Most people might not know but Cobb was an upper class Southerner, his father was a professor and known for his progressive views on blacks.
He ended up quite rich, he invested in Coke stock early and made other good investments. He maintained good friendships with most ball players of his era. He frequently saw Ruth in the off-season and even fixed Ruth up with a gal that, rumors say he might have been intimate with also. Imagine her stories!
You mentioned Al Stump one of histories great douche bags that singlehandedly created the “Cobb is racist” meme. All for his personal profit.
I will say that Tommie Lee Jones portrayal, while totally fictional, is fun to watch. His Cobb character is basically a cranky old man. Racist only because he holds views about blacks that are typical of the era before the race hustlers took over.
Well, Cobb was a very intelligent man, son of a professor as you noted, and an excellent businessman, and Tommie Lee Jones was at his lunatic best in the film. Which brings up...
Harvard Beats Yale 29-29
Tommie Lee Jones had a role in the football DVD documentary titled "Harvard Beats Yale 29-29." After watching it I felt that it was the greatest college football game I've ever seen, and I've seen 60 years of great college football. The game was played in 1968. Everything about it is old school - no canned music; real cheerleaders, not gymnasts like today; real grass, real cold-weather football outdoors, and real student-athletes rather than 5-star recruits looking for NFL money. It was unbeaten Yale vs once-beaten Harvard. Best of all, the ending is the most incredibly unbelievable one I've ever seen. No one would ever have believed it if it were fiction.
In the film they intersperse actual footage from the game with interviews of players who participated in that game, including Tommie Lee, who played for Harvard. The interviews are fascinating - players revealing their thoughts and feelings about that day - the game is remarkable, and the film footage, which includes most of the game, is clear as a bell. I advise all the many football-loving fans on this site to pick up the DVD, which is for sale at Amazon. I've never heard of a single fan who wasn't blown away by the insane ending of this game and the revealing interviews of the former players, all reflecting back 40 years or so on that game. It was also the last time an Ivy league team would make the top 20.
Anyone here who hasn't seen it should. You won't be disappointed, I guarantee.