From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gordon Stanley "Mickey" Cochrane (April 6, 1903
– June 28, 1962) was a catcher and manager in Major
League Baseball for the Philadelphia Athletics and Detroit Tigers.
New York
Yankees Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle was named after Cochrane.
He was born in Bridgewater, Massachusetts
to Northern Irish immigrant John Cochrane,
whose father had immigrated to Ulster from Scotland and Scottish immigrant Sadie Campbell.
He was also known as "Black Mike", because of his dark moods and
bad temper. Cochrane was educated at Boston University where he played
five sports. He broke in with the Philadelphia Athletics in 1925 as the
team's starting catcher, quickly establishing himself as one of the
best offensive players ever at the position. A left-handed batter,
Cochrane ran well enough that manager Connie Mack would occasionally
insert him into the leadoff spot in the batting order. Most
frequently, Cochrane would bat third, but wherever he hit, his
primary job was to get on base so that hard-hitting Al Simmons and Jimmie Foxx could drive
him in.
Known for his fiery temper, Cochrane and teammate Lefty Grove were known
to tear up locker rooms after difficult losses. Cochrane was a
close friend of fellow baseball legend Ty Cobb. Cobb was a good friend to him, helping
Cochrane out financially, at the end of his life. Mickey Cochrane
(along with Ray Schalk
and Nap Rucker) was
one of the few ballplayers to attend Cobb's funeral.
Cochrane enjoyed his best year in 1930, when he hit .357 with 10 home
runs and 85 RBI and scored 110 runs. He played in three World Series with the
Athletics, and was blamed by many for the loss of the 1931 World
Series against the St. Louis Cardinals who, led by Pepper Martin,
stole eight bases in the series, five of those by Martin.
In 1934, Connie Mack started to
disassemble his dynasty for financial reasons and sold Cochrane to
the Detroit Tigers, who made him player-manager. Cochrane led the
Tigers to the World Series in 1934 and 1935.
Cochrane's playing career came to a sudden end on May 25, 1937
when he was hit in the head by a pitch by Yankees pitcher Bump Hadley. Hospitalized for seven days,
the injury nearly killed him. Ordered by doctors not to play
baseball again (he was just 34 years old), Cochrane returned to the
dugout but had lost his competitive fire. He managed for the
remainder of the 1937 season and was replaced midway through the 1938 season.
Cochrane's all-time managerial record was 348-250, for a .582
winning percentage.
Despite his head injury, Cochrane served in the United States
Navy during World
War II, as did Bill
Dickey of the Yankees, giving the Navy the two greatest
catchers baseball had yet seen; with Yogi Berra also serving but not yet having
reached the major leagues, there were actually three possible
"greatest catchers ever" in the WWII-era Navy.
Cochrane was elected into the Baseball Hall of
Fame in 1947. Having been
a heavy smoker, Cochrane died in 1962 in Lake
Forest, Illinois of lymphatic cancer, at the age of 59.
Mickey Cochrane was honored alongside the retired numbers of the
Detroit Tigers in
2000.
With the Athletics having moved out of Philadelphia in 1954, and
never retiring the uniform number 2 he wore with them, the Philadelphia Phillies honored
Cochrane by electing him to the Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame
at Veterans
Stadium. The Athletics' plaques from that display have been
moved to the Philadelphia Athletics Museum in Hatboro, Pennsylvania. The
Tigers honored him by renaming National Avenue, behind the
third-base stands at Tiger Stadium, Cochrane Avenue,
but have never retired the uniform number 3 he wore with them.
In 1999, he ranked number 65 on The
Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players, and
was a nominee for the Major League Baseball All-Century
Team.
See also
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