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#1
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Posted By: Darren J. Duet
Who were the biggest major league disappointments of the pre-WW II era? Meaning to old timers equivalent of busts like joe charboneau, phil plantier, gregg jefferies, etc. |
#2
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Posted By: Rhys
Louis Sockalexis, without a doubt. Not a bust on his ability in the majors, but the fact he only lasted for a very short time. McGraw, Jennings and even Ed Barrow in the 1920's (when he was watching Ruth on a daily basis) said he was the greatest player EVER to play the game. Talk about 5 tools!! Throwing: He had Harvard professors measuring his throws and trajectory because they went so far without seeming to come down from gravity that they defied physics (true story). SPEED: The fastest player in the game when he played and that included Keeler and Hoy. FIELDING: The accolades of his fielding are numerous, he was one of the best 2-3 outfielders at least. POWER: In a college exhibition game against the Giants, Amos Rusie made public statements in the newspaper about what he was going to do to Sockalexis when he faced him, Sockalexis then hit a towering home run off of Rusie at the Polo Grounds on the first pitch he saw from him, and not an inside the parker; that was 1896. AVERAGE: He was hitting over .400 as a rookie at mid-season before he started to become an alcoholic. |
#3
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Posted By: Kevin Cummings
I'm currently reading The Pitch That Killed and one of the players the author talks about being a bust was Walter Mails. He was supposedly a tough guy who grew up around San Quentin prison and played against the inmates. |
#4
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Posted By: Darren J. Duet
Great Summary! Thanks for the input. Was he not well received by the other ballplayer's of his time?...Is that why he hit the bottle? |
#5
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Posted By: jay behrens
Sockalexis is probably the biggest what-if ever. Incredible tools and everyone that saw him play before he was comsumed by alcohol all agreed that he was the best they ever saw. The Cleveland Indians are supposedly called that in his honor, but there is more myth than fact surround that. |
#6
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Posted By: dennis
the first 2 that come to mind are harlond clift and pete reiser. also, i would nominate(?) smokey joe wood,dale alexander and joe hauser. |
#7
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Posted By: Chris Counts
I wouldn't consider a career-altering or career-ending injury a justification for calling a player a bust, so I don't believe guys like Joe Wood (whose arm troubles are well-documented in "The Glory Of Our Times") and Pete Reiser (the only thing he ever busted was his skull and several other bones!) should qualify. |
#8
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Posted By: dennis
chris it said great expectations...these players i listed were not busts but big things were expected from them and for whatever reason(and injuries play into this)the expectations were not met.w/o the injuries reiser and wood would no doubt be HoFers....maybe |
#9
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Posted By: Joe P.
The man played for about 10 seasons. |
#10
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Posted By: Ted
Roy Hobbs |
#11
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Posted By: Rhys
In response to Darren's question above, Sockalexis was horribly ridiculed in his 1st year of baseball. People yelled and screamed and mocked him mercilessly every time he came to the plate and it basically drove him to the bottle worse than ever, then he tried to escape out of a second story hotel where Patsy tebeau (Cleveland Manager) had him locked up so he couldn't drink, and he busted his ankle. Since he was not playing for a while his drinking just got worse and worse. The prejudice was worse than people would think, 1896 was only 20 years after some of the most intense Indian/American fighting of our History and many people had very negative feelings toward Indians, plus he was BETTER than all the white heroes. |
#12
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Posted By: warshawlaw
From Jewsinsports.org (great resource for info on Jewish athletes): |
#13
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Posted By: Darren J Duet MD
I'd love to a view a scan of your Sockalexis memorabilia. Thanks for sharing the knowledge, and I'll be hunting for one of his bios--any recommendation? |
#14
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Posted By: Rhys
Here are three pictures of the Sockalexis photo. The picture is HUGE and is in the original frame and glass that it was made in 1895. The player second from the right, back row is Sockalexis. Person in street clothes on the left is Jesse Burkett. He was Worcester Mass' most famous ballplayer and used to help with the Holy Cross team when he could. This is documented in several sources and it has been absolutely confirmed that this is indeed Jesse Burkett in the photo. Player with catchers mitt is Doc Powers a star catcher in the majors for many years. Player on the far left top row is named George Kerrigan and that is who this photo belonged to. They only made these photos for the team members (10-11 total produced) and that is why this is one of only 2 known to have survived, and the only one in public hands. |
#15
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Posted By: Darren J Duet
Great stuff Rhys, |
#16
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Posted By: Joe P.
Back in 1944/45 or 1946, this young pup, an early teener at that time, was also struck by the Sockalexis story. |
#17
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Posted By: tbob
David Clyde the teen phenom, the Taylor guy (Brian?)who was the first round pick in the draft by the Yankees who threw in the high 90's, and Willie Banks, supposedly the next Bob Gibson, a 1st rounder picked by the Twins, all come to mind. Speaking of the Twins, their late 70's, early 80's teams were filled with "can't miss" pitchers who all bombed. Luckily (for us Twins fans) they retooled the farm system guys in the mid 80's (Brunansky, Hrbek, Gaetti, Puckett, Viola and company)and have picked and signed consistently well since then. Despite their pecuniary owner, the Twins farm system is one of the best in the majors and getting even better now that they have discovered South America. |
#18
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Posted By: Joe P.
He busted his paw in a bar fight one night, and that was all she wrote with George and the Yanks. |
#19
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Posted By: john/z28jd
Phillies currently have Brien Taylor reincarnated in Cole Hamels.I saw him in 2003 dominate in single-A as a 19 year old lefty,averaging almost 2 K's per inning in the 4 games i went to,threw 6 perfect innings once,a 7 inning 2 hitter with 13 k's and the other 2 games were real good too.I think one was 6 innings,11 K's if i remember correct. |
#20
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Posted By: Chris B.
my vote goes to Rick Ankiel, who forgot how to throw a ball and today announced he is going to retire as a pitcher and focus on becoming an outfielder. Such a shame; his stuff is (was?) electrifying. |
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