Ty Cobb - Not a Cheating Bigot or Dirty Player - new biography
http://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/book...wkN/story.html
Sounds like he has been misjudged on several fronts. |
Ty Cobb - Not a Cheating Bigot or Dirty Player - new biography
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I guess he was right. |
You can read what those who played with and against him had to say about him long after he is gone and they are now old men with nothing to prove or hide in "The Glory of Their Times." Even better is to hear it directly from them on the audio edition. In general, Cobb was not well liked at all by his contemporaries, got into a lot of fights on and off the field, and had some old-fashioned racial ideas--"Still fighting the Civil War" is how Sam Crawford put it. However, to a man they also defend his base-running as hard-nosed and aggressive, not cheating or dirty.
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To be fair, Crawford to me often comes across as the "Cobb"-like personality. In "The Glory of Their Times" Crawford seems anti-social to a degree. Also, it must have been a tough situation for him during his playing days where the young Cobb came to Detroit and received all the headlines. Jealousy may have been an issue for Crawford. Not to mention, did Crawford join in heavily in the poor rookie treatment of Cobb? Interesting too that accounts exist that Cobb lobbied hard on behalf of Crawford to help get him elected to the HOF As with most things it seems, with Cobb, it's complicated But I would caution the use of Crawford as a character witness for/against Cobb at least to some degree |
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My all-time favorite player and to me the greatest hitter and greatest PLAYER of ALL TIME. I don't know how I'd feel about this book being true. I definitely would like to read it. I highly doubt that he was anything but what he has been portrayed as though. |
Cobb was an awesome business man that's for sure.....
He did really well for himself after his playing days. |
Cobb was also an extremely intelligent and well-read man. I had the opportunity to review a couple dozen original Cobb full letters to a female fan and he does nothing but write about the weather and the several books he was reading.
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with Cobb being my favorite HOFer this book is a must buy and should be an interesting read and comparison to Stumps book.
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For a much different perspective into Cobb, this interview with his grandson is very interesting.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaA5KpAkKzc |
Ty Cobb was not a racist. He defended the inclusion of African-Americans in baseball and all life on numerous occasions. I think you'd be hard-pressed to find a quote in which he disparages them.
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Sounds like a good read IMO, might check it out.
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I just finished reading Herschel Cobb's, Heart of a Tiger. A fantastic book which not only highlights the dysfunction of the Cobb family, but also the warmth and generosity of Ty Cobb in his twilight years -- albeit, through the eyes of a young teenager.
While it's hard to say what the man was like during his playing days (depending on who you believe - and for me, Stump isn't one of them), but as a man in his later years, stories of the time spent with his family and him helping out former players who were down on their luck, certainly conflict with how he is perceived by many baseball enthusiasts. |
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For the record, here's Buck O'Neil's take. If I was able to sit down and have a conversation with any former player or manager, living or deceased, I would probably choose this gentleman.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7zYopq-dFs |
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Tim Hornbaker has written a biography of Cobb that has also just been released. His book, which features extensive footnotes and sourcing, concludes that Cobb was racist. Not so much in the KKK mold but in the "I'm white and you should act with deference to me at all times." mold. I asked Tim about this other new book and he told me he doesn't understand how anyone could draw the "not a racist" conclusion.
Hornbaker's book, btw, is fantastic. FWIW, he agrees that Cobb was not a dirty player. |
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Herb K thanks for that !!! I've never read that before. Looking forward to this book. |
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Cobb War On The Basepaths ...................... two Cobb's in two weeks ??? http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/war-...=9781613217658 |
Author coming up on Olbermann right now
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Got my copy today 4 chapters deep.
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Ty Cobb was very complex, but he was not the racist that he's been painted to be by the likes of Al Stump. And there is plenty of evidence in Cobb's own words and actions to prove it.
https://nationaltycobbhistorian.wordpress.com/ |
I'm surprised this hasn't been a more popular topic on here, if what Leerhsen writes is true than the popular conception that has been drawn of Cobb will be completely changed.
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/DYldVJyEBP4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
That link is completely awesome... Thanks for sharing.
Makes a pretty compelling case that Cobb wasn't exactly the monster that history has made him out to be... Who knows? That just makes his mystique that much more interesting |
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His legend is growing, and deservedly so. May your collecting fill you with joy, Larry |
We thought Stump's fiction had been largely debunked years ago.
Cobb may have been no angel, but what's to say the ancient old-timers bad-mouthing him were? We've known bitter, sour old men who've held grudges for fifty years and more (we're some of them). |
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The "Cobb was a racist" thing isn't just from Stump (who was a fraud) and it's not just from old guys airing a 50-year old grudge. |
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Cobb was a racist. He was ruthless. He was also a brilliant ballplayer. Those things are not mutually exclusive. Let me amend this post to say this: I truly, truly hope that what Leerhsen says is correct. I am a massive Giants' fan, but I could never collect Alvin Dark baseball cards after hearing so many stories of his racism. Years later, someone pointed to an obituary in the San Francisco Chronicle about Dark. It contained quotes by Alou and Cepeda about how Dark had asked for forgiveness for his words and behavior in his later days. While not absolving the individual of racist acts, the idea of contrition is a powerful one. I'll try to follow the example of Buck O'Neill in life... and hope that the truth about Cobb wins out. History should never be whitewashed, but it should contain the whole unvarnished record. |
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Another interview. I'm not seeking these out, the author so happens to be appearing on the programs I frequent.
http://onlyagame.wbur.org/2015/05/16...arles-leerhsen |
These are the Ty Cobb stories I have heard. Are all of these not true? They are all pretty damaging:
Edited to add: Riley Cooper is known as a racist because he said n****** once (or twice?) after a game. Ty Cobb has done that. Ron Artest is known as a violent animal because he climbed into the stands to beat up a heckler. Ty Cobb has done that. Ray Rice is known as a woman beater because he punched his girlfriend. Ty Cobb has also done that! Could you imagine an athlete more racist than Riley Cooper, as violent as Ron Artest and has the same regard for women as Ray Rice? Sounds like a pleasant fellow :) |
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Not to say that Cobb wasn't wealthy but at the times of doing what he did fighting (with fans) was common and not like it was EVER in the NBgay. Hitting women (though not saying he get's a pass) was quite common and a hell of a lot less looked down upon then. |
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So you're not saying he didn't do these things, but that they were socially acceptable. I get it. Back then it was socially acceptable to try to murder a man for intervening in your berating racist rant of another man? |
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Cobb was fairly well off in 1919, when he savagely beat and hospitalized a woman for talking back to him. I mean, you're right, things were different back then, but when people say he wasn't a violent, racist thug and a disciple human being they should probably take a look at what he has done. |
I wouldn't call him a racist thug that's a bit off the mark. Did you read the book ?? It doesn't dismiss things that he had done but it sure proves he wasn't a racist like Stump made him out to be.
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You probably should read the book which counters much of what you say -- and actually was written by someone who did real research. Maybe then you'll become a disciple human being like Cobb too.
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Well said, Jeff. What has to be realized here is that 40 years after the Civil War ended....it really didn't end in many American's minds. Circa 1905 - 1908, when the careers of guys like Cobb and Joe Jackson started, there were very few BB players from the "deep South". And, it wasn't easy at the beginning for them to fit in. Hey guys....after reading all these books on Cobb that have been written by guys who have an "agenda", try reading TY AND THE BABE. Tom Stanton provides a fair and very interesting take on Cobb (especially Cobb's rivalry with the Babe....when Ruth pitched for Boston). I'll not reveal anymore, but it's a great story on these two legends of Baseball, during their playing years and after. The Appendix is about Ty Cobb versus Babe Ruth, Game by Game. It's fascinating to read the details of approx. 200 games that Cobb and Ruth played in from May 11, 1915 > Sept 11, 1927. http://i529.photobucket.com/albums/d...obbandruth.jpg TED Z . |
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Jeff and others--
Probably one of the neatest projects I've had in the auction industry was reviewing the dozens of letters penned between Ty Cobb and Helene Champlain ranging over five decades from the 1910s through the 1950s. I'm not sure how Cobb and Champlain met and if there was "something more" to their relationship, but the letters were hardly dripping with sexual tension. What's more is that they were entirely absent of racial rhetoric, the ramblings of a psychotic mad man or even one mention of baseball. In short, they were really interesting book reviews with other personal anecdotes interspersed. In short, it helped me understand the depth of Cobb in greater detail....an astute and well-read business man who loved the weather in both California and Nevada :) |
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