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Atlanta's All-Time Baseball Team

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19. Atlanta's All-Time Baseball Team

The Atlanta Braves have the widest area of any team, now that the Arizona Diamondbacks have taken Arizona and New Mexico out of the Colorado Rockies' region. The Braves take the entire States of Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Alabama, and much of the States of Tennessee and Mississippi.

This team? It could be the best of the bunch, since the warm weather allows practice all year long, thus explaining why Southern teams do so well in college baseball, compared to their Northeastern and Midwestern counterparts.

It's got a pretty good pitching staff, sensational outfielders and shortstops. Until 2010 or so, it was a little weak behind the plate. The first time around, my runner-up was Jody Davis of Gainesville, Georgia, the catcher for the 1984 Playoff-bound Chicago Cubs. But that has already changed, and it may change further in the next few years.

1B Willie McCovey of Mobile, Alabama. And that's not pronounced "MOH-bull," it's "Mo-BEEL." "Stretch" is in the Hall of Fame, his Number 44 has been retired by the San Francisco Giants, he's in the 500 Home Run Club, he has a statue outside AT&T Park, he has a 147 lifetime OPS+, he won the 1959 National League Rookie of the Year and 1969 NL Most Valuable Player. (Nope, Tom Seaver didn't win it that year.) When The Sporting News announced its 100 Greatest Baseball Players in 1999, he came in at Number 56.

The Atlanta region is so loaded at 1st base, the starting lineup couldn't be cracked by Bill Terry of Atlanta (though he was often called "Memphis Bill," so he may have grown up in Cardinals territory). The Giants retired his Number 3. When The Sporting News announced its 100 Greatest Baseball Players in 1999, he came in at Number 59.

Also not getting in, except as Honorable Mentions: Johnny Mize of Demorest, Georgia and Frank "Big Hurt" Thomas of Columbus, Georgia (the White Sox retired his Number 35 and dedicated a statue of him at U.S. Cellular Field). With Thomas' recent election, that's 4 HOFers at this position. (The Big Hurt even finished with the same number of homers as McCovey, 521.)

Actually, Thomas made it 7, along with the aforementioned and 3 legends from the Negro Leagues: Walter "Buck" Leonard of Rocky Mount, North Carolina (that town is closer to Washington than to Atlanta, but North Carolina's baseball tastes tilt toward Atlanta, partly due to its Southernness, partly due to the Durham Bulls having once been a Braves farm team); George "Mule" Suttles of Blocton, Alabama; and Ben Taylor of Anderson, South Carolina.

Of course, a lot of what we think about Leonard, a.k.a. "the black Lou Gehrig" -- he, too, was a 1st baseman who batted lefthanded and wore Number 4, but unlike Gehrig lived to a ripe old age -- is not what we know. Still, The Sporting News named him to their 100 Greatest Baseball Players in 1999. Having played in both Washington and Pittsburgh with the Homestead Grays, he is honored on the Washington Wall of Stars at Nationals Park. Leonard admitted that Taylor was his mentor, and Taylor had also been a fine pitcher in the years before the formal establishment of the Negro Leagues in 1920. Suttles was one of the top sluggers in Negro League history.

2B Frank White of Greenville, Mississippi. A 5-time All-Star, 8 Gold Gloves (his last, legitimately, at age 36), his Number 20 has been retired by the Kansas City Royals, and the Royals have never reached the postseason without him -- with him, 7 times, including losing the World Series in 1980 and winning it in 1985. He also collected over 2,000 hits, so he wasn't a "good field, no hit" player, either.

Certainly, Jackie Robinson would be a better choice. But, while he was born in Cairo, Georgia, he was moved by his mother to Pasadena, California when he was 1 year old, so he qualifies for Los
Angeles, not Atlanta.

Honorable Mention to Brandon Phillips of Stone Mountain, Georgia. He'll only give you 18 home runs a year, but he had his 1st 100+ RBI season last year (his 3rd of at least 94), to go with his 3rd All-Star appearance and his 4th Gold Glove. He's helped the Cincinnati Reds reach 3 of the last 4 postseasons.

Honorable Mention to Dan Uggla of Columbia, Tennessee. A 3-time All-Star, in 8 seasons he's got 231 doubles and 231 home runs. He's helped the Braves reach the last 2 postseasons.

SS Luke Appling of Atlanta, Georgia. They called this Hall-of-Famer "Old Aches and Pains," but he sure put a hurt on a few pitchers. He won 2 American League batting titles (his .388 average in 1936 is a record for post-19th Century shortstops), had a .310 lifetime batting average, and 2,749 hits including 440 doubles.

He was not much of a slugger, but who cares when you can still hit .301 at age 42. Not to mention that he played his home games at the old Comiskey Park, a terrible park for hitters, for the Chicago White Sox, who retired his Number 4. Oddly, in 1982, he hit a home run (albeit over a 275-foot left-field fence) at an old-timer's game at RFK Stadium in Washington. He was 75, and lived to be 83.

Honorable Mention to Joe Sewell of Titus, Alabama. Won the World Series as a rookie with the 1920 Cleveland Indians and as a veteran with the 1932 Yankees. Batted .312 lifetime, and like Appling wasn't a home-run hitter, but hit 436 doubles. Oh yeah, and he struck out 114 times. In his entire career. That's in 8,329 plate appearances. Amazing.

3B Al Rosen of Spartanburg, South Carolina. Like the general manager who signed him for the Indians, Hank Greenberg -- and like another Greenberg protege, Ralph Kiner, briefly Rosen's teammate -- he had to quit the game too soon because of a bad back. He hit 192 homers in only 10 seasons.

He had a career OPS+ of 136. In 1953, he won the AL MVP award, missing the batting title and thus the Triple Crown by .001: .336, 43 homers, 145 RBIs, despite playing his home games at cavernous Cleveland Municipal Stadium. He only played 5 games for the Indians' 1948 World Championship team, but was a key cog in their 1954 Pennant winners. Too bad he could only play 2 more years, leaving at age 32.

He later became the general manager of the Yankees, winning the 1978 World Series. He was also a postseason-building executive for the Giants and the Houston Astros. If he'd been able to play even to age 36, batting at the same rate, he'd be in the Hall of Fame, as he would be if they combined the player and executive categories. The Indians haven't retired his Number 7, but they have inducted him into their team Hall of Fame.

LF Joe Jackson of Greenville, South Carolina. How do I pick a guy who's not in the Hall of Fame, and played his last game at age 30, and that last game having been 94 years ago so I couldn't possibly have seen him play, and there's precious little film footage of him playing ,so how can I really get an idea of how good he was, over 3 Hall-of-Famers who qualify here?

Namely, Henry "Heinie" Manush of Tuscumbia, Alabama (a Senators star who was honored on the Washington Wall of Stars); Billy Williams of Whistler, Alabama (the Cubs retired his Number 26); and Jim Rice of Anderson, South Carolina (the Red Sox retired his Number 14)? How can I take such a guy over those 3 HOFers?

Well, the guy is Shoeless Joe Jackson, that's how. He had a career OPS+ of 170. That's 8th all-time, behind Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, Barry Bonds *, Lou Gehrig, Rogers Hornsby, Mickey Mantle and Dan Brouthers. (Okay, he never played into a decline, but, still, 8th all-time!)

He batted .408 at age 21. His 1,772 hits included 307 doubles and 168 triples, and he had just had his best home-run year in 1920, with 12 (and a .382 average) at the dawn of the Lively Ball Era, when, uh, the other shoe dropped. Think about that: When he was banned, Shoeless Joe was actually getting better. He played the 1917 World Series to win, and the White Sox did.

That he accepted money to throw the 1919 Series, he confessed; that he actually played not to win is debatable. If Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis had accepted the verdict of the jury, that he was "Not Guilty" of fraud, and let him play again -- or even if he'd just suspended him for the rest of the 1921 season, meaning he missed the entire year when he was 31, but could then have resumed playing -- who knows what he could have done. When The Sporting News announced its 100 Greatest Baseball Players in 1999, he came in at Number 35, so, clearly, they didn't hold his "crime" against him.

In my other blog, "Otherwise Sports," I speculated on what could have happened to him, and to the White Sox, had Shoeless Joe and the rest of the "Eight Men Out" played the '19 Series to win.

Moises Alou was born in Atlanta, while his father Felipe played for the Braves, but grew up and played high school ball in the Dominican Republic. Still, I can't put him ahead of Shoeless Joe, or Heinie Manush, or Billy Williams, or Jim Rice.

Nor can I rank Vincent "Bo" Jackson of Bessemer, Alabama ahead of those guys. We'll never know what the 1985 Heisman Trophy winner out of Auburn University could have done in either baseball or football if he had stuck with one or the other, although that could also be a question for me to tackle in Otherwise Sports.

While James "Cool Papa" Bell of Starkville, Mississippi was the subject of legends about his speed while playing in the Negro Leagues, we just don't have complete stats, or even film of him playing, to know with any certainty how good he was. Still, like Buck Leonard, he's in the Hall of Fame and TSN's 100 Greatest Baseball Players: Bell at 66, Leonard at 47.

CF Willie Mays of Fairfield, Alabama. How do you sum this guy up? Not briefly. He was one of 3 men to play in 24 All-Star Games. He was the 2nd National Leaguer, after Mel Ott, to hit 500 home runs, and the first to hit 600. From 1966 (when he passed Jimmie Foxx at 534) to 1972 (when Hank Aaron passed him at 648), he was 2nd on the all-time home run list, finishing with 660. He was the 2nd man to have both 500 homers and 3,000 hits.

He played in the World Series at age 20, 23 and 31 with the Giants (1951 and '54 in New York, '62 in San Francisco), and closed his career at age 42 (in 1973) with another World Series appearance, with the Mets.

"The Say Hey Kid" was a sensational hitter and baserunner, and as for his defense, well, he wasn't just the man who made the most famous defensive play in the history of sports, a.k.a. "The Catch" in the 1954 World Series. People who followed the Giants, both in New York and in San Francisco, have said that he made great catches all the time.

He was named to the Hall of Fame and the All-Century Team. His Number 24 was retired officially by the Giants and unofficially by the Mets. He has a statue outside AT&T Park, and the park's mailing address is 24 Willie Mays Plaza. When The Sporting News announced its 100 Greatest Baseball Players in 1999, he came in at Number 2, the highest-ranking player then living, and the highest-ranking National Leaguer.

And he had the best song any ballplayer's ever had, in the Giants' 1954 title season, in which you can hear the Big Band sound morphing into Rock and Roll (or, at least, into Rhythm & Blues) right before your very ears.