[quote:fb4aa19dda]was he really a bad fielder?[/quote:fb4aa19dda]Evidence suggests that Jackie was a phenomenal fielder. Bill James discusses this in p. 502-3 of the [i:fb4aa19dda]New Historical Baseball Abstract[/i:fb4aa19dda]. He notes that, by his Defensive Win Shares method, the top defensive 2B with at least 3,000 innings at the position are:
[list=1:fb4aa19dda][*:fb4aa19dda]Hal Lanier[*:fb4aa19dda]Bill Mazeroski[*:fb4aa19dda]Jody Reed[*:fb4aa19dda]Glenn Hubbard[*:fb4aa19dda]Jackie Robinson[/list:o:fb4aa19dda]James then says:[quote:fb4aa19dda]Jackie also played about 2,000 innings at third base, at the end of his career. Guess what? As a third baseman, he rates as even more sensational than he was as a second baseman... The highest [Defensive Win Shares] figure since 1940, by a player who played 10,000 or more innings, is 4.97 by Clete Boyer.
Jackie is at 5.52.
He's off the charts. Nobody else (post-1940) is even in the same zone.
He also played (about) 1,175 innings in the outfield, mostly in left field. He rates as sensational there, for a left fielder... he has a per-inning rate which wouldn't be half bad if he was a center fielder. He rates about the same, per inning, as Rick Manning, Earle Combs, Matty Alou, and Roberto Clemente, a little bit ahead of guys like Dwight Evans and Al Kaline and Minnie Minoso, who are the best of the left/right fielders.[/quote:fb4aa19dda]I dunno why SOM does not rate him as such. I think they tend to be skeptical that a player who moves between positions could be exceptionally good at any of them; perhaps that's why. If you do buy that Jackie was an all-time fielder, which I personally suspect is correct, then he is most likely highly underrated as an actual baseball player.