Rjnewman wrote: Put Dimaggio on Cleveland and see how history would place him.
Interesting what if, to say the least. Larry Doby, of course, was the Indians center fielder for part of Joe D.'s career. Indians won the AL pennant and the World Series in 1948, so the Cleveland team (which edged the Boston Red Sox by just 1 game) would have been that much more potent. The Indians finished six games behind the Yankees in 1950; having DiMaggio on the Indians would likely have resulted in a few more wins for them along with a few more losses for the Yankees, so they might have been able to win the pennant that year, also.
Although playing on the Yankees helped, I would like to think that it was his 56 game hitting streak that cemented his legacy. Along with Marilyn Monroe, of course...
I always thought it was Mr. Coffee, the Bowery Savings Bank and Simon & Garfunkel who made the Dimaggio legacy
Earlier today I posted from a website called What the Hall, which is about the Baseball Hall of Fame, specifically about why some of the players were voted in and notable players who haven't yet been selected. Anyway, there was a story regarding Ty Cobb, and that he was so despised by other ballplayers that only two former major leaguers attended his funeral, Schalk being one of them, Mickey Cochrane being the other.
Earlier today I posted from a website called What the Hall, which is about the Baseball Hall of Fame, specifically about why some of the players were voted in and notable players who haven't yet been selected. Anyway, there was a story regarding Ty Cobb, and that he was so despised by other ballplayers that only two former major leaguers attended his funeral, Schalk being one of them, Mickey Cochrane being the other.
Please note that AllStarInc's 3rd round pick of Ray Chapman has to be the 1915 version, as the 1920 version isn't part of this draft. Please correct now, if that's not who you want.