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Encyclopedia > Shoeless Joe
Photo of Jackson

Joseph Jefferson "Shoeless Joe" Jackson (July 16, 1889 - December 5, 1951) was a left fielder in Major League Baseball who played for the Philadelphia Athletics, Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox. One of the greatest hitters of his era, he was one of eight players banished for life from professional baseball for his alleged participation in the Black Sox scandal, this being the basis for his exclusion from baseball's Hall of Fame.


He is considered to be one of the most outstanding hitters in the history of the game, to the point that Babe Ruth claimed that he modelled his hitting technique after Jackson's. Jackson is the only rookie to have batted .400 (he would not be considered a rookie by today's definition, though) and his career .356 batting average is the third highest in history, after Ty Cobb and Rogers Hornsby.


The nickname "Shoeless" came from a game he once played when he was suffering from blisters on the feet from a new pair of spikes. He was sitting the game out, but a shortage of players obliged him to play. With no other option at one point, he played in his socked feet and hit a triple in one at bat. When he arrived at third base, a fan yelled out "You shoeless son-of-a-gun, you!" and the name stuck.


Joe Jackson always maintained his innocence about the Black Sox scandal and insisted that he was playing with his best effort in the 1919 World Series. Supporters point out the World Series statistics show that he maintained a .375 batting average and played well in the field, throwing out five baserunners and handling thirty chances in the outfield with no errors. On the basis of these stats, they maintain that Joe was obviously not participating in the players' conspiracy if he was playing that well. However, there is a corresponding argument that Jackson seemed to have hit well only when there were no runners on base or when games were out of reach, and that he hit poorly at points when he could have most helped his team.


Against his case is the fact that Jackson admitted under oath that he agreed to participate in the fix, and accepted $5,000 as partial payment for his cooperation. He also admitted to complaining to other conspirators that he had not received his full share. His banishment was based primarily on these admissions. Furthermore, in the five World Series games which the White Sox lost, Jackson had only one RBI on a home run in the deciding game 8.


The phrase "Say it ain't so, Joe" is based on a young fan's comment to Jackson when he heard of the Black Sox scandal (possibly apocryphal).


External Links

Books

  • Shoeless Joe, novel by W. P. Kinsella (basis for the movie Field of Dreams)
  • Eight Men Out, by Eliot Asinof, an account of the 1919 World Series fix.

Films

  • Eight Men Out, directed by John Sayles, based on the Asinof book and starring D.B. Sweeney as Joe Jackson.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Joe Jackson Statistics - Baseball-Reference.com (754 words)
Shoeless: The Life and Times of Joe Jackson is the award-winning biography by SABR member David Fleitz.
The Philadelphia Athletics sent a player to be named later and Morrie Rath to the Cleveland Naps for Bris Lord.
The Philadelphia Athletics sent Joe Jackson (July 30, 1910) to the Cleveland Naps to complete the trade.
Shoeless Joe Jackson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1239 words)
Joseph Jefferson "Shoeless Joe" Jackson (July 16, 1889, in Pickens County, South Carolina – October 5, 1951, in Greenville, South Carolina) was a left fielder in Major League Baseball who played for the Philadelphia Athletics, Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox.
The nickname "Shoeless" is sometimes said to have come from a minor-league game he once played when he was suffering from blisters on the feet from a new pair of spikes.
Joe Jackson suffered from heart trouble in his later years and died in Greenville in 1951.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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