Bobby Doerr, 99, Red Sox Hall of Fame Second Baseman, Is Dead
He was number 171 on the list.
Bobby Doerr, the Hall of Fame second baseman who was a
smooth fielder, timely hitter and immensely popular figure through 14 seasons
with the Boston Red Sox, died on Monday in Junction City, Ore. He was 99 and
had been the oldest living former major leaguer.
The Red Sox announced his death. “Bobby’s life is one we
salute not only for its longevity, but for its grace,” the organization’s
chairman, Tom Werner, said in a statement. “He set the standard for what it
means to be a good teammate.”
Doerr was a celebrated presence at Fenway Park, along with
Ted Williams and Dom DiMaggio in the outfield and Johnny Pesky at shortstop. He
was the last surviving major league player from the 1930s, having begun his
career with the Red Sox in 1937.
His death leaves Red Schoendienst, 94, best known for his
years with the St. Louis Cardinals, as the oldest living Hall of Famer.
Doerr lacked the tempestuousness of a Williams and the
celebrity name of a DiMaggio. He went about his business quietly and became a
team leader through his steady excellence.
“We never had a captain, but he was the silent captain of
the team,” Williams said when Doerr was elected to the Hall of Fame by the
Veterans Committee in 1986.
Playing at Fenway Park into the early 1950s, except for one
year in the Army during World War II, Doerr was a nine-time American League
All-Star. He set a record for consecutive fielding chances without an error,
batted over .300 in three different seasons and drove in more than 100 runs six
times.
His teams won just one American League pennant, in 1946. The
Red Sox went on to lose to the St. Louis Cardinals in a seven-game World
Series, but he batted .409 in that series.
“Doerr was easily the most popular player of the Red Sox and
possibly the most popular baseball player of his era,” David Halberstam wrote
in “Summer of ’49” (1989), an account of a memorable pennant race between the
Red Sox and the Yankees. “He was so modest and his disposition so gentle that his
colleagues often described him as ‘sweet.’ He was the kind of man other men
might have envied had they not liked him so much.”
Remarking on Doerr’s fast hands, the novelist and Red Sox
devotee George V. Higgins wrote in “The Progress of the Seasons: Forty Years of
Baseball in Our Town” (1989) that Doerr had “the front paws of a polar bear.”
What Higgins found equally noteworthy was Doerr’s standing
before the often critical Boston press and fans. “Bobby Doerr cannot recall
being hammered by the Boston media or being insulted by the fans,” he wrote.
“Reasonable enough, because he was perceived as a workman who always gave his
very best.”
Robert Pershing Doerr was born in Los Angeles on April 7,
1918, the son of Harold and Frances Doerr. His father was a telephone company
lineman. He was signed by the Hollywood team of the Pacific Coast League out of
high school in 1934 and played two seasons in Hollywood, then a third year for
the franchise when it moved to San Diego.
He was signed by the Red Sox after being scouted in the
summer of 1936 by Eddie Collins, the Boston general manager and himself a
former second baseman and future Hall of Famer. On that trip, Collins also
discovered Williams, then a teenager with the San Diego team.
When Doerr joined the Red Sox, he was in awe.
“I’ll always remember spring training in 1937,” he was
quoted as saying by Cynthia J. Wilber in “For the Love of the Game: Baseball
Memories From the Men Who Were There” (1992). “I was just 18, and there was
Jimmie Foxx hitting balls out of the ballpark like golf balls and Joe Cronin at
shortstop and Lefty Grove pitching, and Pinky Higgins and Doc Cramer and the
Ferrell brothers. My gosh, all of those guys I had their pictures up on my wall
as a kid. They were all my heroes, and there they were, and I was with them.”
Doerr was hit in the head by a pitch early in the season and
played in only 55 games, but he became a regular in 1938, helped by Cronin, the
Red Sox manager and shortstop, who encouraged him to relax on the field and
gave him batting tips.
Throughout the 1940s, Doerr and Pesky vied with the Yankees’
Joe Gordon at second base and Phil Rizzuto at shortstop as the American
League’s leading double-play combination. Doerr led American League second
basemen in double plays in five different seasons and in 1948 set major league
records, since broken, for consecutive chances without an error at his
position, 414, and consecutive errorless games, 73.
Doerr was the batting hero of the 1943 All-Star Game at
Shibe Park in Philadelphia, hitting a three-run homer off the Cardinals’ Mort
Cooper in the American League’s 5-3 victory.
As a Red Sox coach in August 1968, Doerr met with Freddie
Parent, who played shortstop for the 1903 world champion Red Sox, in the dugout
at Fenway Park. Coach Ed Popowski is behind Doerr. Credit Associated Press
He got his 2,000th hit on July 1, 1951, at Yankee Stadium.
But he developed back problems that summer and retired after the season. He
finished his career with 2,042 hits and a .288 batting average, hit 223 home
runs and drove in 1,247 runs. He led the American League in slugging percentage
in 1944 with a .528 mark.
He was later a coach for the Red Sox and the Toronto Blue
Jays. His No. 1 was retired by the Red Sox in 1988.
In his later years, Doerr devoted himself to caring for his
wife, Monica, who had multiple sclerosis, and who died in 2003. He also loved
to fish. But he returned to Boston for ceremonial occasions.
When the Red Sox marked the 100th anniversary of Fenway Park
in April 2012, he appeared alongside Pesky at second base, each of them in a
wheelchair, an emotional high point for a gathering that attracted dozens of
former Red Sox players.
Doerr’s survivors include his son, Don; two grandchildren;
and four great-grandchildren.
The enduring ties among Doerr, Pesky, Williams and Dom
DiMaggio were chronicled by David Halberstam in “The Teammates” (2003). Doerr
maintained a particularly close friendship with Williams, who died in 2002.
They often talked about hitting, but there was a dimension to their closeness
beyond that. Williams, as the product of a broken home, envied Doerr for the
support he had received from his father.
Reflecting on his upbringing, Doerr, a product of the
Depression years, told Cynthia Wilber that his generation “didn’t quit at
things, and that was just a way of life.”
As for his major league career, Doerr said: “In those, days,
I don’t think anyone ever got too complacent. Even after I played 10 years of
ball, I still felt like I had to play well or somebody might take my place. I
hustled and put that extra effort in all of the time.”
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