Eddie Waitkus
Waitkuseddie.jpg
Edward Stephen Waitkus
Bats Left, Throws Left
Height 6' 1", Weight 175 lb.
School Boston College
High School Cambridge High and Latin School
Debut April 15, 1941
Final Game September 20, 1955
Born September 4, 1919 in Cambridge, MA USA
Died September 16, 1972 in Jamaica Plain, MA USA
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Contents
1 Biographical Information
2 Notable Achievements
3 Further Reading
4 Related Sites
Biographical Information
". . . it is flat-out incorrect to declare that the murder attempt on Eddie Waitkus was the singular inspiration for The Natural." - from a SABR article called "Eddie Waitkus and The Natural: What is Assumption? What is Fact?"
Eddie Waitkus was an eleven-year major leaguer who hit a lifetime .285. Although a competent hitter, he had little power - clubbing only 24 homers in 11 seasons.
Born in Massachusetts, he attended Boston College. Signed as a free agent in 1939, Waitkus began his big league career with the Chicago Cubs in 1941 when he was 21. He also played for the Los Angeles Angels in 1942, leading the Pacific Coast League in hits.
The war intervened, and it was 1946 before he played in the majors again. He served in the military during World War II, won four Battle Stars, and was wounded. By 1946, he had become a Cubs regular at first base.
He had perhaps his finest season on the 1948 Chicago Cubs team with Andy Pafko and Bill Nicholson. Eddie hit .295 and made the All-Star team. After the season, he was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies.
Waitkus got off to a hot start in 1949, hitting .305. However, on June 14th of that year, he was shot with a .22 caliber rifle in a Chicago, IL hotel by Ruth Ann Steinhagen, an obsessed teenage fan (à la Roy Hobbs in The Natural). The injury almost cost him his life.
After several operations to remove the bullet, he amazingly returned to baseball and was a key member of the Phillies' 1950 "Whiz Kids" team. He hit .267 in the 1950 World Series, batting in the leadoff spot ahead of the 23-year-old Richie Ashburn.
Waitkus later played a season and a half with the Baltimore Orioles before returning to the Phillies to end his career. Later in life, he worked summers at the Ted Williams baseball camp. He died in Massachusetts at the age of 53.
Notable Achievements
2-time NL All-Star (1948 & 1949)
NL Singles Leader (1950)
100 Runs Scored Seasons: 1 (1950)
Further Reading
Rob Edelman: "Eddie Waitkus and The Natural: What Is Assumption? What Is Fact?", in Morris Levin, ed.: From Swampoodle to South Philly: Baseball in Philadelphia and the Delaware Valley, The National Pastime, SABR, 2013, pp. 86-91.
C. Paul Rogers III: "Eddie Waitkus", in Bill Nowlin, ed.: Van Lingle Mungo: The Man, The Song, The Players, SABR, Phoenix, AZ, 2014, pp. 66-75. ISBN 978-1-933599-76-2
John Theodore: Baseball's Natural: The Story of Eddie Waitkus, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, NE, 2006.
Related Sites
Eddie Waitkus at the SABR Bio Project
Chatter from the Dugout article.