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Everybody on this forum knows 1941 saw Joe DiMaggio hit safely in 56 consecutive games (get stopped and then hit in 16 more!) and Ted Williams go 6 for 8 on the last day to hit .406 for the season (only .002 below DiMaggio’s average during his 56-game streak!). But how many know who led the AL in hits that year?
http://net54baseball.com/attachment....1&d=1571170211 It was Washington SS Cecil Travis, who was halfway to the HoF at the end of the 1941 season. But duty beckoned and like many ball players he joined the armed forces that winter. Although he spent most of the war playing BB for military teams, he shipped out to the ETO in time for the Battle of the Bulge, during which he earned a Bronze Star and suffered frost bite so severely that an operation was required to save his feet. He eventually returned to the Senators while still only 31 years old, but the physical trauma suffered in Europe had robbed him of his ability to excel and his career quickly petered out. Despite hitting less than .250 in parts of three seasons before his retirement (following ‘Cecil Travis Night” in 1947 at Griffith Stadium with General Dwight Eisenhower in attendance), his career .314 batting average is still the best by a SS in AL history and third in MLB history (behind Honus Wagner (who else?) and Arky Vaughan). So, as you enjoy watching this year's World Series, remember to raise a glass to what might have been for Cecil Travis, who protected democracy instead of the 4-5 hole and discarded the second half of a HoF career in the process. |
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#3
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Oft overlooked and always underrated.
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__________________
Check out my aging Sell/Trade Album on my Profile page HOF Type Collector + Philly A's, E/M/W cards, M101-6, Exhibits, Postcards, 30's Premiums & HOF Photos "Assembling an unfocused collection for nearly 50 years." |
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I'm a big fan of Cecil Travis and I know that there were a lot of players who advocated for his inclusion in the Hall of Fame such as Bob Feller, Ted Williams and Buck O'Neil.
A lot of these players felt that he didn't get in as of a direct result of his service.I think he absolutely should. |
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George,
What a nice tribute - thank you for starting this thread. Cecil was one of the finest gentlemen I've every had the pleasure of knowing. Tom |
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Cool post.
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