Tue Aug 12, 2014 3:49 pm
To return the discussion to Yaz playing infield, I recall reading somewhere that one of Yaz's managers said that Yaz worked (just for fun) out at 2nd base with the regular Red Sox 2nd baseman and there was no question in the manager's mind that Yaz was the better fielder at 2nd. (I'm away from home, but when I get back I'll look through my books and see if I can find the source.)
What I've always wondered is...If Yaz could be a major league quality 2B, for gosh sakes, why not play him there? If someone who could hit like Yaz could give you a decent 2B, that would far more valuable than the same offense in LF or 1B, even though Yaz was really good at those positions.
I've always wondered if the failure to use Yaz at, say, 2B, wasn't a product of the thinking of the 1950s & 1960s. The expectation seemed to be that the heavy hitters played OF and the slick fielders played middle infield, and one didn't try to put the two together. Ernie Banks seemed to be about the only exception to this rule--a power hitting SS. Most teams figured that if they had a Maury Wills, Dick Groat or Luis Aparicio at SS, they were lucky. The Yankees won a World Championship in 1962 with rookie Tom Tresh at SS, then moved him to the outfield. Bobby Murcer and Roy White came up as middle infielders but were promptly moved to the OF. The result was many years of Gene Michael and Horace Clarke around 2nd base. What if White and Murcer had been given good coaching and been allowed to develop as infielders? I'm not sure Murcer had the makings of a big league SS, but it would have been interesting to find out.
Then as the 70s evolved into the 80s we started to get a crop of players like Joe Morgan, Robin Yount, Cal Ripken, etc. who could really hit and give you an excellent 2B or SS. I think the thinking in baseball had become--let's see if we can work with these really talented youngsters and let them develop into middle infielders.
And recall that Ripken came to the majors as a 3B. It was Earl Weaver who was able to visualize this 6'4'' muscular guy with the strong arm as a SS. At first, everyone thought he was nuts. Mickey Mantle came up as a SS and Casey Stengel said that with a bit more seasoning he could have been a good one, but given that he already had Rizzuto at SS and Dimaggio fading in CF, Casey just stuck Mickey in at CF. But he always felt a bit guilty about not letting Mick develop into a SS. If he had, he would be considered an even greater player than he now is.
Nowadays, of course, middle infielders who can really hit are common place. This is a roundabout way of saying that my guess is that if Yaz had come along a little later, he might have been a 2B. He never did play an inning at 2B in his actual career, as far as I can see, however.