Marty marion biography

MLB Stats for Marty Marion

Marty Marion Baseball Stats | Baseball Almanac

Marty Marion, the Major League Baseball player, was born on Friday, December 1, 1916, in Richburg, South Carolina. Marion was 23 years old when he broke into the major leagues on April 16, 1940, with the St. Louis Cardinals. Marty Marion stats, height, weight, career totals, schools, positions, and more historical research are in the Baseball Almanac.

"New York Giants executive Garry Schumacher came up with a set of rules to follow when dealing with the cunning (Branch) Rickey: 'Don't drink the night before [and] keep your mouth shut and your hands in your pockets.' Rickey once discussed salary with Marty Marion and tried to entice him by saying Marion should simply accept the 'terms I have offered, and I'll take care of you.' Marion wisely replied, 'Give me what I want, and I'll take care of myself.'" - Stewart, Wayne. Author. Stan the Man: The Life and Times of Stan Musial. Triumph Books. 1 May 2014. Page 36.

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Marty Marion

Before the Wizard of Oz, the St. Louis Cardinals had Mr. Shortstop. Marty Marion never turned a backflip, but he was the National League’s premier defensive shortstop in the 1940s and is the only man to win a Most Valuable Player award with his glove.

No Scooter or Rabbit or Pee Wee, he was a different breed at 6-foot-2 and 170 pounds. His long legs and arms earned him another nickname, “The Octopus.” The sportswriter Red Smith said he “could go and get balls nobody else could reach.”1 Baltimore manager and St. Louis native Earl Weaver shifted the 6-foot-4 third baseman Cal Ripken Jr. to short because “he reminded me of Marty Marion.”2

Mr. Shortstop’s legacy extends beyond the infield. Every major leaguer who came after him owes him, because he was the father of the players’ pension plan.

Marion joined the Cardinals in 1940 as the last members of the Gashouse Gang were leaving. He was part of a new generation with Stan Musial, Enos Slaughter, and the brother battery of Mort and Walker Cooper who led the team to the most successful run in its history. In the twil

St. Louis Cardinals: Marty Marion, the original Cardinal short-stopper

Marty Marion was a St. Louis Cardinals legend who is touted by some as the greatest defensive shortstop that the league has ever seen. He is forgotten on occasion in favor of his similarly inclined Cards shortstop successor Ozzie Smith, but Marion was a legendary Cardinal in his own right.

Before the charm of the Wizard of Oz, the face of the St. Louis Cardinals defense was Mr. Shortstop, Marty Marion. For 11 of the 94+ years that Marion was on this Earth, he donned a St. Louis Cardinals jersey, and was considered one of the best shortstops of all time. Marion, who passed away in 2011, would have been 102 today, though baseball always believed him to be a year younger.

Marion’s numbers are by no means robust, but that doesn’t mean his impact on the St. Louis Cardinals wasn’t felt. In his St. Louis Cardinals tenure, Marion slashed .264/.323/.346 and drove in 624 runs, but only managed 36 home runs and 35 stolen bases in his career. While he carved out a niche as a doubles hitter, his line is certainly not one

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