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St. Louis Cardinal hall of famer Stan Musial is on the cover of this week's Sports Illustrated. There is a good story inside.
Don Wassall said:Stan Musial has been greatly underappreciated since he retired from baseball. It takes a fairly hard-core fan now to know that Stan The Man ranks 4th on the all time hits list, 6th on the all time RBIs list, 9th all time in runs scored, and only Ted Williams (.344) and Tony Gwynn (.338) among post-WWII players finished with a better lifetime batting average than Musial's .331.ÂÂÂ
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<div>Musial should be celebrated in his last years the way Ted Williams was. Glad to find out SI has a tribute to him but those have been few and far between. Every young baseball fan has heard of Willie Mays but how many have heard of Stan Musial? I can't remember ever reading anything negative about Musial; maybe that's why the Cultural Marxist media has mostly ignored him since he retired after the 1963 season as there was nothing to continually smear his reputation with as there was with Williams (grumpy and distant), Ty Cobb (horrible "racist"), Babe Ruth (hotdogs, booze and broads), and Mickey Mantle (booze and broads).</div>
Sad news he was the elder statesman of baseball. Earl Weaver also died today.R.I.P.
Ken Burns made a mini series about the history of baseball. It started from amateur teams in the mid 19th century to the late 90's.What is that documentary called that features MLB from the 30' to the 40's? The Glory Years or something like that. Just looking at those all white teams is amazing. There were a few blacks coming in the late 40's and into the 50's,but still not many.What a time to watch baseball.
Brooklynites had another reason to think well of Musial: Unlike Enos Slaughter and other Cardinals teammates, he was supportive when the Dodgers' Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier in 1947. Bob Gibson, who started out with the Cardinals in the late 1950s, would recall how Musial had helped established a warm atmosphere between blacks and whites on the team. "I knew Stan very well," Mays said. "He used to take care of me at All-Star Games, 24 of them. He was a true gentleman who understood the race thing and did all he could."