ZiPS Time Warp: Ted Williams
Ted Williams isn’t the typical beneficiary of a trip in the ZiPS time machine. After all, anyone who has the slightest interest in baseball — and many who don’t — know his name, even if they aren’t familiar with every last one of his accomplishments. Williams typified the cerebral, scientific hitter in the same way that Babe Ruth created the archetype of the larger-than-life slugger. The mercurial Ruth likely would have had considerably more trouble adapting to today’s game, but I’m of the opinion that the Splendid Splinter would actually thrive in a world where offense is looked at more as science than myth made true. Perhaps the best modern comparison for Williams is Joey Votto if the latter somehow got a hold of a genie’s lamp.
The list of Williams’ accomplishments is far too lengthy to run down in complete fashion, so we’ll settle for a sampling. He’s first all-time in on-base percentage and second in slugging percentage. He’s the most recent player to hit .400, and a two-time Triple Crown winnner. Ted finished with a .344 batting average, 521 homers, 2,654 hits, and enough black ink in his stats that he could have started his own newspaper.
But Williams’ career was also marked by long absences from the game. He was drafted after Pearl Harbor, initially receiving a deferment because he was his mother’s sole support. He played through the 1942 season, but enlisted in the Navy reserve after its conclusion and served for the next three years.
In terms of baseball, those were prime seasons of his career lost. The 1943-1945 stretch represented his age-24 through age-26 seasons, years when a lot of Hall of Famers turn in some of their most eye-popping campaigns. Taking a look at the list of Hall of Fame hitters through those ages sorted by WAR, there are some truly gigantic numbers involved:
Name | WAR |
---|---|
Babe Ruth | 36.5 |
Mickey Mantle | 31.7 |
Rogers Hornsby | 31.5 |
Jimmie Foxx | 30.0 |
Lou Gehrig | 29.5 |
Tris Speaker | 28.5 |
Ty Cobb | 27.3 |
Joe DiMaggio | 25.7 |
Mike Schmidt | 25.7 |
Ron Santo | 24.8 |
Willie Mays | 24.4 |
Eddie Collins | 24.1 |
Rickey Henderson | 22.3 |
Johnny Bench | 22.1 |
Hank Aaron | 22.0 |
Ralph Kiner | 21.8 |
Frank Robinson | 21.6 |
Arky Vaughan | 21.0 |
Johnny Mize | 20.8 |
Frank Thomas | 20.4 |
Mel Ott | 20.4 |
Frank Baker | 20.4 |
Lou Boudreau | 20.4 |
Joe Cronin | 20.3 |
Robin Yount | 20.3 |