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-   -   Forgotten Hall of Famers (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=267052)

frankbmd 03-19-2019 09:03 AM

Forgotten Hall of Famers
 
Net54 is a source of voluminous information about prewar cards and ballplayers, particularly those who made it to the Hall of Fame. If you have hung around here for more than five years, I'm sure you can attest to this. However for some reason some players are rarely mentioned. Let's exclude owners, umpires, managers and the like and focus on those players that were elected into the Hall of Fame on the basis of their playing careers. Nominate a player who is worthy of more love on Net54.

My nomination is

https://www.collectorfocus.com/image...0156/mcginnity

The Iron Man

aljurgela 03-19-2019 09:37 AM

Maybe I am wrong... but I think most negro leaguers
 
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But how about pop lloyd? Here is a run of all of his cards.

SAllen2556 03-19-2019 09:42 AM

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Big Sam Thompson

From SABR:
In 1887, Sam set a record of 203 hits, thus becoming the first man in major league history to garner more than 200 hits in a season. Sam also batted .406 and drove in 166 runners, a record that stood until Babe Ruth delivered 171 RBIs in 1921.

One record that Thompson continues to hold, and which probably will never be broken, is the ratio of RBIs per game played. Sam averaged nearly one RBI per game, .923 to be exact, ahead of modern-era sluggers Babe Ruth, Hank Greenberg, Joe DiMaggio and Lou Gehrig.

Not mine (but I want one!)
Attachment 347940

TUM301 03-19-2019 09:56 AM

Awesome card, good ole "Air Guitar" Thompson !!

clydepepper 03-19-2019 10:16 AM

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309 Triples!!! - but played in Cobb's shadow.

Attachment 347953

Attachment 347944

perezfan 03-19-2019 10:34 AM

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I interpreted it more as for guys that are forgotten, and many don't even know are in the Hall of Fame. Here's a guy that no one ever talks about. He hit .340 or better 4 times, and is an unheralded Hall of Famer.

Plus, he has a super cool T206 Card in which the sky looks like it's on fire...

TheBig6 03-19-2019 01:00 PM

Elmer Flick
https://photos.imageevent.com/rucker...ze/flick_1.jpg

Exhibitman 03-19-2019 01:03 PM

Besides being one of my favorite T206 portraits so I wanted to post it, when was the last time you heard anything about Ed Walsh?

https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibi...06%20walsh.jpg

darwinbulldog 03-19-2019 01:13 PM

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Here are a couple that have been largely forgotten.

frankbmd 03-19-2019 01:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Exhibitman (Post 1863689)
Besides being one of my favorite T206 portraits so I wanted to post it, when was the last time you heard anything about Ed Walsh?

https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibi...06%20walsh.jpg

Back in the fall of '08 I remember an article about him in the Chicago papers in which he complained about the slackers in the bullpen after pitching 466 innings with 42 complete games. Not only was he responsible for 49 starts, he led the team in saves with 6. I would conclude that he was justifiably pissed.

The following year his innings pitched were more than 50% less.

triwak 03-20-2019 11:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aljurgela (Post 1863629)
But how about pop lloyd? Here is a run of all of his cards.

My goodness, Al!! What a run!

judsonhamlin 03-20-2019 01:20 PM

I'm guessing most of the mid-tier pitchers from the 20's and 30's qualify - Lyons, Haines, Grimes, Pennock, Hoyt, Rixey, Ruffing, Shawkey, Faber

ValKehl 03-20-2019 01:49 PM

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I nominate Edgar Charles "Sam" Rice who began his professional baseball career in the minors as a pitcher at the rather late age of 22 in the spring of 1912. Almost immediately, his family was struck by a horrific tragedy, one that Rice very seldom mentioned, even to his teammates, during the rest of his life. The following is from SABR's bio of Rice:

"Rice signed a contract in October of 1911 with the Galesburg Pavers of the Class D Central Association. [6] He made the 150 mile trek across state the next April in hopes of securing a spot on a professional baseball team for the 1912 season. Rice and the other new Paver recruits reported to Galesburg's Illinois Park on Thursday, April 11 for their first practice. Two days later they met the local Knox College nine in a pre-season tune up game, during which Rice made his professional pitching debut. [7] In all, Rice made four pre-season appearances for the Pavers, two against the local college boys, and two against the nearby Central Association rival Monmouth Browns. [8] His performance in these contests led a local reporter to pronounce Rice "one of the most promising of [Galesburg manager] Ducky Ebert's recruit pitchers." [9] The most promising of his pre-season outings occurred on April 21 in a Sunday afternoon encounter with the Browns. Rice gave up a run on one hit and two walks while striking out four in three innings of work, helping the Pavers to an eventual 6-1 victory. [10] Unfortunately, any celebration that might have accompanied either his team's win or his own improving pro prospects was quickly curtailed.

While Rice was away in Galesburg, his wife and children moved in with his parents on the family farm in Donovan. On Sunday, April 21, as Rice took to the mound in Galesburg, his family took to the road to visit friends in his wife's hometown of Iroquois. Shortly after the family returned from their outing that evening, a violent tornado ripped through Donovan. The high winds destroyed the Rice farmhouse and killed Rice's wife, both of his children, his mother, and his youngest two sisters. According to a report published in the Kentland Democrat a few days later, "... the house, with contents, and everything else on the premises ... was seized, torn, and whirled into fragments and strewn entirely across the farm. ... [family members'] ... bodies were found ... 150 [to] 400 yards south of where the house was ... all nearly entirely naked, the clothing having been whipped into shreds and torn away by the wind." His father survived the storm, but was seriously injured. "When neighbors came upon the scene, they found Mr. Rice running distractedly about among his dead dear ones in the ravine, and carrying in his arms one of the children that yet showed evidence of life, but died a few moments later."[11] All told, the storm left over 70 dead and as many as 200 injured while destroying over $1,000,000 in property as it thundered along a line beginning southwest of Donovan in Illinois, through Rice's birthplace of Morocco in Indiana, and to points beyond. [12]

Rice was notified of the tragedy by telegraph the next morning [13] and immediately set out for home. He arrived in time for his mother's and sisters' funerals on April 23 and for those of his wife and children the day after, at services reportedly attended by "thousands" of mourners. [14] He stayed with his father afterward, helping care for him at the neighboring farmhouse where he had been taken after the storm. The elder Rice succumbed to his injuries shortly thereafter, however, dying on April 30. [15]"

Following this tragedy, after wandering a bit, Rice returned to baseball and made it to the Senators at age 25. After a brief period as a pitcher (1-1 W-L record), he was converted to an outfielder because of his hitting ability. A contact hitter who seldom struck out, Rice played mostly during the era when the home run hitters emerged after the introduction of the lively ball. He finished his career at age 44 with 2,987 base hits, back when there was no emphasis on getting 3,000 hits; if his 19 World Series base hits are included, Rice finished with 3,006 base hits for his career.

I'm working on a master set of Sam Rice cards. This scarce R316 Kashin premium photo is one of my favorites:

esd10 03-20-2019 03:28 PM

Joe Kelley

aljurgela 03-21-2019 12:00 PM

Thanks....
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by triwak (Post 1863927)
My goodness, Al!! What a run!

Took a lot of luck and $! But love the run!


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