Showing posts with label 1914. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1914. Show all posts

Jul 9, 2019

MVP Profile: Eddie Collins, 1914

Second Baseman, Philadelphia Athletics


Age:  27 (May 2)
8th season with Athletics
Bats – Left, Throws – Right
Height: 5’9”    Weight: 175

Prior to 1914:
A native of upstate New York, Collins was raised in Tarrytown before entering Columbia University, where he played football, despite his small size, as well as baseball. While in college, he also played baseball on a semipro basis. The Athletics signed him to a contract in 1907, at the point he had been declared ineligible to continue his college ballplaying due to his semipro activities, although he had already briefly played for the A’s under an assumed name in 1906. Collins appeared in 14 games in ’07 as a shortstop, his original position. He played more regularly for the A’s in 1908, appearing in 102 games at second base, shortstop, and in the outfield. He batted .273. He became the regular second baseman in 1909, hitting .347 with 30 doubles, 10 triples, 3 home runs, 56 RBIs, and 63 stolen bases. The A’s won the AL pennant in 1910 and Collins topped the circuit with 81 stolen bases as well as contributing a .324 average with 16 doubles, 15 triples, 3 home runs, and 81 RBIs. In the World Series triumph over the Cubs he hit .429. As part of “the $100,000 infield” along with first baseman Stuffy McInnis, shortstop Jack Barry, and third baseman Frank “Home Run” Baker in 1911, Collins batted .365 with 22 doubles, 13 triples, 3 home runs, 73 RBIs, and 38 stolen bases as the A’s repeated as AL and World Series champions. Nicknamed “Cocky” due to his demeanor, Collins was an intelligent as well as highly skilled player, with an excellent batting eye and speed on the base paths as well as excellent defensive ability. His overly self-confident behavior alienated some teammates and caused dissension on the club. The A’s dropped to third place in 1912, although Collins had another outstanding season, batting .348 and topping the league with 137 runs scored. The club returned to the pinnacle in 1913 with the star second baseman hitting .345 and again leading the AL in runs scored with 125 while also knocking in 73 RBIs and stealing 55 bases. 

1914 Season Summary
Appeared in 152 games
2B – 152

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

Batting
Plate Appearances – 659 [7]
At Bats – 526 [20, tied with Chick Gandil]
Runs – 122 [1]
Hits – 181 [4, tied with Stuffy McInnis]
Doubles – 23 [8, tied with four others]
Triples – 14 [6, tied with Bobby Veach]
Home Runs – 2
RBI – 85 [5]
Bases on Balls – 97 [2]
Int. BB – N/A
Strikeouts – 31
Stolen Bases – 58 [2]
Caught Stealing – 30 [4]
Average - .344 [1]
OBP - .452 [1]
Slugging Pct. - .452 [4]
Total Bases – 238 [5]
GDP – N/A
Hit by Pitches – 6 [11, tied with eight others]
Sac Hits – 28 [8]
Sac Flies – N/A

League-leading runs scored were +21 ahead of runners-up Eddie Murphy & Tris Speaker
League-leading batting avg. was +.006 ahead of runners-up Tris Speaker & Joe Jackson
League-leading OBP was +.029 ahead of runner-up Tris Speaker

Midseason snapshot: 2B – 10, 3B – 6, HR - 1, RBI - 24, AVG - .328, OBP - .428

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Most hits, game – 4 (in 5 AB) at Cleveland 6/12
Longest hitting streak – 12 games
HR at home – 2
HR on road – 0
Most home runs, game – 1 (in 2 AB) vs. Bos. Red Sox 6/29, (in 4 AB) vs. Detroit 8/20
Multi-HR games – 0
Most RBIs, game – 3 vs. Detroit 8/20
Pinch-hitting – No appearances

Fielding
Chances – 764
Put Outs – 354
Assists – 387
Errors – 23
DP – 55
Pct. - .970

Postseason Batting: 4 G (World Series vs. Boston Braves)
PA – 17, AB – 14, R – 0, H – 3, 2B – 0, 3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 1, BB – 2, IBB – N/A, SO – 1, SB – 1, CS – N/A, AVG - .214, OBP - .313, SLG - .214, TB – 3, GDP – N/A, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – N/A

Awards & Honors:
AL MVP: Chalmers Award

Top 5 in AL MVP Voting:
Eddie Collins, PhilaA.: 63 pts. - 98% share
Sam Crawford, Det.: 35 pts. – 55% share
Frank Baker, PhilaA.: 17 pts. – 27% share
Donie Bush, Det.: 17 pts. – 27% share
Joe Jackson, Clev.: 15 pts. – 23% share

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A’s went 99-53 to win the AL pennant by 8.5 games over the Boston Red Sox while leading the league in runs scored (749), hits (1392), home runs (29), RBIs (627), batting (.272), on-base percentage (.348), slugging (.352), and total bases (1804). Lost World Series to the Boston Braves, 4 games to 0.

Aftermath of ‘14:
Following the stunning World Series defeat, Connie Mack began dismantling the A’s, part of which involved selling Collins to the Chicago White Sox for $50,000. With his new team in 1915, he continued to excel, hitting .332 with 77 RBIs and 118 runs scored. He also led all AL second basemen with 487 assists and a .974 fielding percentage. The White Sox contended in 1916, finishing a close second to the Red Sox. Collins contributed a .308 average along with 17 triples, 40 stolen bases, 52 RBIs, and 87 runs scored. In the field he topped all AL second basemen with 75 DPs and a .976 fielding percentage. The team won the pennant in 1917 while Collins batted .289, scored 91 runs, and was once again outstanding in the field. He hit .409 in the six-game World Series triumph over the New York Giants. He and the White Sox had a lesser year during the war-shortened 1918 season, after which he joined the Marines for the wrap-up to World War I. Discharged just prior to spring training in 1919, Collins was captain of the White Sox team that won the AL pennant and contained players that conspired to throw the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds, although he was not one of the conspirators. While the franchise reeled from the effects of the “Black Sox” scandal after 1920, Collins remained an effective player for several more seasons, even being the team’s player/manager for a time in 1924 and then full-time in 1925 and ’26. Following his dismissal as both manager and player after the 1926 season, he returned to the Athletics, where he was a reserve and pinch-hitter primarily in 1927, and a coach and occasional player from 1928 to ’30, after which he retired as a player at age 43.  Overall for his career, Collins batted .333 with 3315 hits that included 438 doubles, 187 triples, and 47 home runs. He further accumulated 1299 RBIs, scored 1821 runs, and stole 741 bases. With the A’s his numbers were a .337 average with 1308 hits, 172 doubles, 85 triples, 16 home runs, 496 RBIs, 756 runs scored, and 373 stolen bases. In World Series play he hit .328 in 34 games. Following his playing career, he became vice-president and general manager of the Boston Red Sox until 1947, four years prior to his death at 63. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1939. His son Eddie Jr. played for three undistinguished seasons for the Athletics.     

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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.

Feb 19, 2019

MVP Profile: Johnny Evers, 1914

Second Baseman, Boston Braves


Age:  33 (July 21)
1st season with Braves
Bats – Left, Throws – Right
Height: 5’9”    Weight: 125

Prior to 1914:
A native of Troy, New York, Evers (which was pronounced Eevers) originally played sandlot baseball and became shortstop for his home-town team in the New York State League where he exhibited good range while being error-prone. He was hitting .285 with 10 home runs when he drew the interest of the Chicago Cubs during the 1902 season. Evers was a throw-in as part of a $1500 deal to purchase one of his teammates, a pitching prospect. Debuting with the Cubs in September, he was initially tried at shortstop before moving to second base. He fielded well in his 26-game trial at second but hit only .222. Regular second baseman Bobby Lowe suffered a major knee injury that lingered into the spring of 1903 and provided Evers with the opportunity to start regularly. The slightly built rookie (he weighed just 105 pounds when he first joined the Cubs) batted .293 with 27 doubles, 7 triples, 25 stolen bases, and 52 RBIs. A scrappy and argumentative player who focused his ire on opponents and umpires, hence drawing many ejections and suspensions, he was nicknamed “the Crab” due to both his disposition and the way he covered his ground at the keystone. Possessing speed, if not batting power (he didn’t hit his first major league home run until 1905), and intelligence, he became adept at the inside aspects of the game. The Cubs won three consecutive pennants from 1906 to ’08 and Evers was part of a legendary double play combination along with shortstop Joe Tinker and first baseman Frank Chance. He and Tinker shared an intense mutual dislike but performed well together. Better in the field and on the base paths rather than as a hitter, Evers became adept at drawing walks and stealing bases. He stole a career-high 49 bases in 1906 and followed up with 46 in 1907 and 36 in 1908. His batting averages during the same three seasons were .255, .250, and .300. His gamesmanship and knowledge of the rules played a crucial role in the tight 1908 pennant race with the Giants when he called for the ball and tagged second following an apparent game-winning single by the Giants when New York’s rookie first baseman Fred Merkle, who was the baserunner on first, failed to touch second and ran directly to the Polo Grounds clubhouse. In what entered baseball lore as “Merkle’s Boner”, Merkle was ruled out and the game declared a tie. Replayed later, the Cubs won both the game and the NL pennant. Evers hit .263 in both 1909 and 1910, another pennant-winning year for the Cubs. The high-strung Evers suffered a nervous breakdown that limited him to 46 games in 1911 and followed a disastrous financial loss off the field. He recovered in 1912 to hit .341 with 23 doubles, 11 triples, and a home run while knocking in 61 RBIs. In 1913 he was named player/manager and hit .285 while the Cubs finished in third place with an 88-65 record. Fired as manager after the season, the Cubs attempted to trade him and the NL owners gave him his release and he sold his contract to the Braves, where manager George Stallings appointed him team captain.  

1914 Season Summary
Appeared in 139 games
2B – 139

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

Batting
Plate Appearances – 612 [18]
At Bats – 491
Runs – 81 [9]
Hits – 137
Doubles – 20
Triples – 3
Home Runs – 1
RBI – 40
Bases on Balls – 87 [4]
Int. BB – N/A
Strikeouts – 26
Stolen Bases – 12
Caught Stealing – N/A
Average - .279 [16]
OBP - .390 [7]
Slugging Pct. - .338
Total Bases – 166
GDP – N/A
Hit by Pitches – 2
Sac Hits – 31 [3]
Sac Flies – N/A

Midseason snapshot: HR – 0, RBI – 20, AVG. - .303, OBP – .402

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Most hits, game – 3 on eight occasions
Longest hitting streak – 8 games
HR at home – 0
HR on road – 1
Most home runs, game – 1 (in 1 AB) at Brooklyn 10/6
Multi-HR games – 0
Most RBIs, game – 2 vs. NY Giants 6/27, vs, NY Giants 9/7
Pinch-hitting – No appearances

Fielding
Chances – 715
Put Outs – 301
Assists – 397
Errors – 17
DP – 73
Pct. - .976

Postseason Batting: 4 G (World Series vs. Phila. A’s)
PA – 18, AB – 16, R – 2, H – 7, 2B – 0, 3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 2, BB – 2, IBB – N/A, SO – 2, SB – 1, CS – N/A, AVG - .438, OBP - .500, SLG - .438, TB – 7, GDP – N/A, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – N/A

Awards & Honors:
NL MVP: Chalmers Award

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:
Johnny Evers, BosB.: 50 pts. - 78% share
Rabbit Maranville, BosB.: 44 pts. – 69% share
Bill James, BosB.: 33 pts. – 52% share
George Burns, NYG: 31 pts. – 48% share
Dots Miller, StLC.: 18 pts. – 28% share

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Braves went 94-59 to win the NL pennant by 10.5 games over the New York Giants. The team led the league in walks drawn (502). “The Miracle Braves” were in last place on July 4 before taking off on a 43-13 stretch that put them in first on Sept. 8. Won World Series over the Philadelphia Athletics, 4 games to 0.

Aftermath of ‘14:
Evers appeared in only 83 games in 1915 due to injuries and suspensions, and he hit .263 with six extra-base hits. Following a mediocre 1916 season and poor first half in 1917, he was waived by the Braves and finished the year with the Philadelphia Phillies. Overall for the season Evers batted just .214. Signed by the Boston Red Sox in 1918, he was released without seeing any action. Evers served as a coach with the New York Giants in 1920 and managed the Cubs for 96 games in 1921 and appeared in one game for the White Sox in 1922, another team that he later managed with unimpressive results. He eventually returned to the Braves as a coach and scout. Overall for his major league playing career Evers hit .270 with 1659 hits that included 216 doubles, 70 triples, and 12 home runs. He also accumulated 536 RBIs and 324 stolen bases. With the Braves he batted .254 with 278 hits that included 28 doubles, 5 triples, and 2 home runs while also accumulating 77 RBIs and 25 stolen bases. In 20 postseason games, he hit .316. Evers ran a sporting goods store after his retirement from baseball. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1946, a year before his death at age 65. His younger brother Joe appeared in one game with the Giants in 1913.

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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.