Friday, October 25, 2019
Ty Cobb Essay -- essays research papers
 Ty Cobb      "Baseball," Ty Cobb liked to say, "is something like a war...Baseball is a red-  blooded sport for red-blooded men. It's not pink tea, and mollycoddles had  better stay out of it. It's...a struggle for supremacy, a survival of the  fittest" (Ward and Burns 64). Although Ty Cobb was possibly the greatest player  in baseball history, many people would consider him its worst person. Tyrus  Raymond Cobb was born December 18, 1886 in The Narrows, Georgia. His parents  named him after the ancient Phoenician city of Tyre, which stubbornly refused to  surrender to Alexander the Great. From the very beginning, he took after the  city and became one of baseball's most stubborn and hated men. The Georgia Peach,  so-called, was a creature of extremes. Ty Cobb is, by bald statistics,  measurably the greatest hitter ever; he was, by the reckoning of virtually  everyone who met him, personally the most despicable human being ever to grace  the National Pastime (Deford 56). Cobb's playing career, with the Detroit Tigers  and the Philadelphia Athletics, was arguably the best anyone ever had. He won  twelve batting titles in thirteen years, including a record nine in a row. He  also holds the records for the most runs scored with 2,245 and the highest  lifetime batting average at .367, a number nearly unreachable even in just one  season by today's standards. Other records he set that have since been broken:  3,034 games played, 4,191 hits, 892 stolen bases, 392 outfield assists, 1,136  extra base hits, and 1,961 runs batted in. He also struck out just 357 times in  11,429 times at bat, a phenomenal achievement. After his career ended, in 1936,  he was the leading vote-getter of the first class of the Baseball Hall of Fame,  beating even Babe Ruth. However, Cobb's career was marred with controversy and  scandals. He was hated by nearly every player in the league, including his own  teammates. When he was first called up to play with Detroit, he was extremely  unpopular with his teammates. They locked him out of the bathroom, tore the  crown out of his straw hat and sawed in half the bat that had been especially  fashioned for him by his hometown coffin maker. He did not take any of it with  good humor and could not bear to be the target of the mildest joke. He fought  back with his fists, refused to speak to his tormentors, developed ulcers, took  to sleeping with a revolver...              ... Ty burned his fan mail for  heat" (Kramer 31). As with all bad boys, there was a good side to Ty Cobb,  although few ever saw it. Despite his inability to spend money on himself, he  did give a lot to others. He gave money to needy retired ballplayers, helped  build a new hospital in Royston, and started a fund for poor college students  (Kramer 44). While giving money, Cobb still felt unliked and remained virtually  alone for the rest of his life. What money he did spend on himself was almost  exclusively towards the use of alcohol, which he became heavily dependent on.  He said he would have given up his money if only he could change the way players  felt about him. He knew nobody forgot how nasty he always could be in his  playing days (Kramer 45). Cobb died of cancer July 17, 1961, a sad and lonely  man. Only 400 people, most of them little-leaguers who only knew him as a name  from baseball's past, showed up at his funeral. Just three ballplayers from his  era bothered to attend. Near the end of his life, Cobb commented to a caller  that if he had his life to live over again, "I would have done things a little  different...I would have had more friends" (Ward and Burns, 65).                       
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