Outfielder, St.
Louis Cardinals
Age: 27
6th season
with Cardinals
Bats – Left,
Throws – Left
Height: 6’0” Weight: 175
Prior to 1948:
A native of
Donora, Pennsylvania, the sports-minded Musial excelled in basketball, as well
as baseball, in his youth, where his pleasant personality and friendly
disposition were first on display as well. Signed by the Cardinals against his
immigrant father’s wishes, he started out as a pitcher. With Williamson of the
Class D Mountain State League in 1938, the 17-year-old southpaw went 6-6 with a
4.66 ERA in 20 appearances. Returning to Williamson in 1939 he produced a 9-2
tally and 4.30 ERA while issuing 85 walks in 92 innings. Playing in the
outfield between starts he batted .352. Sent to Daytona Beach of the Class D
Florida State League in 1940, his record improved to 18-5 with a 2.62 ERA,
although he still walked 145 batters over the course of 223 innings. He also
batted .311. While playing center field in an August game, Musial attempted to
make a diving catch and landed on his left shoulder, causing an injury that
finished his pitching career and turned him into a full-time outfielder,
although he never regained full strength in his throwing arm. Moving on to
Springfield of the Class C Western Association in 1941, he hit .379 with 26
home runs as a full-time outfielder before advancing to Rochester of the
International League where he batted .326 in 54 games. The Cardinals, who were
battling Brooklyn for the NL pennant, called Musial up in September and,
appearing in 12 games in place of injured right fielder Enos Slaughter, he hit
.426 with a home run and 7 RBIs. Moving into the St. Louis lineup in left field
in 1942, he batted .315 with 32 doubles, 10 triples, 10 home runs, and 72 RBIs.
The Cardinals won 106 games and the pennant and World Series, and the
21-year-old rookie placed twelfth in league MVP voting. Musial had an unusual,
closed batting stance in which he started out crouched in the back of the
batter’s box from which he uncoiled to powerfully hit line drives to all fields
while rarely striking out. With excellent speed on the bases and in the
outfield, he compensated for his weakened throwing arm by getting rid of the
ball quickly and accurately. St. Louis again won the NL pennant in 1943 and
Musial led the league in batting (.357), on-base percentage (.425), slugging
(.562), hits (220), doubles (48), triples (20), and total bases (347) while also
contributing 13 home runs and 81 RBIs. He was chosen league MVP. The Cards lost
the World Series rematch with the Yankees in which Musial hit .278 with no
extra base hits. In the offseason, Musial returned to Donora to do war industry
work at the American Steel & Wire Company. The Cardinals won a third
straight pennant in 1944 and “the Donora Greyhound” batted .347 while leading
the NL in hits (197), doubles (51), OBP (.440), and slugging (.549). He also
collected 14 doubles, 12 home runs, 94 RBIs, and drew 90 walks. In rhw World
Series, the Cards defeated the St. Louis Browns, with whom they shared
Sportsman’s Park, in six games with Musial hitting .304 and slugging a key home
run. He also finished fourth in league MVP balloting. Musial joined the Navy in
1945 and spent most of the year playing service baseball. Discharged early in
1946, he was tempted by an offer from the Mexican League, which was attempting
to buy up major league players and offered him $50,000. Staying with the
Cardinals, he was utilized primarily at first base and hit a league-leading
.365 while also topping the circuit in runs scored (124), hits (228), doubles
(50), triples (20), slugging (.587), and total bases (366). He further compiled
16 home runs and 103 RBIs while drawing 73 walks and striking out just 31
times. He was again the National League MVP and in the World Series St. Louis
defeated the Boston Red Sox in seven games although Musial’s matchup against
Boston slugger Ted Williams did not live up to expectations (Musial hit .222
with five extra-base hits and four RBIs and Williams batted .200 with one RBI).
In 1947 Musial was hindered by an inflamed appendix that was removed following
the season and he batted .312 with 30 doubles, 13 triples, 19 home runs, and 95
RBIs. A player who took offseason conditioning very seriously, he rebounded in
1948.
1948 Season Summary
Appeared in 155
games
RF – 81, CF – 65,
LF – 42, 1B – 2
[Bracketed
numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]
Batting
Plate
Appearances – 698 [2]
At Bats – 611 [2]
Runs – 135 [1]
Hits – 230 [1]
Doubles – 46 [1]
Triples – 18 [1]
Home Runs – 39 [3]
RBI – 131 [1]
Bases on Balls
– 79 [7, tied with Pee Wee Reese]
Int. BB – 6
Strikeouts – 34
Stolen Bases – 7
[16, tied with four others]
Caught Stealing
– 3
Average - .376
[1]
OBP - .450 [1]
Slugging Pct. -
.702 [1]
Total Bases – 429
[1]
GDP – 18 [2,
tied with Sid Gordon & Tommy Holmes]
Hit by Pitches
– 3 [13, tied with seven others]
Sac Hits – 1
Sac Flies – N/A
League-leading
runs scored were +18 ahead of runner-up Whitey Lockman
League-leading
hits were +40 ahead of runner-up Tommy Holmes
League-leading
doubles were +6 ahead of runner-up Del Ennis
League-leading
triples were +6 ahead of runner-up Johnny Hopp
League-leading
RBIs were +6 ahead of runner-up Johnny Mize
League-leading
batting average was +.043 ahead of runner-up Richie Ashburn
League-leading
OBP was +.027 ahead of runner-up Bob Elliott
League-leading
slugging percentage was +.138 ahead of runner-up Johnny Mize
League-leading
total bases were +113 ahead of runner-up Johnny Mize
Midseason
snapshot: 2B – 17, 3B – 9, HR - 20, RBI - 64, AVG - .403, SLG – .722, OBP –
.478
Most hits, game
– 5 (in 6 AB) at Cincinnati 4/30, (in 5 AB) at Brooklyn 5/19, (in 5 AB) at Bos.
Braves 6/22, (in 5 AB) at Bos. Braves 9/22
Longest hitting
streak – 13 games
HR at home – 16
HR on road – 23
Most home runs,
game – 2 (in 5 AB) at NY Giants 5/26
Multi-HR games
– 1
Most RBIs, game
– 4 on five occasions
Pinch-hitting –
No appearances
Fielding
Chances – 364
Put Outs – 347
Assists – 10
Errors – 7
DP – 3
Pct. - .981
Awards & Honors:
NL MVP: BBWAA
All-Star (Started for NL in LF)
Top 5 in NL MVP
Voting:
Stan Musial,
StLC.: 303 points - 18 of 24 first place votes, 90% share
Johnny Sain,
BosB.: 223 points – 5 first place votes, 66% share
Alvin Dark,
BosB.: 174 points – 1 first place vote, 52% share
Sid Gordon, NYG:
72 points – 21% share
Harry Brecheen,
StLC.: 61 points – 18% share
---
Cardinals went 85-69 to finish second in the NL, 6.5 games behind the pennant-winning Boston Braves, while leading the league in triples (58) and fewest batter strikeouts (523). The Cardinals were in first place from May 15 until May 31, when they were derailed by a six-game losing streak. They remained in contention through a 15-13 June and were in third place at 39-36 at the All-Star break. Unable to close the gap down the stretch, they finished out of the running despite Musial’s greatest season, in which he led the NL in nine offensive categories and came within one home run of the Triple Crown.
Aftermath of 1948:
Dubbed “Stan the Man” by New York fans and sportswriters due to his superlative performances at Ebbets Field and the Polo Grounds (he was regularly referred to as “that man” for the way he dominated the Dodgers and Giants), Musial, who had returned to the outfield in ’48, continued his outstanding play in 1949 by batting .338 and leading the NL in hits (207), doubles (41), triples (13), OBP (.438), and total bases (429). He further compiled 36 home runs and 123 RBIs while drawing 107 walks. He finished second in the NL MVP race. His outstanding hitting continued in 1950, ’51, and ’52. Musial won three straight batting titles and led the NL in runs scored, slugging, and total bases twice and hits once. He also placed second in league MVP voting in 1950 and ’51, so that over the course of four consecutive years he either received the MVP award or finished second. “Stan the Man” also split his time between first base and the outfield, with satisfactory results. In 1953 he placed eighth in NL MVP voting, leading the league in doubles (53), walks drawn (105), and OBP (.437) while batting .337 with 200 hits, 9 doubles, 30 home runs, and 113 RBIs, while striking out just 32 times. In 1954 against the Giants at home in Busch Stadium (the renamed Sportsman’s Park), Musial set a record with five home runs in a doubleheader. The Cardinals were a mediocre, seventh-place club in 1955 but Musial kept up his steady batting production by hitting .319 with 33 home runs and 108 RBIs. His twelfth-inning home run in the All-Star Game propelled the National League to a 6-5 win. “Stan the Man” led the NL with 109 RBIs in 1956 while also batting .310 with 33 doubles, 27 home runs, and a .522 slugging percentage. In 1957, his consecutive game streak dating back to 1952 ended at 895 due to torn shoulder ligaments, but he still won his seventh league batting title by hitting .351 and finished second in MVP voting. By 1958 he was 37 and making $100,000 per year and piling up significant career statistics. He reached 3000 hits in a May game at Chicago’s Wrigley Field on his way to batting .337 with 17 home runs and 62 RBIs. Despite his excellent conditioning, age appeared to be catching up to Musial in 1959 as his average plummeted to .255 along with 14 home runs and 44 RBIs. He rebounded somewhat in 1960 by hitting .275 with 17 home runs and 63 RBIs. In the spring of 1961, the Cardinals rented an entire motel in segregated St. Petersburg, Florida, so the entire team, white and black, could live together with their families. Musial, who typically rented a house for his family, stayed at the motel in his role as an esteemed team leader who supported the club’s action. He went on to hit .288 in 1961 and contended for another batting championship in 1962 at age 41 as he finished at .330 with 19 home runs and 82 RBIs. Musial played one last season in 1963 and batted .255 with 12 home runs and 58 RBIs. For his major league career, spent entirely with the Cardinals, “Stan the Man” batted .331 with 3630 hits that included 725 doubles, 177 triples, and 475 home runs. He scored 1949 runs and further compiled 1951 RBIs along with a .417 OBP and .559 slugging percentage. Appearing in 23 World Series games, he hit .256 with a home run and 8 RBIs. A 24-time All-Star, Musial hit a record six home runs in All-Star play. He finished in the top 10 in NL MVP voting 14 times, winning three times. The Cardinals retired his #6 and he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1969. Esteemed for his dignity and class, both on and off the field he was never ejected from a game during his major league career. Personable and popular, Musial operated a restaurant in St. Louis and remained in the public eye long after his playing career ended. He also served the Cardinals as a vice-president and was general manager during the 1967 season that concluded with a World Series title. President Lyndon B. Johnson’s advisor on physical fitness, he was presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011 by President Barack Obama. The Cardinals erected a statue of Musial outside Busch Stadium in his honor. Musial died in 2013 at the age of 92.
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MVP Profiles feature players in the National or
American leagues who were winners of the Chalmers Award (1911-14), League Award
(1922-29), or Baseball Writers’ Association of America Award (1931 to present)
as Most Valuable Player.
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