Shoeless Joe Remains a Scapegoat
By Harvey Frommer
With the recent announcement of a new
class of inductees to the Baseball Hall of Fame, the skeletons in the closet
come front and center once again.
Pete Rose and and "Shoeless Joe" are becoming
baseball's odd couple - both ineligible for the Hall of Fame because of a
lifetime ban, two of just 15 ever issued by the commissioner of baseball. No
person ever permanently banned has ever been reinstated.
Most sports fans know a lot about Pete
Rose: however, their knowledge about Jackson is sketchy, sometimes inaccurate.
So for the record - the facts.
Joseph Jefferson Wofford Jackson was
born to a poor family on July 16, 1889 in Greenville, South Carolina. School
was never a part of his life for at the age of six he was already working in
the cotton mills as a cleanup boy.
By the time he was 13 he was
laboring a dozen hours a day along with his father and brother. His sole escape
from the back-breaking work, the din and dust of the mill, took place out in
the grassy fields playing baseball. He was a natural right from the start, good
enough to be noticed and recruited to play for the mill team organized by the
company.
One hot summer day Jackson
played the outfield wearing a new pair of shoes. They pinched his feet, so he
took them off and played in his stocking feet. A sportswriter who saw what he
did dubbed him "Shoeless Joe." The name stuck even though that was
the only time Jackson is reported to have played 'shoeless.'
He despised the name for he
felt it reinforced his country-bumpkin origins, the fact that he could not read
nor write.
Perhaps that was why when he
played for the Chicago White Sox after stints with the Philadelphia Athletics
and Cleveland Indians, he wore alligator and patent leather shoes - the more
expensive the better. It was if he was announcing to the world: "I am not
a Shoeless Joe. I do wear shoes. And they cost a lot of money!"
He was the greatest ball player
ever from South Carolina, one of the top players of all time. His lifetime
batting average was .356, topped only by Ty Cobb and Rogers Hornsby.
Four times he batted over .370. Babe
Ruth copied his swing claiming Jackson was the greatest hitter he ever saw.
Ruth, Cobb, and Casey Stengel all placed him on their all-time, all star team.
He was such a remarkable fielder that his glove was called "the place
where triples go to die."
In the National Baseball Hall of
Fame at Cooperstown one can find Jackson's shoes. His life size photograph is
there. But he is not there even though others with far less credentials and far
more soiled reputations are. Shoeless Joe had to leave the game in disgrace,
one of the members of the "Black Sox" accused of throwing the 1919
World Series.
He was asked under oath at
trial:
"Did you do anything to
throw those games?"
"No sir," was his
response.
“Any game in the
series?"
"Not a one," Jackson
answered. "I didn't have an error or make no misplay."
In fact, Shoeless Joe was
under-stating his accomplishments which included the only series home run, the
highest batting average, the collecting of a record dozen hits, while
committing no errors.
It took the jury a single ballot
to acquit all eight accused players of the charges against them. But the very
next day baseball's first commissioner - Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis - issued
a verdict of his own. He banned all eight players from baseball for life.
Landis was brought into organized
baseball in the fall of 1920 with a lifetime contract and a mandate to clean up
the game using whatever methods he saw fit. He had the reputation of being a
vindictive judge, a hanging judge - and he was all of that.
Every baseball commissioner since
Landis has refused to act on Shoeless Joe's behalf.
Commissioner Faye Vincent said:
"I can't uncipher or decipher what took place back then. I have no
intention of taking formal action."
Commissioner Bart Giammatti said:
"I do not wish to play God with history. The Jackson case is best left to
historical debate and analysis. I am not for re-instatement."
All Commissioners have kept to the
“company line.”
A
professor for more than two decades in the MALS program at
Dartmouth College, Frommer was dubbed “Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by
their
alumni magazine. He’s also the founder of www.HarveyFrommerSports.com.
Mint, signed,
discounted Frommer books (Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball) are available from the site.