This
article was written by Paul Mittermeyer
https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/Eddie-Collins/
Researched and compiled by Carrie Birdsong
An Ivy League graduate, Collins was one of the smartest players of his day, and he knew it. Saddled with the nickname “Cocky” from early in his career, Collins drew the resentment of teammates for his self-confidence and good breeding that at times seemed as though it belonged more in a ballroom than a baseball clubhouse. Perhaps for this reason, contradiction and complexity became a recurring theme throughout his 25-year major-league career. He made his major league debut under an alias and later served as captain of the most infamous team in baseball history, the 1919 Chicago White Sox. He won an award recognizing him as the most valuable player in the league, only to be sold off to another club in the subsequent offseason. Despite his upper-class origins and education, Collins abided by a litany of superstitions, although he insisted he was “not superstitious, just thought it was unlucky to get base hits.”[1]
Edward Trowbridge Collins was born on May 2, 1887, in
Millerton, New York, the son of railroad freight agent John Rossman Collins and
Mary Meade (Trowbridge) Collins. When
Eddie was 8 months old, the Collins family moved to Tarrytown, New York, in the
Hudson Valley 30 miles north of New York City.
Young Collins registered at the Irving School in Tarrytown for the
fourth grade in 1895. By legend, he
played ball there that afternoon and continued smashing hits for Irving through
the spring of 1903, when he graduated from the prep school. That fall he entered Columbia
University. Though a slight 135 pounds,
the precocious 16-year-old quarterbacked the freshman football team and later
one season on the varsity before the school dropped football entirely --
"At that time,” Collins recalled, “I liked football better than I liked
baseball”[2] – and was the starting shortstop for the college nine.
Shortly after beginning his amateur athletic career at
Columbia, Collins began picking up paying gigs on the side. In 1904 he pitched for the Tarrytown Terrors
for $1 per game. He also performed for the Red Hook (New York) squad, drawing closer to $5 a contest. In the summer of 1096, Eddie played for a
succession of semipro clubs – in Plattsburgh, Rutland, and Rockville – before
his professional career was discovered, thus invalidating his senior year of
eligibility at Columbia. The summer was
not to be a total loss, however. While
honeymooning, Andy Coakley, a pitcher with the Philadelphia Athletics,
happened to see Collins playing for Rutland.
Coakley sent word of the youngster to Connie Mack, who dispatched
backup catcher Jimmy Byrnes to develop an in-depth scouting
report.[3] When Byrnes confirmed the
pitcher’s observations, Mack signed Collins to a 1907 contract, but not before
Collins obtained a written promise that Mack would not send him to the minor
leagues without his consent. John
McGraw, manager of the New York Giants, had been aware of the budding
prospect but declined to offer him a trial.
At Connie Mack’s suggestion, Collins made his
major-league debut under the alias of Eddie T. Sullivan on September 17, 1906,
at Chicago’s South Side Park. “I put on
a uniform that did not fit me too well,” he recalled later.” "Gosh, I
weighed about only 140 pounds. I was
self-conscious among all those big fellows – men like [Rube] Waddell,
whom I had read so much about.”[4] He
played that first game at shortstop behind the future Hall of Famer Waddell,
who completely subdued Eddie in batting practice. Nonetheless, “Sullivan” managed to reach
Chicago’s Big Ed Walsh for a bunt single in his first at-bat. Six fielding chances were executed flawlessly
that day, though Eddie’s tenure at short was not to last.
Having played six games with the Athletics, Collins
was back in class at Columbia shortly after the Mackmen completed their Western
tour. On March 26, 1907, the day of
Columbia’s opening game, Collins ran out to take field at shortstop before
being informed that the University Committee on Athletics at Columbia had ruled
him ineligible for the 1907 season – not because of his time with the
Athletics, which wasn’t revealed publicly until years later, but because he had
been paid to play with semipro teams in Plattsburgh and Rockville. Still, Eddie’s game smarts earned him the
unprecedented position of undergraduate assistant coach for the Lions’ 1907
squad. By this time, the baseball bug
had a firm hold on Collins and the youngster postponed his plans for a legal
career to rejoin the Athletics after graduation in 1907, appearing in 14 games
for Philadelphia that summer.
Collins became a regular player in the majors in
1908. That first full season, he split
time at five positions: shortstop, second base, and all three outfield spots,
hitting .273 in 102 games. He converted
to second base full-time in 1909, pushing Danny Murphy to right field,
and from there his remarkable career took wing.
It was no small coincidence that when Collins became the starting second
baseman, the team also took off. Eddie
played every game in 1909, hitting .347 as the club rose to second, chasing the
pennant-winning Tigers to the wire. The
young second-sacker finished second in the circuit in hits, walks, steals, and
batting average, and placed third in the league in runs, total bases, and
slugging. He led all second basemen in
putouts, assists, double plays, and fielding average.
In 1910 the club broke through, winning the first of
four pennants in five years by a convincing 14 ½ games. Eddie led the American League in steals, was
third in hits and RBIs, and fourth in batting while leading in most fielding
categories. Philadelphia dusted the Cubs
in five games to give Connie Mack his first World Series title. Collins was the star of the Series, batting ..429
and hitting safely in each contest. His
play in Game Two, when he had three hits, stole two bases, and made several
outstanding defensive plays, confirmed his status as one of the American
League’s top stars.[5] A month after the
championship was secured, Eddie married Mabel Doane, whose father was a close
friend of Connie Mack’s; Mack himself had introduced them. Collins and Mack had a standing bet as to who
would get married first, which Mack won by a week. The Collinses remained married for more than
30 years until Mabel died in 1943.
In 1911 the A’s, with the “$100,000 Infield” of Home
Run Baker, Jack Barry, Collins, and Stuffy McInnis now intact,
repeated as world champs, besting Detroit by 13 ½ games, and downing John
McGraw’s Giants in six. After finishing
fourth in hitting (.365) during the year and leading the league’s second
basemen in putouts, Collins had a modest Series, batting .286 with three
errors. Still, the A’s had successfully
defended their championship and, Collins, just 24, had experienced little but
success in his few years of prep, collegiate, and professional play.
Known as a gentleman off the field, the brainy star
gave grudging quarter at best between the foul lines. Hard-nosed play around the bag invited like
responses and incurred the enmity of some.
One such encounter in 1912 would have long-term consequences. An unflinching tag by Eddie broke the nose of
Washington first baseman Chick Gandil.
Chick’s teammate Clyde Milan witnessed the play and noted that
“for the rest of his playing career, Gandil was out to get even. He went into the bag against Collins 200
times I guess and always got the worst of it.”[6]
In 1913 the A’s returned to form, winning their third
World Series, in five games over the Giants, as Collins hit .421, with five
runs, three RBIs, and three steals. His
standout autumn followed a regular campaign that featured 55 steals. 73 RBIs,
and a robust .345 average. In 1914 the
A’s repeated as American League champs, and Collins was honored as the Chalmers
Award winner, given to the league’s most valuable player. Unfortunately, the bat that drove in 85 runs
and registered a .344 clip was utterly absent in the Series, Philadelphia was
stunned in four straight by the “Miracle Braves,” with Collins batting .214.
In the aftermath of the upset, his team’s harmony was fractured by overtures from the Federal League, and Connie Mack began to clean
house in Philadelphia. On December 8,
1914, Collins was sold to the Chicago White Sox for a reported $50,000. As part of the deal, the White Sox agreed to
pay Collins a salary of $15,000 per year, plus a signing bonus of
$10,000.[7] By 1919, his salary was
still more than double that of any of his Chicago teammates.[8]
The White Sox had spent the first half of the 1910s
languishing between fourth place and sixth place. Collins’s tenure in Chicago lasted 12
years. For all 12 seasons, he was a genuine
star. For the last two-plus years, he
was player-manager. During Collins’s
first year in Chicago, the Great Cleveland outfielder Joe Jackson joined
the club via trade with 45 games remaining in the campaign. Through skill they were peers, and there was
little evidence of friendship or social interaction between the two stars. The educated and savvy Collins may have
intimidated his illiterate teammate.
A sub-500 team in 1914, the White Sox steadily rose
in the standings. The 1915 club finished
third, besting the .600 mark with 93 wins.
Collins was second in the league in batting, led in walks, was third in
steals, and was fifth in total bases while leading second basemen in both
assists and fielding average. In 1916
the White Sox chased the Red Sox all summer, finishing a mere two games
back. Collins led the league’s second
basemen in double plays and fielding average, while on the offensive side of the
ledger, he was second in triples, third in walks, and fourth in steals. In 1917 the White Sox won the pennant by a
convincing nine games, with 100 wins for a .649 percentage. Though Collins’s average dipped to .289, he
led second basemen in putouts and was second in the circuit in steals and
walks.
In that year’s fall classic, Collins enjoyed his third
great World Series, with a .409 average, and scored the first run in the sixth
and final game by outthinking the Giant's defense. Though immortalized as the “Heinie
Zimmerman boner,” it was actually catcher Bill Rariden, first
baseman Walter Holke, and pitcher Rube Benton who were the real
goats. In a rundown between third base
and home plate, Rariden allowed Collins to slip past him, and Holke and Benton
neglected to cover home. With a foot pursuit
his only option, the lumbering Zimmerman failed to catch Collins as he slid
across the plate with what proved to be the Series-winning run. “In a World Series game, when you see a base
uncovered you run for it,” Collins later recalled. “Believe me, I didn’t waste any time on that
play…At least two, possibly three other men could have covered the plate on
that play. why they didn’t I’ll never
know.”[9]
Like many other players, Collins’s 1918 campaign was
cut short by US involvement in the Great War.
On August 19, 1918, Collins joined the Marine Corps, missing the final
16 games of the season. His decision to
enlist in the military was greeted with patriotic fanfare – unlike his
teammates Joe Jackson, Lefty Williams, and Byrd Lynn, who were harshly
criticized for taking war-essential jobs in the shipyards. Collins’s actual service wasn’t much
different from theirs, consisting mainly of drills and guard duty at the
Philadelphia Naval Yard, but he received a Good Conduct Medal and was honorably
discharged on February 6, 1919, in time for spring training.
As the great White Sox team coalesced, it became ever
more socially segmented. When Chick
Gandil had arrived before the 1917 season, the calcification of some of these
divisions was pretty much assured. There
was resentment, right or wrong, of owner Comiskey’s penny-pinching ways, and
Gandil’s pre-existing bitterness towards Collins helped focus some of the
discontents on the captain. Collins came
to represent management, and his status as one of Commy’s favorites further
poisoned the atmosphere. Of all the
performers in this ill-fated cast, Collins was sharp enough to have sensed the
malignant potential. Perhaps his
privileged status, his seemingly unbroken record of personal success, and the
team’s burgeoning success combined to help dull such sensitivity.
One might expect that if Collins were so aware and
adept at the multidimensions of leadership, he might have sensed and tried to
mitigate intrasquad tensions. the
superficial machismo of clubhouse camaraderie should not have been too
significant a hurdle for a well-bred, broadly experienced, established
star. The distinct cliques among the
1919 White Sox might have been immutable, but few were better equipped than
Collins to initiate the select one-on-one rapprochements that might have
modulated such tensions.
The 1919 White Sox finished with a record of 88-52 for
a .629 percentage, besting Cleveland by 3 ½ games. Collins hit .319 and drove in 80 runs while
leading second basemen in putouts and finishing second in double plays. The 1919 White Sox were the greatest he ever
saw because, in part, they won despite widening dissension: “(The club) was
torn by discord and hatred during much of the ’19 season,” Collins later
said. “From the moment I arrived at
training camp from service, I could see that something was amiss. We may have had our troubles in other years,
but in 1919 we were a club that pulled apart rather than together. There were frequent arguments and open
hostility. All the things you think –
and are taught to believe – are vital to the success of any athletic
organization were missing from it, and yet it was the greatest collection of
players ever assembled, I would say.”[10]
Over the years Collins was inconsistent when
discussing what he knew about his teammates’ plot to throw World Series games,
as well as when he knew it. After the
scandal was first exposed in the fall of 1920, Collins was quoted in Collyer’s
Eye, a small gamblers’ newspaper, as saying, “There wasn’t a single doubt
in my mind” as early as the first inning of Game One that the games were
being thrown. Collins added, “If the
gamblers didn’t have (Buck) Weaver and (Eddie) Cicotte in their
pocket then I don’t know a thing about baseball” == and that he told “all this”
to owner Charles Comiskey (which Comiskey always denied).[11] Years later, Collins changed his story
considerably. “I was to be a witness to
the greatest tragedy in baseball’s history – and I didn’t know it at the time,”
he told Jim Leonard of The Sporting News in 1950.[12]
After the scandal gutted the club, Collins still
starred. He was one of the few bright
lights for the decimated White Sox in the early 1920s. he filled in as player-manager for 27 games
during the 1924 season and assumed the role full-time for the 1925 and 1926
campaigns. The club finished fifth in
each of his full years at the helm.
Injuries cut into his playing time in both of these seasons. Deposed as White Sox manager on November 11,
1926, Collins was released as a player two days later. He signed with Philadelphia six weeks later and emerged as a solid pinch-hitter in 1927.
From 1928 through 1930 he mostly coached, finally playing his last game
at age 43 on August 5, 1930.
Collins concluded his career with a .333 batting
average, 1,821 runs scored, 3,315 hits, and 741 steals, figures that assured
his induction into the Hall of Fame in 1939, as one of the original players
honored by the baseball writers upon the museum’s opening. Also in 1939, Eddie Collins Jr. made
his debut with the Athletics, where he would spend three seasons as a
light-hitting outfielder. Collins’s
other son, the Rev. Paul Collins, officiated his father’s marriage to his
second wife, Emily Jane Hall, in 1945.
Collins coached full-time for Philadelphia in 1931 and
1932 before joining the Boston Red Sox as vice president and general manager
when fellow Irving schooler Tom Yawkey purchased the team in early
1933. Collins remained with the Red Sox
for the rest of his life, and in one notable scouting trip to California signed
two future Hall of Famers, Bobby Doerr and Ted Williams. But his most notable act as general manager
may have been his failure to pursue and sign Jackie Robinson after
Robinson and two other Negro League players tried out for the Red Sox. Facing pressure from local press and
politicians, Collins and Yawkey had offered the sham tryout only reluctantly,
and their failure to take Robinson and the other black prospects seriously
resulted in the Red Sox becoming the last to integrate instead of the first.
Due to deteriorating health, Collins turned over the
general managers’ reins to Joe Cronin after the 1947 season but remained
as vice president. A cerebral hemorrhage
in August 1950 left Eddie partially paralyzed and visually impaired. Devoutly religious throughout his life, he
succumbed to complications from cardiovascular disease on Easter Sunday
evening, March 25, 1951, at age 63. He
was buried in Linwood Cemetery in Weston, Massachusetts. And was survived by
his wife and two sons.
Holt, 1988).
(New York: Macmillan Publishing, 1990).
and Baseball in Boston (New York: Routledge,
2002).
of Fame Library, Cooperstown, New York.
(Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Co.,
2008).
(New York: Collier Books, 1971).
(New York: Aladdin Books, 1955).
National Baseball Hall of Fame Library,
2. Cooperstown, New York.
(Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland &
Co., 2008), 74-75.
President Ban Johnson claimed that he promised
Collins an additional $5,000 for considering the
White Sox’ offer, and that Collins insisted he
make good on the promise after signing. “I
signed my personal check for $5,000,” Johnson
said.
research of American League contract cards
housed at the Baseball Hall of Fame, Buck
Weaver’s $7,250 salary was the second-highest
to Collins among all White Sox players in 1919.
See Bob Hoie, “1919 Baseball
Salaries and the Mythically Underpaid Chicago
White Sox,” Base Ball: A Journal of the Early
Game (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland
& Co., Spring 2012).
analysis of Collins’s statements about the fix,
see Rick Huhn’s Eddie Collins, 179-83.
No comments:
Post a Comment