Today we add the great, and underappreciated in my book, Hall of Famer Larry Doby to my custom "Classic Baseball" set, to be released later this year celebrating the sport I hold dear for all these years:
Doby
began his professional career at the age of 18, suiting up for the
Newark Eagles at second base in 1942, putting in parts of three seasons
before heading off to the Military in 1945.
He'd
be back to playing ball in 1946 with Newark, and would lead the Negro
Leagues with 85 hits, 10 triples and 138 total bases while making his
first All-Star team.
In
1947, just a few months after Jackie Robinson broke the MLB
color-barrier playing for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the National League,
Doby would do the same in the American League, donning the uniform of
the Cleveland Indians, appearing in 29 games.
Though
his initial start with Cleveland was a bit rough, to the tune of a .156
batting average over 32 at-bats, Doby would immediately find his stroke
in 1948, hitting .301 for the eventual World Champions, scoring 83 runs
while hitting 14 homers with 23 doubles and nine triples, even
garnering some MVP attention at season's end.
He would make seven All-Star teams while with Cleveland, with MVP consideration in four of those campaigns.
He'd
lead the A.L. in homers twice with 32 in both 1952 and 1954, while
leading the league with 126 RBIs in the latter season, one of five
seasons he'd top 100.
Never given enough praise for his
ground-breaking MLB debut, often overshadowed by Jackie Robinson's debut
just before him, I'm happy to see his place in Big League history
getting more and more attention as time passes.
Thankfully, he
was also given his rightful place in the Hall of Fame, having been
selected for enshrinement in 1998, though far too late in my opinion,
but at least before he passed away, which he did on June 18th of 2003 at
the age of 79.