On January 24, 1939, the baseball writers
select EddieCollins, Willie Keeler and George Sisler to the Hall of Fame.
George Sisler never played on a pennant winner and he wasn't a slugger, but in spite
of that he earned a reputation as the best first baseman in the first 30 years
of the 20th century. The greatest player in St. Louis Browns' history, he twice
batted over .400, and his 257 hits in 1920, hitting 420 for the season, his hit
record remained a modern major league record. later broken by Ichiro Suzuki
That same year, the lefty-swinging Sisler hit in 41 consecutive games, an American League record that stood until surpassed by Joe DiMaggio. Sisler, who attended the University of Michigan, where he played for Branch Rickey,
Factoid
On September 1, 1918, Sisler hit a double off Ty
Cobb. Cobb was making his first major league appearance on the mound. Sisler
also pitched in the game for St. Louis, pitching a scorless 9th in
the Browns win. He made 24 apperances over his career with a 2.35 ERA and has a
shutout to his credit in 1916.
Collins batted an even .333 for his career,
collected 3,315 hits and stole 744 bases as. A member of four World Championship
teams, Eddie Collins was a winner with a confident and aggressive style of
play. He played 25 years in the major leagues and was considered the finest
second baseman of his time. He led his league in fielding nine times, and he
accepted more chances, had more assists, and made more putouts than any other
pivot man in history. He was one of the best performers in World Series play,
hitting .328 with 42 hits and 14 stolen bases in 34 games.
Eddie Collins buried his bats during the
off-season in shallow holes in his backyard that he called "graves"
in order to keep them "lively."
Keeler, who “hit ’em where they ain’t”,
batted .341 and collected 2,932 hits. A master with a bat, Willie Keeler was a demon
at the top of the lineup for Ned Hanlon's Orioles in the 1890s. Keeler led his
team to four pennants, two each in Baltimore and Brooklyn, winning two batting
titles. As a member of the 1890s Orioles' teams that revolutionized the way
baseball was played, Keeler was adroit at laying down a bunt, chopping the ball
into the ground to beat it out for an infield hit, performing the suicide
squeeze, and parlaying the double steal. Keeler's 44-game hitting streak in 1897
was a record until surpassed by Joe DiMaggio in 1941.
He is highlighted on the January 1 podcast –
the Brooklyn Millionaire