A controversial vote, to say the least. Ted Williams won the Triple Crown, but finished second in the MVP vote to Joe Gordon. Gordon led the league in errors and strikeouts, which did not impress fans of The Splinter.
        Although I think Williams deserved the award, the vote isn't as bad as it may seem. Gordon did have a terrific year at the plate, though nothing close to what Williams did. And despite the error total, Gordon was one of the best defensive second basemen in the league, him and Bobby Doerr. He was a vastly better defensive player than Williams. And Gordon's team, the Yankees, won the pennant.

American League 1942
   AVGOBASLUABHIT DB TP HR RUN RBI BB SB OPS
LFT WILLIAMS BOS356499648 52218634 536141137145 3 1147
RFC KELLER NY 292417513 54415924 92610610811414 930
LFC LAABS STL 275380498 52014321 727 90 99 88 0 878
OFG CASE WAS 320377407 51316426 2 5101 43 4444 784
1BL FLEMING CLE 292412432 54816027 4 1471 82106 6 845
LFB JOHNSON PHI 291384451 55016035 7 1378 8082 3 835

CFJ DIMAGGIO NY305376498 610186291321123114 68 4 875
CFS SPENCE WAS 323384432 6292032715 4 94 79 62 5 817
CFW JUDNICH STL 313413499 45714322 6 1778 8274 3 912
3BH CLIFT STL 274394399 54114839 4 7108 55106 6 794

CFD DIMAGGIOBOS 286364437 62217836 814110 48 7016 801
2BJ GORDON NY 322409491 538173321030112103 5218 900
2BB DOERR BOS 290369455 54515835 515 71102 67 4 824
SSJ PESKY BOS 331375416 62020529 9 2105 51 42 9 791
SSL BOUDREAUCLE 283379370 5061431810 2 57 58 75 7 749
SSP RIZZUTO NY 284343374 55315724 7 4 79 68 4422 718
     

1942 American League

Boston Red Sox
Chicago White Sox
Cleveland Indians
Detroit Tigers
New York Yankees
Philadelphia Athletics
St. Louis Browns
Washington Senators
        Williams was just 24 years old, and had already hit .400, won a Triple Crown, two RBI titles, two home run titles, and led the league three times in runs scored. After the season, he and Joe DiMaggio and many others went off to war for three years. Williams was a pilot, and is said to have been the most accurate bomber in the Air Force.
        Williams returned in 1946, and picked up right where he left off; his 1942 and 1946 seasons were almost identical. He remained the best hitter in baseball until 1951, when again he was called into service in the Korean War. Williams was 33 years old when he left for Korea; before he left, he hit a home run in his final at bat, what many thought would be the final hit of his career.
        Williams spent almost two full years in the Korean War; he returned at age 35, and was once again the best hitter in baseball. But he was older now, and was slowed by a myriad of ailments sustained during the war. He never again played a full season. Williams managed to win three more batting titles, then retired in 1960, at age 42. He once again hit a home run in his final at bat, and his career ended for good. Williams retired with a career .344 batting average, a career .483 on-base percentage, 521 home runs, 2654 hits, and almost five full years of his career lost to war service.
        As I write this, it seems that Williams' reputation has dramatically improved over the years. There are a number of reasons why; for one, he lived into his 80's, and remains in the public's memory. His statistics are in a class of their own, and he is almost always considered the greatest hitter in baseball history (with good reason). The five years of war service only increase his reputation as a hero. And chances are, most of the people who hated him (and there were many) have probably died.
        In various End-Of-The-Century polls, Williams seems to have eclipsed both Musial and DiMaggio as the greatest player of the era, and ranks behind only Ruth and Mays as the greatest of all time. But he wasn't always so popular; in his day, Williams was perceived as a cocky and arrogant S.O.B. He had few other skills on the ball diamond beyond his hitting; he also hated the local media, and they hated him as well. As for the fans, Williams once took enough time out of his day to spit on one of them.
        His teams never won anything. They were regularly beaten by the Yankees, despite having at least as much talent as the Bombers. I have great respect for Williams as a hitter; had he not gone to war, he could easily have hit 700 homers in his career, or hit .400 on another occasion. But if I were to make up a list of the greatest ever players, I doubt I would put him among my top ten; I would rather have both DiMaggio and Musial, plus Aaron, Mays, and Mantle, and probably some infielders, such as Gehrig and Wagner. That he was in a class of his own as a hitter, I do not disagree with.
        It is too bad that Gordon is remembered for leading the league in errors and strikeouts, because his season was a monster. And with his defence, an argument can be made that he was the MVP. I'm not going to make that argument; Teddy Ballgame was just too good a hitter. Gordon entered the service after the 1943 season and spent two years overseas.
     What a wonderful time it was for young shortstops in the American League. Both Johnny Pesky and Vern Stephens were rookies, Phil Rizzuto a sophomore. Lou Boudreau was only 25. Of course, both Pesky and Rizzuto spent the next three years in the service. Pesky came back in 1946 and led the league in hits two more years; he led in that category his first three years in the majors, though it took him six years to do it.

TOP FOUR 1942 AL STARGELL AWARD
Ted Williams
Joe Gordon
Johnny Pesky
Joe DiMaggio

1942
1941 1943
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