American baseball player (1893-1988)
Baseball player
Edd Roush
|
---|
Edd Roush with the Cincinnati Reds in 1923
|
Center fielder
|
Born:
(
1893-05-08
)
May 8, 1893
Oakland City, Indiana
, U.S.
|
Died:
March 21, 1988
(1988-03-21)
(aged 94)
Bradenton, Florida
, U.S.
|
|
|
August 20, 1913, for the Chicago White Sox
|
|
September 27, 1931, for the Cincinnati Reds
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|
Batting average
| .323
|
---|
Hits
| 2,376
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Home runs
| 68
|
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Runs batted in
| 981
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
|
Induction
| 1962
|
---|
Election method
| Veterans Committee
|
---|
|
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Edd J. Roush
(May 8, 1893 ? March 21, 1988) was an American professional
baseball
player and
coach
. He played in
Major League Baseball
as a
center fielder
from 1913 to 1931, most prominently as a member of the
Cincinnati Reds
where he was a two-time
National League (NL) batting champion
and led the team to the
1919 World Series
championship. He also played for the
New York Giants
,
Chicago White Sox
as well as the
Newark Peppers
and the
Indianapolis Hoosiers
of the
Federal League
. Roush accumulated a .323 batting average over his 18-year playing career and was elected to the
National Baseball Hall of Fame
in 1962.
Early life
[
edit
]
Roush was born in
Oakland City, Indiana
, on May 8, 1893, to parents Laura and William Roush, a dairy farmer.
[1]
[2]
A twin, he and his brother Fred (not short for Edward or Frederick, respectively)
[1]
each shared a middle initial of J, which was not short for any name.
[1]
The boys worked on the dairy farm throughout childhood. Edd was left-handed, but he learned to throw and bat right-handed early in his career due to the fact that left-handed gloves were scarce in Oakland City.
[3]
He received the opportunity to play for the local semi-pro Oakland City Walkovers
[2]
in 1909 after their regular outfielders failed to appear.
[4]
After collecting two hits the first game he became a starting outfielder. In 1911, once he learned that other players were receiving $5 (equivalent to $88 in 2023) per game, he transferred to the rival
Princeton, Indiana
team.
[2]
In 1912 , he played for the
Evansville, Indiana
team in the
Kentucky?Illinois?Tennessee League
(KITTY). He performed well with the team and hit .284 in 1912 and .300 in 1913 when his contract was bought by the
Chicago White Sox
.
[2]
Professional baseball career
[
edit
]
Early career
[
edit
]
Roush made his major league debut as a 20-year-old for the
Chicago White Sox
on August 20, 1913.
[2]
[5]
After nine games he was sent to the minors
[6]
to play for Lincoln Railsplitters of the
Western League
. After only ten games he quit and returned to Oakland City.
[3]
Roush joined the
Indianapolis Hoosiers
of the
Federal League
in 1914 and hit .325 through 74 games as the Hoosiers won the pennant. The Hoosiers became the
Newark Peppers
in
1915
and Roush continued to play outfield for the team under manager, and fellow
1962 Hall of Fame
inductee
[7]
Bill McKechnie
. After the Federal League disbanded in early 1916, the Giants picked up Roush, McKechnie and
Bill Rariden
. Midway through the 1916 season, the Giants traded Roush, McKechnie, and Hall of Famer
Christy Mathewson
to the Cincinnati Reds.
[2]
[3]
Cincinnati Reds
[
edit
]
Roush played only 69 games with the Reds in 1916 and finished second in team batting average with .287, behind
Hal Chase
.
[5]
1917 was Roush's first full season with the Reds and by the end of August his batting average of .347 topped
Rogers Hornsby
who was in second place. An injured leg caused him to miss the final week of the season
[8]
but Hornsby could not catch his .341 average. At season's end, Roush led the National League in batting average and finished third in hits with 178, only 4 behind leader
Heinie Groh
.
In 1918, Roush finished the season with a .333 average, .002 behind Hall of Famer
Zack Wheat
. On April 29, 1918, the Reds originally beat the St. Louis Cardinals, but a protested play
[9]
caused the game to be replayed on August 11.
[10]
The play in question involved Roush, who slid to make a catch in the outfield. After he juggled the ball, he secured it in his glove to make the out and threw to third base as the runner left before the catch was made.
[9]
The Cardinals protested the play stating that the runner did not have to wait until the ball was settled into Roush's glove to begin running. They presented this to National League President
John Heydler
and won.
[9]
The game was then replayed on August 11. This is significant because Roush went 2?3 in the initial game, and 1?4 in the replayed game. If the initial game stood then Roush would have finished the season 146 for 434 (a .336 batting average) instead of 145 for 435 (a .333 batting average). This would have made him batting champion for the second straight year.
Roush won his second batting title in 1919, when he led the league with a batting average of .321, and led the Cincinnati Reds to the World Series. The Reds won the
1919 World Series
, known for the
Black Sox Scandal
, by winning five of the eight games. Throughout his life Roush would state that the Reds were the better team, and would have won the Series either way.
[2]
[3]
Roush showed up for
spring training
in 1920, an occurrence rare enough that
The Sporting News
reported on it.
[2]
Roush would hunt quail and rabbits at his home in
Oakland City, Indiana
right until a week before opening day.
[11]
On June 8, 1920, a lengthy argument took place on the field, and Roush fell asleep in the outfield. After infielder
Heinie Groh
was unsuccessful at waking Roush up, Roush was ejected for delay of game.
[2]
[3]
[12]
Roush hit .339, and set career highs in hits, doubles, triples,
RBI
, and total bases.
[5]
1921 would be the first of many holdouts that Roush would start. After his stellar 1920 season where he led the team in hits, triples, RBI, stolen bases and average, he argued that his salary of $15,000 (equivalent to $256,231 in 2023) was not enough.
[13]
He failed to show up to spring training and continued to hold out until April 30 when he reached an agreement with the Reds.
[13]
The Reds played poorly in 1921, and by the end of May they were 14?28.
[14]
Roush had been sidelined a couple of times during the season with leg injuries,
[15]
but he finished the year batting .385 over the last 37 games of the season to finish with a career-high .352 batting average, second to
Rogers Hornsby
.
Before the 1922 season would start, Roush entered negotiations with the Reds for the second straight year, this time demanding a 3-year contract for $18,000 (equivalent to $327,650 in 2023) per year.
[16]
After the initial demand, Roush held out for months
[17]
prompting
The Sporting News
to say:
He is the best silence keeper in baseball. Just says real early what he wants and then closes up. No gabbing or elaborate explanations. Transacts business the way he plays ball? no fuss, but exceedingly effective.
[16]
On July 26 Roush met with team president
Gary Herrmann
to negotiate a ten-week contract that would expire at the end of the season. After the contract was signed he put on a uniform and joined the in progress game against the
Philadelphia Phillies
.
[18]
Over the 49 games he played in 1922 he hit for a .352 average. 1923 would start similarly to the previous two years with a new holdout by Roush;
[19]
this time he demanded a $25,000 (equivalent to $447,070 in 2023) salary. The Reds countered with the salary he was making the previous season and began to fine him $50 per day of missed training camp.
[20]
On April 15 the two sides reached an agreement. He missed time due to a fractured rib from August 29 to September 14, although it is still disputed when he broke the rib.
[21]
He finished the year with a .351 average and led the league in doubles with 41.
[5]
In the off season before Opening Day in 1924 Roush signed a three-year $19,000 contract. During spring training, manager
Pat Moran
fell ill on the train ride to their training facilities in Florida,
[22]
and on March 7, 1924, he died. In April Roush strained his side when he swung and missed at a pitch and was sidelined for eight games
[22]
and would again be sidelined for nine games after he strained a muscle in his leg in St. Louis.
[22]
[23]
Roush would finish the year with a .348 average and led the league with 21 triples. Roush became team captain of the Reds in 1925
[24]
and led the team to a third-place finish, a disappointing end to the season as the Reds led the league in ERA for the third year in a row.
On July 21, 1926, team officials celebrated "Roush Day" at
Redland Field
in honor Roush and his decade spent with the team.
[25]
At the end of the season it was clear that with three younger outfielders,
Curt Walker
,
Cuckoo Christensen
and
Rube Bressler
, the Reds would part ways with the 34 year old Roush.
[26]
In February 1927 Roush was traded to the Giants for
George Kelly
and an undetermined amount of cash.
[5]
[27]
From 1917 to 1926
[5]
Roush hit .339 and collected over 1,600 hits. The Reds were trading the player with the highest career batting average for the team at that point. He had the most triples for the team for any player after 1900. From 1917 to 1926, he never had a batting average under .323.
[5]
Later career
[
edit
]
Roush's career with the Giants started with a contract dispute. The Giants offered $19,000 (equivalent to $333,264 in 2023), and Roush rejected the offer, demanding $30,000 (equivalent to $526,207 in 2023).
[28]
Roush met with
John McGraw
, the Giants manager, in a hotel room in
Chattanooga, Tennessee
to work out the details of the contract.
[28]
After a back-and-forth discussion about how Roush did not want to play in New York, the two sides agreed to a three-year $70,000 (equivalent to $1,227,816 in 2023) contract.
[29]
[30]
In 1927 Roush had a down year for the third place Giants, and batted only .304, the lowest average since 1916.
[5]
The following year he suffered torn muscles in his abdomen
[31]
and only appeared in 46 games. After receiving surgery on the torn muscles in February, he returned to form and hit .324 over 115 games for the Giants.
In early 1930 Roush threatened to retire than to receive a pay cut. After the two sides could not agree on a number Roush held out for the whole season.
[17]
When the
Great Depression
hit in late 1929, the Roush family was largely unaffected due to his frequent holdouts and salary demands. Roush spent the season with his family and played in benefit baseball games in Oakland City and
Princeton
.
[32]
As the next season began, Roush refused to play for the Giants and retired from baseball.
[33]
He was contacted by Reds President
Sidney Weil
to play for the team in 1931. After a short negotiation, both sides agreed to a one-year contract worth $15,000 (equivalent to $300,525 in 2023). Roush struggled in his last season in baseball, only managing to hit .271 in 101 games.
[5]
In his final game he went 2?3 with a triple in a 5?3 loss against the pennant winning Cardinals.
[34]
Roush finished his 18-year career with a .323 lifetime average, 268
stolen bases
and 182
triples
. He never struck out more than 25 times in a season and had 30 inside-the-park home runs.
[5]
Roush used a 48-ounce (1,400 g)
Louisville Slugger
,
[35]
the heaviest bat used in baseball.
At the time of his retirement in 1931, he was second place behind
Bid McPhee
for hits and triples in
Cincinnati Reds
history.
[36]
Hall of Fame pitcher
Pete Alexander
wrote of Roush, "Of all the batters I have faced ... Edd Roush and
Ross Youngs
are the trickiest. I won't say they are the hardest hitters but they are the trickiest, smartest."
[37]
Later life and honors
[
edit
]
Roush served one season as the Reds coach alongside his good friend, manager
Bill McKechnie
, who had previously been his teammate. During his career he had saved his money and was able to retire after he finished playing. He built a house in Bradenton, Florida, and used it as a winter residence. He frequently attended spring training and told stories of the old days. Roush spent most of his time in his hometown of Oakland City, where he served on the town and school boards and ran the Montgomery cemetery for 35 years.
[2]
He was one of the 22 players interviewed by
Lawrence Ritter
and included in the original version of
The Glory of Their Times
, a ground-breaking book that set a standard for oral histories of baseball.
[
citation needed
]
Roush was elected to the
National Baseball Hall of Fame
in 1962 via the
Veterans Committee
.
[2]
In addition to Roush's selection into the
Baseball Hall of Fame
, chosen with McKechnie,
[38]
he is also a member of the
Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame
, inducted in 1960.
[39]
Considered the greatest player in Reds' history at the time, Roush was invited to throw out the first ball at the last game at
Crosley Field
on June 24, 1970.
Joe Morgan
called Roush "the best of us all".
[
citation needed
]
In 1981, Ritter and
Donald Honig
included Roush in their book
The 100 Greatest Baseball Players of All Time
.
[40]
Roush died at the age of 94 on March 21, 1988, in
Bradenton, Florida
. At the time of his death he was the last surviving Federal League participant and the last surviving 1919 World Series participant.
[
citation needed
]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 20
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
Edd Roush
at the
SABR Baseball Biography Project
, by Jim Sandoval, Retrieved May 8, 2015.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
Cava, Pete
, pp. 167
- ^
Ritter, Lawrence
, pp. 243
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
"Edd Roush Statistics and History"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
October 4,
2017
.
- ^
"Edd Roush Minors Statistics and History"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
October 26,
2019
.
- ^
"Robinson, Feller, McKechnie and Roush Inducted into Hall of Fame"
.
The Daily Register
.
Harrisburg, Illinois
.
UPI
. July 24, 1962. p. 7
. Retrieved
October 25,
2019
.
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 95
- ^
a
b
c
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 108
- ^
"August 11 1918 Game Log"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
October 26,
2019
.
- ^
Ritter, Lawrence
, pp. 248
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 132
- ^
a
b
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 149
- ^
"Cincinnati Reds 1921 Season"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
October 27,
2019
.
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 150
- ^
a
b
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 152
- ^
a
b
Suehsdorf, A. D. (1978).
The Great American Baseball Scrapbook
, p. 56. Random House.
ISBN
0-394-50253-1
.
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 153
- ^
"Ed Roush Declines to Play With Reds: Star Outfielder Says He Will Join an Industrial League Team This Season"
.
The New York Times
. April 6, 1923. p. 13
. Retrieved
March 14,
2011
.
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 155
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 158
- ^
a
b
c
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 160
- ^
"1924 Batting Game Logs"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
October 27,
2019
.
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 162
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 163
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 166
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 167
- ^
a
b
Ritter, Lawrence
, pp. 250
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 171
- ^
Ritter, Lawrence
, pp. 251
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 175
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 179
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 181
- ^
"September 27, 1931 Game Log"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
October 27,
2019
.
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 3
- ^
"Cincinnati Career Records"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
October 26,
2019
.
- ^
Stinson, Mitchell
, pp. 16
- ^
"National Baseball Hall of Fame ? Explorer"
.
baseballhall.org
. National Baseball Hall of Fame
. Retrieved
June 4,
2019
.
- ^
"Reds Hall of Fame Member Directory"
.
mlb.com
. Major League Baseball
. Retrieved
June 4,
2019
.
- ^
Ritter, Lawrence; Honig, Donald (1981).
The 100 Greatest Baseball Players of All Time
. Crown Publishers. p. 211.
ISBN
0-517-543001
– via archive.org.
- Asinof, Eliot (1987).
Eight Men Out: The Black Sox and the 1919 World Series
. Macmillan.
ISBN
9780805065374
. Retrieved
October 25,
2019
.
- Cava, Pete (2015).
Indiana-Born Major League Baseball Players: A Biographical Dictionary, 1871-2014
. McFarland.
ISBN
9781476622705
. Retrieved
October 25,
2019
.
- Ritter, Lawrence (1992).
Glory of Their Times
. Harper Collins.
ISBN
9780688112738
. Retrieved
October 25,
2019
.
- Stinson, Mitchell (2012).
Deacon Bill McKechnie: A Baseball Biography
. McFarland.
ISBN
9780786492367
. Retrieved
October 25,
2019
.
- Stinson, Mitchell (2014).
Edd Roush: A Biography of the Cincinnati Reds Star
. McFarland.
ISBN
9780786456291
. Retrieved
October 25,
2019
.
External links
[
edit
]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Edd Roush
.
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