The Mount RushWAR series will allow us to take a more in-depth look at the careers of the four players with the highest bWAR in each franchise’s history.
Ted Williams (123.1)
Background
Ted Williams was born and raised in San Diego, California. A graduate of Herbert Hoover High School, Williams got his start in pro-ball right in his own back yard with the San Diego Padres, then members of the Double-A Pacific Coast League.
In 1937, while playing for the Padres, Williams was identified as a big league prospect. White Sox Mount RushWAR honoree, Eddie Collins, then the General Manager of the Boston Red Sox, acquired Williams from the Padres after his age-18 season.
Williams spent his age-19 season dominating the Double-A American Association for the Minneapolis Millers. He hit .366 with 43 homers, placing himself firmly on the big club’s radar for 1939.
Red Sox Career
Immediate Impact
Williams made the opening day roster for Boston in 1939. The 20-year-old outfielder was as good as advertised. Williams finished third in the league with 160 OPS+, and led the league with 145 RBI. He finished fourth in the MVP voting after his rookie season. Boston won 89 games, but finished second to the Yankees.
In 1940, Williams was again the third best hitter in the American League at 161 OPS+. He led the league with a .442 OBP, and 134 runs. Williams was selected for what would be the first of 17 seasons as an American League All Star. Boston finished in fourth place at 82-72.
.406
1941 would turn out to be among the most important years in United States history. With the nation drifting closer to eventual entry into World War II, baseball provided a welcomed distraction from world affairs. Ted Williams was right at the center of one of baseball’s most magical summers.
Williams got off to a slow start with just 19 plate appearances through the team’s first nine games in April. By the end of the month, he was playing every day, and on the verge of one of the hottest streaks of his career.
He hit .436/.540/.683 in the month of May. He finished the month in the midst of a 23-game hitting streak that would carry into June.
His season batting average crested on June 6 at .436. Although he couldn’t hold that pace, he was still hitting .404 at the end of the month.
July brought the “low point” in his season. His average dipped to .393 on July 19. He got back to .400 on July 25, and would seldom drop below that magic number the rest of the season.
From July 25 onward, Williams finished the season on a torrid pace. Over his final 64 games, he hit .417/.594/.804 with 19 homers, and an incredible 87 walks against just 15 strikeouts.
After a 4-17 stretch in late-September, his average dipped to .39955 on September 27. With the Red Sox eliminated from playoff contention, destined to yet again finish second to the Yankees, manager Joe Cronin gave Williams the option to sit out the final day and hang onto his rounded .400 average. Williams famously elected to play, finishing 6-8 on the day, and .406 on the season.
On some levels, Williams’s season is held in even greater esteem in modern times than it was as it happened. Joe DiMaggio’s record-setting 56-game hitting streak the same summer for the first-place Yankees stole some of Williams’s thunder. There have been 27 times a player ended his season with an average above .400. It had been 11 years since Bill Terry hit .401 for the New York Giants, and it was not apparent that Williams would be perhaps the last to accomplish the feat.
Before the War
1942 was yet another excellent season for Williams. Four seasons into his big league career, it was clear that Williams was one of the game’s greatest players.
From 1939-1942, Williams averaged .356/.481/.642, 190 OPS+, and 8.6 bWAR per season. He was a three-time All Star with two batting championships, and two home run titles to his credit. He had finished second in the MVP voting back-to-back seasons in 1941-1942.
World War II
With the United States military embroiled in the Second World War, Williams enlisted in the navy’s aviation program in 1943. He spent the next three years serving in the armed forces. Williams initially trained as a naval pilot before joining the Marine Corps. Upon joining the Marines, Williams was quickly assigned duties as a flight instructor during the late stages of the Pacific War.
Although Williams never served in combat, his commitment to the service of his country would become a hallmark of his legacy.
1946: Return to Baseball
The Red Sox struggled mightily without their star slugger from 1943-1945 and failed to finish above .500 during that stretch. Following the end of the War in 1945, Williams returned to the Red Sox for the 1946 season.
Now in his age-27 season, Williams proved he was still among the game’s best players despite his time away from the game. Williams was the best player in the American League in 1946. He led the league in runs (142), walks (156), OBP (.497), slugging (.667), OPS+ (215), and bWAR (10.9).
Williams joined fellow Red Sox Franchise Phenoms Bobby Doerr, and Dom DiMaggio, to form the core of a Red Sox offense that led the league by scoring 88 more runs than the next closest team. The Red Sox won 104 games to cruise to the American League pennant.
In the 1946 World Series, Boston faced the St. Louis Cardinals. Williams hit just .200/.333/.200, and the Cardinals took the series in seven games.
Ted Williams was the American League MVP in 1946. The Red Sox would never play another postseason game during the Ted Williams era.
1947-1951
Coming off a brilliant MVP season, Williams proved he had plenty left in the tank. Over the next five years, Williams averaged .340/.483/.619, 184 OPS+, and 7.7 bWAR per season. He won two more batting titles, and twice more led the league in homers during this stretch.
Williams was an All Star in each of the six seasons between his two stints in the armed forces.
He added his second MVP award in 1949 when he led the league in runs (150), doubles (39), homers (43), RBI (159), walks (162), OBP (.490), slugging (.650), OPS+ (191), and bWAR (9.1).
The Korean War
The Korean War began on June 25, 1950 when the North Korean Army invaded South Korea. With the government of the United States committed to combating the spread of communism even in foreign nations, American military involvement in the region quickly escalated.
As the war expanded, the Marines recalled experienced pilots to active duty. Williams got his orders just six games into the 1952 season. After training to operate the new planes, Williams headed to Korea on active duty in early 1953. Williams flew 39 combat missions in Korea and, on a few occasions, was lucky to return alive.
Williams was sent home in June after a series of illnesses. He was formally discharged when a cease-fire went into effect the following month. Williams was selected as an All Star in 1953 despite playing just 37 games after he returned home. In total, he had just 122 plate appearances in 43 games sandwiched around his time in the service in 1952-1953.
“The Greatest Hitter Who Ever Lived”
Ted Williams returned to the Red Sox full-time in 1954. Although he increasingly dealt with injuries and physical ailments into his late-30s, it was this stretch of his career where Williams cemented his place in baseball history.
In the final seven seasons of his career from 1954-1960, Williams was every bit the hitter he had always been. He averaged .337/.477/.624, 189 OPS+, and 5.3 bWAR per season. He made the All Star team in each season, and finished seventh, or better, in the MVP race five times. Even in his final season at age 41, Williams produced 190 OPS+ in 113 games.
Legacy
In 19 seasons with the Red Sox, Ted Williams was an All Star in 17 seasons.
A two-time MVP who twice won the Triple Crown, Williams is in a category all by himself in Boston lore.
He is Boston’s career leader in average (.344), OBP (.482), slugging (.634), homers (521), walks (2021), and OPS+ (190).
His advanced knowledge and understanding of the game served as the foundation of a legend that goes beyond being the very best at what he did. Williams literally wrote the book on hitting.
His career bWAR ranks 14th in history despite missing nearly five full seasons during his prime while serving in the military. Williams has the highest OBP in big league history, and ranks second in slugging. Any way you slice it, Teddy Ballgame is one of the greatest players in baseball history.