Bill Terry
Bill Terry | ||
---|---|---|
Runs batted in | 1,078 | |
Managerial record | 823–661 | |
Winning % | .555 | |
Teams | ||
As player
As manager
| ||
Career highlights and awards | ||
| ||
Member of the National | ||
Baseball Hall of Fame | ||
Induction | 1954 | |
Vote | 77.4% (14th ballot) |
William Harold Terry (October 30, 1898 – January 9, 1989) was an American
Playing career
Early years
Born in
After starting 1916 with Newnan, by the end of the year he had moved up to the class-B Shreveport Gassers of the Texas League. He again compiled impressive statistics for his new team, putting up a record of 6–2 with a 1.07 earned run average in 11 games with Shreveport. Terry spent all of 1917 with Shreveport, with a record of 14–11 and an earned run average of 3.00. By this time, he was also beginning to play more in the field, pitching in 40 games and appearing in 55 other games.
After spending several years playing semi-professionally, Terry was picked up by the
In 1923, Terry had been converted into a full-time first baseman. In 109 games with Toledo that year, Terry batted .377 with 15 home runs. This gained the notice of the major league
Starting out in the majors
Terry made his major league debut with the Giants on September 24, 1923 in a game against the
Terry played all of 1924 with the Giants, backing up fellow future Hall of Famer
Into and out of the starting lineup
In 1925, Giants starting third baseman Heinie Groh suffered an injury early in the season, forcing the team to juggle its lineup a bit. Starting second baseman Frankie Frisch was tried at third but wound up spending most of the season shifting around the infield when Lindstrom was made the starter. Kelly was moved from first base to second, and Terry was installed as the starting first baseman. He hit .319 in 133 games, with 11 homers and 70 runs batted in.
In 1926, with Lindstrom established as the starter at third, Frisch was reinstated at second and Kelly moved back to first, sending Terry back into a reserve role. In addition to backing up Kelly, Terry played in 14 games in the outfield. This was the only season in which he played more than one game at a position other than first base. Overall, Terry played 98 games, batting .289 with 5 home runs and 43 runs batted in.
1927: Breakout year
During the following offseason, the Giants made some major changes to their starting lineup. On December 20, 1926, they traded Frisch and pitcher Jimmy Ring to the St. Louis Cardinals for Rogers Hornsby. Then, on February 9, they traded Kelly to the Reds for outfielder Edd Roush, opening a spot once more for Terry in the starting lineup. Terry batted .326 in 1927, with 20 home runs and 121 runs batted in. He finished 13th in the voting for the Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award, and his days of being a backup were behind him for good.
History in the making
Over the next two seasons, Terry continued to produce for the Giants, batting .326 again in 1928 with 101 runs batted in, and then .372 in 1929 with 117 runs batted in. In both years, he finished in the top ten in the National League in a number of statistical categories and in 1929 he finished third in the Most Valuable Player Award voting. This led to what is generally considered Terry's best season ever, 1930.
In 1930, Terry had an historic season. He finished first in the National League with a .401 batting average, the first player to hit over .400 since Rogers Hornsby in 1925. It is also the last time to date that anyone in the National League has hit .400. Only
Player-manager
While Terry never again reached the lofty heights of 1930, he had another excellent season in 1931. He led the league in runs scored with 121 and in triples with 20 while batting .349 with 112 runs batted in, and he finished third in the new Baseball Writers' Association of America National League Most Valuable Player Award voting. He became the only Giants player (as of 2014) to hit two doubles and two triples in a game when he did so against the Cincinnati Reds on September 13, 1931.[6] In 1932, Terry set his career high in home runs with 28, batting .350 with 117 runs batted in. He was also named the team's manager in early June, replacing the legendary John McGraw. He hit three home runs in a game in a losing effort against the Brooklyn Dodgers.[7] The team finished in sixth place, going 55–59 under Terry.
1933: World Series championship
In 1933, Terry's first full season as manager, the team won the National League pennant and the World Series. Although, as a player, Terry missed a month early in the season with an injury, he still hit .322. It was also the first season of the All-Star Game, for which Terry was chosen as a starter and in which he got two hits. The Giants once again faced the Senators in the 1933 World Series, which they won four games to one. Terry went 6-for-22, hitting a home run in Game 4 off Monte Weaver.[8] Despite an off-year, Terry still finished fourth in the MVP voting, perhaps gaining votes for managing the team to the championship, the Giants' first since 1922, the year before Terry's MLB debut.
Career winding down
In 1934 Terry came back to put up big numbers once more, finishing second in the NL in batting at .354 and in hits with 213 while finishing seventh in the Most Valuable Player Award voting. Terry managed the team to a seven-game lead in the National League on September 6, but the Giants lost 13 of their final 21 games and fell to second place at season's end, just two games behind the pennant-winning St. Louis Cardinals "Gashouse Gang". In 1935, Terry again got over 200 hits with 203, and batted .341 while finishing sixth in the Most Valuable Player Award voting, and managed the team to a third-place finish. In both years he was again selected to start in the All-Star game. As manager, Terry became an advocate of platooning, as Hank Leiber and Jimmy Ripple split playing time in center field.[9]
1936 was Terry's last year as a player. Before the season started, the team had purchased Sam Leslie from the Brooklyn Dodgers. Terry split time at first base with Leslie, with the newcomer getting the lion's share. It worked out well for the team, as they again won the pennant, beating the Cardinals by five games. In the World Series, Terry started all six games, but batted just .240 with no extra base hits. He had five runs batted in, but that was not enough, as the Giants lost to the New York Yankees, four games to two.
Remaining managerial career
Terry retired as a player after the 1936 season, but continued to manage the Giants until 1941. He also held the title of general manager of the Giants from September 7, 1937, through the end of the 1942 season. The Giants won another pennant in 1937, but they lost another World Series to the New York Yankees, four games to one. The team finished third in 1938, but never again finished in the first division under Terry, finishing fifth, sixth, and fifth in his last three years as manager. Terry resigned as manager after the 1941 season and named Mel Ott, his teammate since 1926, as his successor.
Ownership career
After retiring from playing and managing, Terry settled in Jacksonville, Florida, where he owned a successful Buick automobile dealership and purchased the Jacksonville Braves double-A team in 1958.[10]
Career summary
Over his 14-year career, Terry posted seven seasons with 100 or more
Terry accumulated 7 five-hit games and 40 four-hit games in his MLB career.[11]
As a manager, he led the Giants to three National League pennants and a world championship. In nine full seasons as a manager, he only had a losing season twice while finishing in the top three of the League six times. No Giants manager would lead them to three league pennants until Bruce Bochy did so nearly seventy years later.
Baseball honors
Terry was inducted into the
Bill Terry is mentioned in the 1949 poem "Line-Up for Yesterday" by Ogden Nash:
T is for Terry
The Giant from Memphis
Whose .400 average
You can't overemphis.
—
See also
- List of Major League Baseball career hits leaders
- List of Major League Baseball career triples leaders
- List of Major League Baseball career runs scored leaders
- List of Major League Baseball career runs batted in leaders
- List of Major League Baseball players to hit for the cycle
- List of Major League Baseball batting champions
- List of Major League Baseball annual runs scored leaders
- List of Major League Baseball annual triples leaders
- List of Major League Baseball player-managers
- List of Major League Baseball players who spent their entire career with one franchise
References
- ISBN 978-1-57243-990-0
- ^ September 24, 1923 box score Baseball-Reference
- ^ September 30, 1923 box score Baseball-Reference
- ^ 1924 World Series Game 1 box score Baseball-Reference
- ^ Year-by-year hits leaders at Baseball-Reference
- ^ "Batting Game Finder: From 1914 to 2014, Playing for SFG, (requiring 2B>=2 and 3B>=2, sorted by most recent date), sorted by name". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved May 4, 2014.
- ^ "Bill Terry Three-Home Run Game Boxscore at Retrosheet 8/13/1932". retrosheet.org. Retrieved April 20, 2024.
- ^ 1933 World Series Game 4 box score from Baseball Reference
- ^ Loomis, Tom (May 13, 1987). "Don't Blame Casey Stengel For Inventing Platoon System". Toledo Blade. p. 26. Retrieved February 3, 2014.
- ^ Frenrette, Gene: "Wolfson Park nears its final innings" Florida Times-Union, August 25, 2002
- ^ "Bill Terry Top Performances at Retrosheet". retrosheet.org. Retrieved April 20, 2024.
- ^ 100 Greatest Baseball Players by The Sporting News : A Legendary List Baseball Almanac
- ^ "Baseball Almanac". Retrieved 2008-01-23.
Further reading
- Stein, Fred. "Bill Terry". SABR.
- Obituary at The Deadball Era via Wayback Machine
External links
- Bill Terry at the Baseball Hall of Fame
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet
- Bill Terry managerial career statistics at Baseball-Reference.com
- Bill Terry at Find a Grave
- Bill Terry Oral History Interview - National Baseball Hall of Fame Digital Collection