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Sports See other Sports Articles Title: Ty Cobb’s 4,000th career hit… July 18, 1927 in History Ty Cobbs 4,000th career hit
July 18, 1927 in History By Algeria - July 18, 2017 Ty Cobb's 4,000th career hit... July 18, 1927 in History Ty Cobb Made His 4,000th Hit July 18, 1927. Four thousand is a big number. Huge, actually, at least when it comes to base hits. Only two men among the tens of thousands who have played major league ball have ever reached that number in their career. When Pete Rose, then playing for Montreal, doubled off Philadelphias Jerry Koosman on April 13, 1984 for his 4,000th big-league hit, it was treated as an historic milestone one attended by the usual anticipation and celebration. However, 57 years earlier, when Ty Cobb became the founding member of the 4,000 Hit Club, the press and public treated the accomplishment with a collective yawn. Cobbs hit came on July 18, 1927, at Navin Field. The irony is that the Peach did it wearing the uniform of the visiting team. After spending 22 seasons with the Tigers, he had signed a contract with Connie Macks Philadelphia Athletics. Although now technically the enemy, Cobb was greeted warmly each time the As visited Detroit. On this particular Monday afternoon, the park was less than full as Cobb playing right field and batting third came to the plate in the first inning to face right-hander Sam Gibson. As Harry Salsinger wrote in the next days Detroit News, Cobb hit a line drive into right field and [Harry] Heilmann, trying for a one-handed catch, got his glove on the ball but it bounced out and gave Cobb a scratch two-bagger. Harry Bullion of the Detroit Free Press described Cobbs hit as a lucky double [that] slid off Heilmanns gloved hand and helped in the making of two runs. The 2-0 lead didnt last long as Detroit countered with three runs in the bottom of the first off Lefty Grove. Despite his usual iron-glove performance in the outfield, Heilmann grabbed most of the headlines. Ol Slug, who would wind up winning the last of his four batting titles in 1927, went 4 for 4 with a pair of doubles and a home run as the Tigers beat Philadelphia, 5-3. Significantly, the game was not held up to acknowledge the historic base hit and Cobb didnt ask for the ball. In fact, Cobbs accomplishment was scarcely acknowledged in the next days papers. One reason is that little emphasis was put on such arcane records then. Another is that it was considered just another ho-hum day at the office for the 40-year-old Cobb, a hitting machine who seemed likely to go on forever. Who was to say that he wouldnt reach 5,000 hits someday? The same attitude prevailed at the end of the summer when Babe Ruth clouted his 60th home run, breaking his own record. Like 4,000 hits, 60 home runs made for a nice round number, but many observers figured the Yankees slugger might one day hit 65 or 70, so why get too excited? The Free Press ran a column of notes with the headline: Bengals In Third Place; Ty Cobb Gets 4,000th Hit. Bullion wrote: When Cobb made his fluke double in the first inning, it was his 4,000th major league safety. Hes so far ahead of all records of other batsmen that he will never be beaten or tied. Of course, Bullion was wrong, as Rose would one day overhaul Cobbs 4,191 career hits. But thats another story, one that unlike the Peachs 4,000th hit would occur in an era of media saturation. Poster Comment: Ty Cobb was one of the greats to play ball. His legend may never be surpassed. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: All (#0)
Ty Cobb got his 4,000th hit 90 years ago. ;)
"When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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