by durantjerry » Sun Sep 06, 2009 12:39 pm
I found this article on the internet. Not sure how old it is, but it has a nice history of the subject matter. I always recall Tommy Herr's well known 1985 season:
159 696 596 97 180 38 3 8 110 31 3 80 55 .302 .379 .416 .795
By James D. Smith III-SABR
After 1920 it became rather exceptional to see batters like Larry Gardner, Joe Sewell and Pie Traynor knock in 100 runs with only 2-3 home runs. Sewell almost made the list in 1925 when he hit only one homer and knocked in 98 runs. In most cases the clubs these run producers played for had healthy team averages around .300, there were no full-blown home run hitters in the lineup, and the individual hit for a good average himself.
There were a few exceptions. In 1931, for example, Pie Traynor of the Pirates knocked in 103 runs while hitting only two round-trippers and batting only .298. The club was sixth in batting (.266) and fifth in scoring runs. Six other Pirates hit more home runs than Traynor, but no one else knocked in more than 70 runs, which was Paul Waner's figure. There is no doubt that Traynor came through with men on base.
In 1934 Bill Rogell batted only .296 for the Tigers, and his 3 home runs could not compare with Hank Greenberg's 26, but he still batted in 100 runs. However, the Tigers batted .300 that season and scored a very high number of runs - 958 to 842 for the runner-up Yankees. Rogell batted sixth behind Gehringer (third), Greenberg (fourth) and Goslin, all of whom knocked in 100 or more runs.
In 1943, Billy Herman hit two homers and knocked in 100 runs for the Dodgers. However, he batted a solid .330 and the Bums, in spite of little help from their fading home run hitter, Dolf Camilli, led the league in runs.
Gradually it became more and more difficult to collect 100 RBIs with fewer than 10 homers. Pinky Higgins and Frank McCormick both finished with 5/106 in 1938; and Cecil Travis and Bob Elliott were both 7/101 in 1941 and 1943 respectively. Herman's exceptional record in 1943 stood out in comparison.
In 1950, Detroit third baseman George Kell (8/101) became the last player to post an RBI total in three figures with a single figure HR mark. The shift was already in motion. When Kell played his last season in 1957 Duke Snider became a "first" in the other direction with 40 homers and 92 RBI. In 1983 it looked like Ted Simmons might be a throw-back to earlier decades when he was knocking in runs without the long ball. However, by the end of the season his roundtrippers had gone up to 13 and his RBIs stood at 108.
[b:fd2bcfdf97]100 RBI lowest HR since 1920:[/b:fd2bcfdf97]
1931
Pie Traynor, Pirates
2
103
1943
Billy Herman, Dodgers
2
100
1928
Pie Traynor, Pirates
3
124
1920
Larry Gardner, Indians
3
118
1921
Larry Gardner, Indians
3
115
1923
Joe Sewell, Indians
3
109
1924
Earl Sheely, White Sox
3
103
1921
Ross Youngs, Giants
3
102
1934
Bill Rogell, Tigers
3
100