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MICKEY VERNON
By Paul Wysard
Stats from www.baseball-reference.com
This two-time AL batting champion specialized in stroking line drives
from chalk to chalk and into all corners. The seven-year gap between
hitting titles (1946 & '53) ties legendary shortstop Luke Appling (1936 &
'43) as the second widest ever. Ted Williams (1948 & '57) is first.
Respected baseball historian Bill James has rated Vernon at # 23 on
the list of the best first basemen, and following are some other views of
the career over the years.
1. A Young Fan in the 1940s
When this contributor was 10 years old, into Major League baseball
for the first time, subtlety and nuance within the game were not yet
understood or appreciated. The important aspects were: Who had
the highest batting average? Who hit the most homeruns? Who were
the 20-game winners? And so, in 1946, one of my first heroes was
Mickey Vernon, AL batting champ at - wow! - .353. What was also
special was that he was not a Yankee or a Dodger or a Cardinal and
that he was not on a pennant-winner, as stars Williams and Musial and
DiMaggio had been. He played for the 4th-place Washington Senators,
about whom I knew little other than they were not supposed to be very
good, but that a great pitcher named Walter Johnson had been a "Nat."
There was an older father of a friend down the street, a retired Army
officer, who always had a copy of The Sporting News at hand and who
knew all the teams and players and pennant races. He would talk about
the game for as much and as long as his son and friends wanted.
"Is Mickey Vernon a star?" I asked one day.
"Yes," the old man replied, " but it's different."
"Why? What does that mean?"
"Well, he doesn't play in New York or Boston. That's where the most
people are and that's where many important newspapers are printed.
Mr. Williams has trouble with reporters and Mr. DiMaggio doesn't, but
either way, they're written about all the time and thousands of people
read about them. That's not so with Vernon in Washington, especially
this year, when the folks there are more interested in politics."
"Oh. . . and, gee, Mickey had 51 doubles!"
OPS was an unused statistic in the 1940s, and Vernon was not a
power-hitting first baseman along the lines of Mize and Greenberg
and York, but his number in that area in that year was just over .900,
very respectable even 60 years later, when his position is expected to
produce at least that much. He hit 8 homers in that title year; today 35
or 40 are a must. It was a remarkable season for him.
Imagine, then, the disappointment over the next two campaigns when
Vernon's averages dropped to .265 and then to a nightmarish .242. The
OPS declined over 200 points to under .700 in 1948. There were no
injuries in those years, and Vernon had not discussed this very-apparent
slump in articles and interviews. Was he finished as a player at 30?
2. A Somewhat Older Fan in the 1950s
Mentioned many times in TDA articles has been Branch Rickey's
credo: "Trade a man JUST BEFORE his skills decline." Whether
or not the Senators subscribed to that tendency is not clear, but they
chose to trade Vernon to the Cleveland Indians prior to the 1949
season. The Ohio Tribe had just won it all, but were willing to part
with Eddie Robinson, a first baseman with more power and three
years younger, in exchange for Vernon. Both players performed
as hoped for their new clubs -- just about .290, 18, 80 in each case.
Robinson went on to have three even better years for the White Sox
in the early '50s, but the compelling aspect of Vernon's work (for our
purposes here) was the dramatic increase in homeruns, which were
essentially doubled from previous highs. Years later, he said that
many of the long balls he hit in the Capitol's Griffith Stadium would
have gone out elsewhere. A modest, team player, he essentially
was hinting that he could have ALWAYS been at the 20-homer
level had he played elsewhere earlier, although he never, ever, complained
about playing conditions in Washington. And yet there
is much to support the idea of power arriving in one's 30s, because
when he returned by trade to the Senators, he hit 10, then 15, then
20 homeruns in 1952-54. In 1956, he spent a season in Boston,
with fellow close-to-40 Ted Williams, and the two old-timers combined
for .327, 39 homers and 166 RBI. Of his 172 career homers,
well over one-half were hit after the age of 33.
But Vernon's finest year was 1953. Along with his AL-leading .337,
he reached career highs in RBI (115), runs scored (101), and once
again was tops in doubles (43). All of that, however, was accompanied
by controversy. Indian third baseman Al Rosen, with whom Vernon had
played briefly in 1950, was poised to seize the Triple Crown. Some
players of the time have told of an intense desire to prevent that through
a Vernon batting title. Vernon has said nothing about it, but two Senators
have claimed they purposely made outs in front of their teammate
on the last inning of the last day, which preserved the .337 against
Rosen's .336. If true, it was neither the first nor last time such plots
have been successfully hatched. A superb season in any case.
3. Looking Back a Half-Century Later
Many older fans, such as this contributor/observer, constantly seek
comparisons as we watch players today and remember predecessors
from yesterday. A conviction here was that John Olerud was a reincarnation
of Mickey Vernon. Both were tall, left-handed both ways,
and very smooth and smart around first base. Primarily line-drive
hitters to all corners and gaps, both could also fist the little flares over
the heads of shortstops and third basemen to earn themselves another
hit along the roads to well over 2,000. Both were patient in the batter's
box, with little fussing and fidgeting followed by a successful stroke at
an attractive pitch. The past tense is in force here because Vernon,
of course, is long retired, and Olerud is winding down his career as
a part-timer for the Red Sox.
It would be perhaps rewarding, and certainly interesting, if the comparitive
theory was acceptable. It is not. Although the similarities reviewed above
exist, in addition to a high .280s career average in each case, these two players
exhibit very significant differences. Olerud is
a much bigger man, at 6'5", 220, while Vernon, in his playing days, was
6'2", 185, fairly tall for the times, but not at all huge by modern criteria.
The temptation to meld these two performers is enhanced by their
attainment of more than .350 in a season through the "all-fields" hitting
style featuring more than 50 doubles. The congruity ends there.
Mickey Vernon could RUN --- 120 career triples and 137 career
steals. Olerud, in contrast, has reached only about 10% of those totals
in all of the years he has played. Olerud's power is much more evident.;
as this is written, he hit two more homers to close in on 250, while Vernon finished at 172.
If we wish to play the comparitive game --- and we are not compelled
to do so --- which players today might be viewed as similar to Vernon?
This contributor suggests two: One is the Braves' Adam LaRoche,
with his still, simple swing, and the other is the Twins' Justin Morneau,
who could hit like Vernon if he would be more selective. In any case,
those youngsters face a long road ahead if they are to match or exceed
the accomplishments of Vernon --- one of the game's pillars.
4. The Early Years
Born and raised in the greater Philadelphia area, Vernon was a high
school star and talented enough to play in an industrial league, many of
which dotted the country in the mid- and late-1930s. Villanova wanted
him and came through with a baseball scholarship for his freshman
year. His frosh coach also managed Easton(Md.) in the Class D Eastern
Shore League, and convinced the young player to sign on for the
summer of 1937. A .287 mark, coupled with fine fielding in 83 games,
caught the eyes of the Senators and they took on his contract. The
next few years reflected the advancement of a typical prospect in those
days as Vernon began his long career.
1937 Easton Eastern Shore League Class D
1938 Greenville(S.C.) SAL"Sally"League Class B
1939 Springfield(MA) Eastern League Class A
1939 Washington AL (.257 in 76 games)
1940 Jersey City International League Class AAA
1940 Washingon AL (September call-up)
In 1941, after tastes of the Majors mixed with the varying minor league
experiences, Vernon took over at first base for the parent club. 1941
was a special year, with several younger players making their marks
alongside the stars of the day --- DiMaggio, Williams, Feller, Keller,
Doerr, and Joe Gordon. Vernon was among the better newcomers,
although not technically a Rookie, with a batting line of .291, 9, 93.
Except for two years of World War II military service, he would be a
regular at his post in the AL through age 38 in 1956.
5. Vernon talks about Vernon
In 2001, Jim Sargent interviewed the old-timer for a fine article in
Baseball Digest. The following quotes are shared through the
courtesy of that writer and story.
On the gap between batting titles and a couple of off-years in the
late 1940s:
Sure, I was hitting the ball sharply back in '46, but
you can hit it hard all season and not do a thing if
you're unlucky enough to be hitting it right at somebody... When you see the ball dropping just inside
the foul lines instead of just outside them, or when
you see fielders just missing balls instead of catching them, you know it's luck that helps your average.
On being sent down at the start of 1940:
I was leading the Eastern League in hitting when
they called me up and I hated to go back (the next
year) to the minors, but Jersey City was the best
thing that could have happened to me... There
were guys on the way up and guys on the way down.
So it was a good experience for me.
On being traded to Boston at age 38:
Boston was all right. The weather was good (and)
you could stay stronger longer. I liked it (and) Mr.
Yawkey was a great guy to play for. But it was too
late in my career to get sent up there. I wished I had
gone up there ten years earlier.
On special thrills:
In the spring of 1954, President Eisenhower came
out to the ballpark to present the silver bat to me. I
think that's the only time a President made that presentation to a batting champion.
Beating out Ted Williams (in 1946) for the batting
title (.353 to .342).
The man who ranks third, all-time, in games played at first base with
2,237, was also a virtual "lifer" in the sport, spending 51 years on and
near professional diamonds. After putting aside his glove, he managed
in the Majors, in the Pacific Coast League, and in the International
League. He coached in St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Los
Angeles, and Montreal. Finally, he served the Yankee organization as
a minor league hitting instructor and scout before retiring in 1987.
The game would mean less to many of us without without having seen, and now remembering,
the contributions of Mickey Vernon.
Games - 2,409
Runs - 1,195
Hits - 2,495
RBI - 1,311
Home Runs - 172
Steals - 37
Average - .286
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