutton, who violated Philadelphia contracts to sign with Chicago.   (Sutton later elected to stay in Philadelphia.)   William Hulbert, president of the Chicago club, who, along with Spalding, had master-minded the scheme, began to worry.   Finally he hit upon the idea of forming a new league with a new set of rules, all of which would obviate the probability of the players being thrown out.   His coup was successful.  Thus the National League was born and, incidentally, the careers of five of baseball's greatest were saved.

       The Chicagos of 1876 proved to be almost unbeatable.  With Spalding winning 47 games, the team finished first with a 52-14 record, while the denuded Bostons dropped to fourth.   Jim White caught every game but two and batted a robust  .335.  In one stretch he batted in runs in a record 12 consecutive games.

       That fall White made a decision to return to the scene of his earlier glories at Boston.   He was welcomed back with open arms (most Boston fans blamed Spalding for the 1875 trouble).   Although Manager Wright decided not to supplant Lew Brown, his new catcher, the Deacon showed his versatility by performing at first, third, and in the outfield.   What is more, he batted a .385 to win the league batting title.   The 1877 season saw Boston resume its championship ways and it marked the fifth consecutive season that White was on a pennant-winning team.   That same year White brought his younger brother, Will, to Boston for a tryout.   Will was not too impressive in his three appearances for Boston, but he was to go on to a great NL pitching career (222-166).   He also had the distinction of being the first major leaguer to wear glasses.

       The following year, 1878, the brothers White decided to join the Cincinnatis, managed by Cal McVey, one of the "Big Four" of Boston days.   The Reds finished second as the Deacon batted an adequate .313 and played well in the field.   Brother Will found his bearings as a pitcher and wound up with 29 wins.

       The Deacon took over as manager the next season, but after an in-and-out start, he was removed and McVey returned to the helm.   White continued as a player, appearing in all but three of the Reds' games, and batting .330.  Will White enjoyed a fabulous year, winning 43 games and setting an all-time record by starting and finishing 74 games.

       It was late that season that Jim White shocked the Cincinnati baseball public by announcing he was retiring from the game.   He told the Enquirer "he was positively retiring to his farm and that nothing could induce him to play ball again."   The paper editorialized as follows:  "Mr. White has few peers as a ballplayer and he has always been a gentleman in his professional and private life. Such men are sorry losses from baseball when they retire."

       This was the first of many retirements for the Deacon, none of which stuck any more than the first one, until finally the very weight of years forced him to give up.   White did return to the Reds in 1880 -- a disastrous year for the Ohio city in that it finished in the cellar for the third time, and then suffered the ignominy of being thrown out of the league for permitting beer and whiskey to be sold in its park.  In spite of everything, the unretired White batted over .300 for the eighth consecutive time.

      The ejection of Cincinnati set the stage for a shift in Deacon White's career from the Queen City of Ohio to the Queen City of New York State -- Buffalo.  Here he was to find himself as a third baseman and go on to greater glory at an age when most ballplayers seek less strenuous pursuits.

      The news that White was to join the Bisons (then about to start their third season in the NL) was not a cause for loud cheering on Lake Erie's shores.  The Express referred to him as "Farmer White, that sad tiller of the soil who everybody knows is too old to play ball."  Actually White was not the Neanderthal man the paper made him out to be.  His long, doleful face, receding hair line and drooping walrus mustache made him appear much older than his 33 years.   Besides, he had been playing ball as long as most fans could remember.

      White's early efforts for the Bisons did little to dispel the first reactions.   In one game he dropped three balls in right field, causing the Express to comment with acerbity on the said performance of one who had once been "the king bee of all the catchers."   On May 20, 1881, the following note appeared in the Courier:   "Manager O'Rourke will lay off White today because a lefthander, Richmond, is pitching for Worcester."   Thus Deacon White may have become the first lefty hitter to be platooned because a southpaw was to pitch.   Despite the platooning and the snide remarks of the press, Jim batted .310.

      White played third almost exclusively in 1882, although he did go behind the bat occasionally to catch Jim Galvin, Buffalo's great fast ball pitcher.   It was this year that fans began to refer to the first four hitters in the Buffalo lineup (Hardy Richardson, Dan Brouthers, Jack Rowe and White) as the "Big Four."   In his remaining four years with the Buffalo National League club, White batted .281, .289,  .325 and .292 -- not quite up to his earlier standards, but more than adequate in a period when pitchers were beginning to dominate the game more and more.  The Bisons did not finish higher than third in any of White's years with the club, but were a first division contender every season except for the last, 1885.

      Just as White had been present at the temporary demise of Cincinnati as a major league city, so was he to be a part of Buffalo's departure.   The 1885 season had been a rugged one for the operators of the Buffalo club.   While its famed "Big Four" was still intact, the team had lost its spark with the leaving of Jim O'Rourke to join New York.  In June, pitcher Jim Galvin, who had won over 200 victories for the Buffalos, was sold to Pittsburgh for just $1500.  But that was only a hint of what was to come.

      When the baseball writer of the Detroit Free Press soliloquized in late August, "Oh, that Detroit had a Deacon White!" he was indulging in some wishful thinking that was uncannily prophetic.   On September 16, President Josiah Jewett of the Bisons rocked the baseball world with the announcement that he had sold the Buffalo franchise to the Detroit club for $7,000.   The truth was that the Wolverines really wanted the "Big Four" of White, Brouthers, Richardson and Rowe and that the only way they could accomplish this was to buy the entire Buffalo club.   It was the first mass deal in baseball history and certainly the last of its kind.

      An odd aspect of the deal, and one that is often overlooked in accounts of it, is that it was made while

Buffalo still had two more weeks of its schedule remaining.  The Bisons did manage to finish out the year using players Detroit did not want, plus a few amateurs.  Buffalo played its last National League game ever on October 3, 1885, losing to Boston, 18-0.

      Once the deal was completed, White and company entrained to join the Detroit club.  But they never did get into uniform, when President Nick Young of the National League ruled they could not sign Detroit contracts before October 20.  The players then returned to Buffalo, proclaiming to all that since they had been released by Buffalo and could not sign with Detroit, they were free agents and could sign with anyone.   The press was filled with the acrimonious debate as the battle raged between players and clubowners.  In the midst of all the fuss, it was recorded in the Buffalo Express that Deacon White had sought the quiet of his Corning farm and was through with baseball.

      What dreams the "Big Four" had of signing with the highest bidder soon were blasted when it was ruled that

Detroit could reserve them.   In the spring of 1886, the "Big Four," including the "retired" White, joined the Detroit Wolverines, managed by William Watkins.

      The fortunes of the Detroit team, which had been at a low ebb, immediately took a sharp upturn.   The Wolverines of 1886 did not win the pennant, but they did finish second with a .707 percentage, only 2-1/2 games behind Cap Anson's White Stockings.   In 1887 Detroit enjoyed its first pennant winner, with a club that must be ranked among the strongest of the pre-1900 era.   In addition to Brouthers, White, Richardson and Rowe, its roster included Ned Hanlon, whose defensive play made him the Willie Nays of his day; catcher Charley Bennett, a .363 hitter that year; Charley (Pretzels) Getzein, a 29-game winner; and Sam Thompson, then well on his way to recognition as one of the greatest sluggers of the game's early years.

      The great year was climaxed by a post-season victory over Chris Von Der Abe's St. Louis Browns, champions of the then major league American Association.   This was a unique world series, with 15 games played in ten different cities.

      Detroit's taste of baseball glory was brief.   In 1888 the Wolverines dropped from first to fifth, and then at season's end, dropped right out of the league.   President Fred Stearns and his associate, Charles W. Smith, became fed up with the headaches of running a major league club and decided to sell out.   They peddled their stars for between $45,000 and $55,000, a nice figure considering their original player investment was in the neighborhood of $15,000.   Brouthers, White and Richardson were sold to Boston, while Rowe was dealt to Pittsburgh.   Boston then decided it did not want the 40-year-old White and he was sent along to Pittsburgh.

      Both White and Rowe were members of the National Brotherhood of Professional Baseball Players, a group that was becoming more and more outspoken in its espousal of players' rights.   Apart from the perennial complaints about low salaries, the Brotherhood opposed the reserve clause (in effect since 1879) and supported the idea that a player should share in the proceeds when he was sold to another club.

      Although they did not realize it at the time, Deacon White and Jack Rowe were instrumental in bringing two of these quarrels into open and bitter contention when, in December 1888, they announced that they had purchased the Buffalo franchise of the International League and further that they would not report to Pittsburgh, since they would be playing for their own Bisons.

      Deacon White had been in the center of baseball disputes before, but he was soon to realize that these had been but skirmishes compared to the major battle he was now facing.  For the next eight months, the White-Rowe vs. Detroit-Pittsburgh battle was to rage unabated.  White told the Buffalo Express:   "Rowe and I are not bluffing.  Mark my words, neither of us will play in the National League next year.  We own the Buffalo club and we intend to play here."   The Cleveland Plain Dealer, with rare astuteness, said, "This could mean a baseball war."

      After moving his family from Detroit to Buffalo, White consulted a Buffalo lawyer, with the thought of testing the reserve clause in court.  At this time he remarked, "If I cannot get my release, I must protect myself in another way.   The laws of this country will stop people from preventing me from making an honest living."  White and Rowe had the solid support of the press, whose stand was pretty well summed up by the Boston Globe when it said, "It is generally accepted that baseball law is not legal law and could never be upheld in court, if that test should come."   At the same time it expressed doubt that the controversy would ever be litigated.

      Meanwhile, the club owners were doing plenty of firing in the public prints.  President William Nimick of

Pittsburgh said, "Rowe and White will play in Pittsburgh or they will play nowhere."   Fred Stearns of the defunct Detroit club, which stood to receive $7,000 for White and Rowe, emphatically agreed.

      While the oratory went on apace, so did plans for the 1889 Bisons.   The neophyte baseball entrepreneurs,

White and Rowe, had plenty of problems facing them, including getting a new park ready.   Another jolt was the defection of Frank Grant, their brilliant Negro second baseman, who had been the team's best hitter the three previous seasons.  He was joining the Cuban Giants.  A wet spring added to their woes, and great difficulty was encountered in getting the field in shape.  On top of this, Will White, the Deacon's brother, who had been brought in as playing manager, developed a sore arm.

      The team got off to a bad start and never righted itself.   White and Rowe stuck to their guns until mid-season.   Rumors then began to circulate that they were about to make a deal with Pittsburgh.  The rumors proved to be based on fact, when it was announced that the recalcitrants would report to the Pittsburgh club.     Their capitulation was not a complete victory for the establishment, since each received $1,250 of the sale price, plus handsome $500-per-month salaries.    White still was not happy about the deal and told a Buffalo reporter with quaint frankness:    "We are satisfied with the money, but we ain't worth it.   Rowe's arm is gone.   I'm over 40 and my fielding ain't so good,   though I can still hit some. But I will say this, no man is going to sell my carcass unless I get half."

      Later it was revealed that the surrender of White and Rowe followed their receipt of a mysterious letter from John Montgomery Ward, the Brotherhood leader.  While its contents have never been revealed, it has been suggested that White and Rowe were advised to get what they could for the rest of the season, because the "new league" would be in operation for the 1890 season.    There can be little doubt that the mulish stand of the club owners, bringing about a situation where two players could not play for a club they owned, had roused the Brotherhood to action.   In later years, Ned Hanlon often said that in his opinion the White-Rowe dispute was the spark that ignited the Brotherhood War.

      Immediately after White and Rowe joined Pittsburgh, the club went on a nine-game losing streak.    White's performance was described as `very yellow" and Rowe was criticized for his weak throwing.    But within a few weeks they both recovered their diamond legs and by the end of the year were performing close to their old-time ability.

      With the stormy 1889 season now history, the stage was set for Deacon White's last baseball entrance.    When stories of a Players' League came out of New York, little credence was placed in them.    But they were true; there was, indeed, to be a Players' League, and Buffalo was to be represented.   Capital of $20,000 was raised, $1,000 each coming from White and Rowe and $500 from a little-known catcher on the Washington club by the name of Connie Mack.   The rest of the money was put up by local businessmen.   White and Rowe were able to supply a place to play, since they controlled the lease on the new Olympic Park.

      The Buffalo Brotherhood Club was neither a financial nor an artistic success.   After an unbelievable start which saw it score 75 runs against Cleveland in the first four games, it soon dropped to the second division and finally to the cellar.   There it finished the season, 20 games behind the seventh-place Cleveland club it had clobbered in the opening series.   The team drew about 60,000 fans, most of these in the first half of the season.   As the season dragged to a close, attendance dropped steadily, until, in the last two weeks of the season, there was no money to pay salaries.   It was in these sad circumstances that Deacon White closed out his long baseball career.  At age 42 he had played in 122 games and batted .264.

      His baseball days over, White continued to reside in Buffalo, working for his brother Will at the Buffalo Optical Company, and also operating a livery stable (later turned into an auto garage) on Auburn Avenue.  Around 1910 he moved to the Midwest, where he lived until his death in Illinois in 1939.

      White saw his last ball game in the early 1930's when he traveled to Chicago to see the White Sox play the Athletics, managed by his old teammate of Brotherhood days, Connie Mack.   When asked for a comment after the game, in which he had seen Lefty Grove pitch for the A's, he said with characteristic candidness:   "Players of my day would have had little success with present-day pitchers.  But we were better fielders.   Remember, we used no gloves."

      The Deacon was not completely forgotten in his later years.  About two months before he died he granted a long interview to a Chicago reporter.  He was then, at 91, the oldest major leaguer in the land.   But more important than mere longevity was the fact that he had lived through and been a part of more baseball history than almost any other man.


Friday, November 30, 2012

2013 Baseball Hall of Fame Ballot


2013 Baseball Hall of Fame Ballot

Well, the 2013 Baseball Hall of Fame Ballots have been announced, and the amount of talent on this year's ballot is staggering--so staggering that it is fair to say that no single ballot has been this impressive in many, many years.

Featured in this years ballot for the first time are Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Curt Schilling, Jeff Bagwell, Mike Piazza and Craig Biggio, all of whom are clear Hall of Famers.  

Curt Schilling won Game 5 of the 1993 World Series for the Phillies, hurling a 2-0 shutout v the Blue Jays.  He later won World Championships with the AZ Diamondbacks and the Boston Red Sox. He had a dominant fastball.

The famous "bloody sock" of Curt Schilling during the Red Sox postseason run to  "reverse the curse".
Barry Bonds holds the single seaon HR record with 73 HR, as well as the Career HR Record, having hit more HR than Henry Aaron or Babe Ruth.  He drew more than 200 walks in a season.  He is the greatest player every to play baseball.

Roger Clemens and his lovely wife Debbie

Left over from prior years ballots are Jack Morris, Larry Walker, Alan Trammell, Tim Raines, Edgar Martinez, and others who also deserve election to the Hall of Fame.

In short, there are more than ten clear choices on this years ballot, all of whom not only deserve election to the Hall of Fame, but who demonstrably and empirically deserve election based on the JAWs system worked out on Baseball-Reference.com, which compares peak and career WAR for a player with the average peak and career WAR for a comparably player at that position already in the Hall of Fame.

By this standard, Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Jeff Bagwell, Mike Piazza and Curt Schilling are by far the clearest admits to the Hall of Fame.  Their peak and career WARs are far higher than the comparable peak and career WARs of current average HOFs already enshrined, and in the cases of Bonds & Clemens, nearly twice as high.  

With this in mind, this would be my Hall of Fame Ballot, in order of deservingness:

1)  Barry "Home Run King" Bonds
2)  Roger "Cy Young" Clemens
3)  Jeff "Killer B" Bagwell
4)  Mike "Norristown" Piazza
5)  Curt "Bloody Sock" Schilling
6)  Alan "Trammell & Whitaker" Trammell
7)  Larry "Colorado Kid" Walker
8)  Tim "Rock" Raines
9)  Craig "Killer B" Biggio
10 Jack "Mr. Tiger" Morris

A quick note on Jack Morris.  He does not deserve enshrinement under the JAWs system; however, he is in his last year on the active ballot, he is over 60% on last years ballot, and he has done 100% of the things you should do to get into the HOF, including winning a lot of games, winning the most games during the 1980s, leading his team to a championship, leading another team to a championship, being great in the postseason, being a dominant pitcher at his peak, and in the end, being a symbol of the dominant Tiger team of 1984.  

Much as my stathead mind wants to vote for Edgar Martinez, the fact is that Edgar Martinez was a DH, never won anything, and without the absurd DH rule, probably wouldn't have gotten enough bats to have a career.  Morever, his WAR numbers are biased upwards by his not having had to play defense;  his negative defensive WARs would have sagged him down at least minus one-two each and every year, so he's not the HOFer you think he is.  

Turning to the Veterans Ballot, regardless of who's listed on the ballot, there are four names I think should go into the HOF:

1) Marvin Miller
2) Pete Rose
3) Shoeless Joe Jackson
4) Eddie Cicotte

The time to lift the ban on betting, and give both Rose and the Black Sox a pass, has come.  And why is baseball blackballing the single most important figure in modern baseball?  

Of the actual veterans ballot figures, I suppose I'd vote for Big Bill Dahlen and Wes Ferrell.  Bucky Walters was really, really good, too.  Tony Mullane played in the 19th century, and he threw underhanded, so I'm not sure he belongs.  Marty Marion actually doesn't belong at all, even though he was a great shortstop, he didn't hit at all.  If we put him in, we may as well put Larry Bowa in--a key defensive player on a very good to dominant team.  

Finally, they still have not enshrined enough Negro Leagues players, even though they've shut the door on this.  Until as many players from the Negro Leagues from the 1920s, 30s and 40s are in the HOF as are in the HOF from white baseball, this will not be fully redressed.  

One final note:  The Hall of Fame voting should be revised a bit to allow Hall of Fame election based on 50% of the ballots, instead of the current 75%.  Not that many candidates receive 75%, but not that many attain even 50%, so this won't elect that many more.  Second, there are, due to expansion, almost twice as many qualified candidates as before, and this year shows this.  Biggio and Bagwell played for the Astros, Walker for the Rockies, and the effects of expansion on the quality and quantity of HOF players will cause a massive backup in the HOF unless the HOF changes its voting rules.  

Quite honestly, sportswriters have a tough time agreeing on anything with 75% unanimity.  

List of things sportswriters will agree upon with 75% of the vote:

1)  People still read newspapers and think they matter.
2)  Beer is a main food group.
3)  The right to free press box seating for all print sportwriters is enshrined in the United States Constitution in the first amendment.
4)  All ballplayers are overpaid.
5)  "If I just had five minutes on SportsCenter, I could show them I'm just as good as Peter Gammons".
6)  The New York Yankees Rule (if you're from New York).
7)  The New York Yankees Suck (if you're not from New York).
8)  Babe Ruth was the greatest player ever, even though he drank, womanized, gambled, was foulmouthed, ate too much, talked back to his managers, always showed up out of shape every spring, and gave the same kind of speeches about practice as Allen Iverson did.    
9)  Using Steroids is a far worse crime than throwing spitballs, using emory balls, loading up the ball, throwing mudballs, vaseline balls or any kind of cheating by pitchers, as was done by Hall of Famers Gaylord Perry, Don Drysdale, Jim Bunning, et al.  
10)  Newspapers are the only true source of sports information in the world.


Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Reinstate Pete Rose: Put Him in the HOF

REINSTATE PETE ROSE

LIFT THE BAN! AT LIFTTHEBAN.NET


originally posted to DAVE PINTO'S "Baseball Musings" in 2004 at http://www.baseballmusings.com/archives/005910.php
My only emendations would be that Pete Rose NEVER took steroids, NEVER threw the World Series, NEVER doctored a baseball, and was by far the dominant player of his era.

PETE ROSE WAS THE GREATEST HITTER OF NOT JUST HIS ERA BUT ANY ERA.  IF YOU RECALCULATE HIS STATISTICS TO 2000 AND PUT HIM IN FENWAY PARK, HE WOULD HAVE HAD 200 HITS 18 CONSECUTIVE YEARS, WOULD HAVE HAD 5,000 CAREER HITS, WOULD HAVE HIT .394 IN 1968, .386 IN 1969 AND .386 IN 1973, 62 DOUBLES IN 1978, 174 RUNS SCORED IN 1976, 283 HITS IN 1973, CAREER LINE OF .341/.417/.460/.877 WITH 902 CAREER DOUBLES 5165 HITS 2912 RUNS 2900 RUNS CREATED IT IS A JOKE TO SAY DEREK JETER IS ANYTHING CLOSE TO PETE ROSE; PETE ROSE PLAYED IN A PITCHER'S ERA BUT PUT UP HITTER'S NUMBERS


Regarding Pete Rose and gambling. It is critical to put Pete Rose's gambling into perspective. Harold Seymour's three part series on the history of baseball which culminates in "The Golden Age,", and from which Bill James liberally borrows (with annotation) for many of his sidebars in the Historical Baseball Abstract and his Guide to Baseball Managers, makes it perfectly clear that a large number of famous, Hall of Fame baseball players gambled routinely and gambled on their own teams. Those players included Hal Chase, Ty Cobb and Tris Speaker, and may have included countless others who were bitter after salaries were reduced (1) after the American and National Leagues achieved peace in the early 1900s and (2) after the Federal League was disbanded and peace was achieved. As Eliot Asinof points out in Eight Men Out, even the eight men of the White Sox had ample reason for taking bets, because they were miserably underpaid by Charlie Comiskey, who according to Seymour, cleared in excess of $500,000 in profits from the Chisox during the 1910s during an era of no income tax or 1-3% income tax. He never shared that revenue and only spent about $25-40,000 of that on his players.

LIFT THE BAN!!!!!! REINSTATE PETE ROSE, CHARLIE HUSTLE! 



Next, let's talk about more recent players. Anyone read Ball Four by Jim Bouton? Mickey Mantle spent his whole career whoring and drinking and womanizing. Hall of Fame. Did anyone forget about beaver-shooting from that book??? The entire Yankee clubhouse from the early 60s, of which many are in the Hall of Fame, engaged in that despicable practice.Baseball players all played poker. All years of this century, they gambled on cards, they drank and they womanized. We know that cocaine was common in the Pittsburgh Pirate and KC Royals locker rooms even while they won World Series titles, and many of those players testified at drug trials in the 1980s. A lot of those players ended up in the hall of fame.

Babe Ruth. Traded from the Red Sox. Why? Because he had prostitutes everywhere on Kenmore Street, drank every night, gambled and ate too much. In short, he was dirty and stayed out all night in a small town Boston atmosphere. The same team allegedly dumped Tris Speaker for salary, but really wasn't it because he gamled on games in 1916???

Babe Ruth didn't win a series with the Yanks until 1923. He lost in 1921 and 22. He lost in 1926 to an alcoholic famous for being so drunk he never showed up to games. That man was Grover Clevelan "Pete" Alexander. That guy only won 373 games and made it to the Hall of Fame. Oh, and Ronald Reagan played him in a movie where he struck out Lazzeri with the bases loaded to win the 26 series.

So Rose is a gambling addict. Ruth was a sex and food addict. Alexander was an alcoholic. Cobb was a vicious racist who also gambled and purposely spiked people while playing. Eddie Collins & Joe Cronin were visious racists while running the Red Sox and preventing the integration of the Red Sox for more than 30 years, according to new research. The same racist Joe Cronin who was President of the the American League. Hal Chase's gambling kept the Yankees and other teams in the 2d division for all of the 1900s and 1910s and no one did anything about it. Doc Gooden and Daryl Strawberry were fed cocaine by Keith Hernandez in 1986, but no one every sent Hernandez to jail, much less banned him from baseball, even though he ruined two lives and two Hall of Fame careers.

Ty Cobb was a bastard jerk, but his accomplishments put him in the hall of fame. Pete Rose is a lot nicer guy than Ty Cobb; was never a racist; was a team player; and achieved his records in eras, the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s which were comparatively dominated by pitching, especially the first seven years of his career.

It is unfair to bar him from the Hall of Fame for having fallen into a moral abyss of late. A five or ten year suspension is more than enought punishment. He didn't throw the World Series, as Bill James correctly points out, which is what Joe Jackson allegedly did. He did what at least 200 other players did in baseball, including Ty Cobb, which is bet on baseball. Ty Cobb was called into a Commissioner's meeting in 1926, and he was not barred from baseball for throwing a game, even though there's plenty of evidence he threw that game and plenty more, along with Tris Speaker.

fair is fair. Reinstate the man. The Philly fans still love him and we want him back here to throw out as many baseballs as we can give him. He was an integral part of three World Series teams and six pennant or division winners. Unlike Cobb, he was a team player, a winner and a champion, and he loved his teammates no matter what their color. He never threw a game to give a batting champtionship or pennant to someone else, which Cobb allegedly did. He never threw a World Series, which Joe Jackson allegedly did.

His crimes pale in comparison. Justice as Aristotle says must be in accordance with the crime. The punishment in this case is far too great for the crime; Free Pete Rose!!!

--Arthur J Kyriazis
Biotech Consultant; biostatistician
Posted by: Art Kyriazis at April 29, 2004 04:03 PM

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From "Lift the Ban" a website devoted to Lifting the Ban against Pete Rose:http://www.lifttheban.net/pete-roses-records/

Major League records:
Most career hits – 4,256
Most career outs – 10,328
Most career games played – 3,562
Most career at bats – 14,053
Most career singles – 3,215
Most career runs by a switch hitter – 2,165
Most career doubles by a switch hitter – 746
Most career walks by a switch hitter – 1,566
Most career total bases by a switch hitter – 5,752
Most seasons of 200 or more hits – 10
Most consecutive seasons of 100 or more hits – 23
Most consecutive seasons with 600 or more at bats – 13 (1968–1980)
Most seasons with 600 at bats – 17
Most seasons with 150 or more games played – 17
Most seasons with 100 or more games played – 23
Record for playing in the most winning games – 1,972
Only player in major league history to play more than 500 games at five different positions – 1B (939), LF (671), 3B (634), 2B (628), RF (595)

National League records:
Most years played – 24
Most consecutive years played – 24
Most career runs – 2,165
Most career doubles – 746
Most career games with 5 or more hits – 10
Modern (post-1900) record for longest consecutive game hitting streak – 44
Modern record for most consecutive hitting streaks of 20 or more games – 7


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Bill James defended Rose from the accusations in the Dowd Report.  There was a piece published on the Baseball Prospectus website refuting James' account at http://www.baseballprospectus.com/news/20021031zumsteg.shtml on October 31, 2002.  Although in the end Rose confesses to betting on baseball in his memoir, Rose does not anywhere confess to all of the charges made in the Dowd Report.  Even accepting all of the charges in the Dowd Report as true, a reasonable person would still have to argue for Rose's reinstatement, because his crimes are not nearly as great as those of others.

Just to take one more example, there is excellent evidence that DENNY MCLAIN was injured to to his involvement with gambling and mobsters towards the end of the 1967 season, and that his injured toe directly influenced the outcome of the 1967 pennant race--leading to the Tigers losing and the Red Sox winning.  According to the SABR bio of McClain, Bowie Kuhn and practically the whole world knew about McClain, but rather than being suspended from baseball, McLain was only suspended for half a season:

DENNY MCLAIN - HIS GAMBLING INFLUENCED THE OUTCOME OF THE 1967 PENNANT RACE BUT BASEBALL ONLY SUSPENDED HIM FOR ONE HALF OF ONE SEASON DESPITE CONCRETE EVIDENCE THAT GAMBLING AND RACKETEERING AND MCLAIN'S INVOLVEMENT IN THEM AFFECTED THE RACE - HE WAS LATER CONVICTED TWICE OF RACKETEERING RELATED FELONIES BUT WAS NEVER BANNED FROM BASEBALL - PETE ROSE WAS TREATED MUCH MORE SEVERELY

In February 1970, Sports Illustrated featured McLain on its cover next to the headline “Denny McLain and the Mob, Baseball’s Big Scandal.” The mob? According to the magazine, in early 1967 McLain invested in a bookmaking operation based in a restaurant in Flint, Michigan; several of his partners were part of the Syrian mob. When a gambler named Edward Voshen won $46,000 on a horse race, his bookie couldn’t pay it off, suggesting instead that Voshen find the bookie’s partners. One of his partners was McLain. Voshen spent several months trying to get his money, finally enlisting the aid of mobster Tony Giacalone. According to the magazine’s sources, Giacalone met with McLain in early September and, while threatening much worse, brought his heel down on McLain’s toes and dislocated them. This would have coincided with time of McLain’s ankle-toes injury in September 1967. The magazine also reported that Giacalone had bet heavily on the Red Sox and Twins to win the pennant, and had made a large bet on the Angels in McLain’s final start.
McLain denied most of the story. He admitted to investing in the bookmaking business to the tune of $15,000, but claimed that his partners reneged on him, causing McLain to withdraw his support. He told Bowie Kuhn, baseball’s commissioner, that he was completely uninvolved in the ring at the time of the Voshen bet, but oddly admitted that he had loaned $10,000 to one of the partners to help pay off the debt. Furthermore, he had never met Giacalone, and McLain retold the story of his toe injury. (In subsequent years, McLain recalled that it was an ankle sprain, not injured toes.) Just prior to spring training, Kuhn suspended McLain indefinitely while he conducted an investigation.
The problem with all of these accusations was that many of the people making them were criminals and lowlifes, as Sports Illustrated acknowledged. Although he has continued to deny the allegations regarding his injury, his denials have been in themselves damning. In his 2007 memoir I Told You I Wasn’t Perfect, he writes that he was heavily distracted in September 1967. “I was spooked about Ed Voshen and worried about being exposed,” he writes. “I kept expecting someone to tap me on the shoulder and say, ‘Hey, where’s my money?’ or that my car was going to blow up.” This fear is precisely why baseball has a paranoia about gambling.
If these problems were not enough, McLain was also suddenly broke. Though his annual income was close to $200,000, McLain had entrusted it all with a lawyer, who either mishandled it or stole it before fleeing to Japan. Without his baseball income, McLain’s financial problems caused him to file for bankruptcy. Claiming that all of his problems were due to “poor business decisions,” his petition listed debts of $446,069 and assets of only $413.
On April 1, 1970, Kuhn announced his decision. He continued McLain’s suspension until July 1, roughly half of the season. Kuhn’s report, among other things, said: “While McLain believed he had become a partner in this operation and has so admitted to me…it would appear that he was the victim of a confidence scheme. I would thus conclude that McLain was never a partner and had no proprietary interest in the bookmaking operation.” Kuhn also absolved McLain from any charges that his actions had any effect on baseball games or the 1967 pennant race. (On the contrary, McLain’s later recollection that he feared for his life in September 1967 suggests that the pennant race was quite affected.)
After Kuhn read his statement, a reporter asked him to explain the difference between McLain attempting to become a bookmaker, and actually becoming one. “I think you have to consider the difference is the same as between murder and attempted murder,” responded the wise commissioner. Reporters all over the country, and especially in Detroit, thought the decision was a whitewash. Denny’s teammates seemed surprised as well. Dick McAuliffe spoke for many when he said: “If Denny’s innocent, it should be nothing. If he’s guilty, then this is not enough.” Jim Price, the Tigers’ player representative, said that most Tigers thought McLain would get one or two years, or else nothing at all. Nonetheless, three months it was.

Denny McLain

This article was written by Mark Armour.