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TY COBB RESEARCH PAPER

Introduction:
Ty Cobb was the greatest baseball player that has ever lived, he also was the most
influential on other baseball players. Who was Ty Cobb and what was his impact throughout
the 20's? I propose to show his importance to baseball by giving examples of his
determination to get to where he got to as a baseball player. Through the lessons and
morals of hard work that his father had taught Ty as a boy, he was able to become a great
hard-working baseball player. Although his personal life may not have been good at all,
the way he played baseball earned himself a 24 season playing career in the American
league, a batting record for runs scored of 2,245, runs batted in of 1,937, a record of
892 stolen bases, and his record of a batting average of .366 has still not been beaten.
His record of 96 stolen bases in one season in 1915 was not beaten until 1962.
Most people say Ty Cobb was a jerk, which is partially true, I even agree somewhat, but
there was a soft side to Ty, "I was called a radical, a despot, a bad loser, a dirty
player, and worse. Some of these words still hurt." (Cobb, 280) However, no one can deny
his ability to play baseball. He took it one step further than anyone else did at that
time. He showed that it was not a sport for people who were not rough, or did not want to
be hit, or that there was any chance to be hurt somehow. He saw baseball as a great game
of intelligence and athleticism.
When I played baseball I didn't play for fun. To me it wasn't Parcheesi played under
parchesi rules. Baseball is a red-blooded sport for red-blooded men. It's no pink tea,
and mollycoddles had better stay out. It's a contest and everything implies, a struggle
for supremacy, a survival of the fittest. Every man in the game from the minors on up, is
not only fighting against the other side, but he's trying to hold onto his own job
against those on his own bench who'd love to take it away. Why deny this? Why minimize
it? Why not boldly admit it? (Cobb, 280)
Body:
Tyrus Raymond Cobb was born on December 18, 1886 in Royston, Georgia to a
fifteen-year-old mother named Amanda Chitwood. Ty's father, William Herschel Cobb, was
23. They were married in 1883. William bought a 100-acre farm to supplement what he got
for teaching school. This is where Ty grew up and where his father taught him the values
of hard work and intensity. When Ty's father saw that Ty was good at farming and did not
mind working, the two grew closer.
Baseball was played very different then, from the way it is played now. "It was as
gentlemanly as a kick in the crotch" (Cobb, 42) Ty spent a lot of his time playing
baseball although his father disapproved. He says he started playing because he loved the
competition, the battle of muscle and wits. When Ty was younger, he used to wind yarn
around a small ball and make himself a baseball, then for the price of a few errands
would find a leather maker that would make a cover for the ball. He played cow pasture
baseball when he was 11 and 12 but had no ambition to make a career out of playing
baseball. "...The new kid in town who owned a hittable ball could overcome social
obstacles faster than a boy who didn't." (Cobb, 17) 
When Ty was not working on the farm with his father, he was playing baseball. William
didn't like Ty playing baseball; he thought that Ty would become an alcoholic and a
womanizer like the stereotype of baseball 
Stevenson, 4
players back then. When Ty was 17, he went to his father for permission to go try out for
the South Atlantic League team in Augusta. William hesitated, but let Ty go so he could
find that he didn't really want to be a baseball player, and would come back to be a
doctor, lawyer, or military man. This is what he said to Ty, "You've chosen. So be it,
son. Get it out of your system, and let us hear from you." (Cobb, 45) William sent Ty off
with six checks for $15 each and wished him luck.
An early sign that Ty was to become a professional baseball player was how hard he
played. "I was a man who saw no point in losing, if I could win." (Cobb, 280) He would
play every chance he got, practicing his hitting skills, and keeping in shape by working
on the farm back home. One thing that he developed while playing "town ball" is the way
he held the baseball bat. He would choke up on the bat more than anyone else, creating
his own style of hitting and playing.
After playing for the South Atlantic team for a while, he broke into his professional
career playing for the Detroit Tigers in 1905 at the age of 18. There he would stay for
his full 24-season playing career. In 1921 after the manager Hugh Jennings retired, Ty
Cobb became the Detroit Tiger's manager, but he kept playing and directed his team from
the outfield. While playing for Augusta, he was bought for the Detroit Tigers for $700
thanks to manager Bill Armour. He made his first major league 
Stevenson, 5
appearance on August 30, 1905 playing center field. On his first turn at bat he hit a
game-winning double off of Jack Chesbro, one of the leading pitchers of that time. In
1907, he got his first three records out of over 90 after Bill Armour retired and Ty
became a regular outfielder. In 1911, Ty got his highest batting average of his career of
.420. (Kossuth, online) Ty also was famous for not only his physical abilities at
baseball but also his psychological playing. He was the first baseball player to study
the psychology of pitchers. He practiced the "war of nerves" method of getting on base.
"I always try to keep the other team on their toes, so they won't know where the ball is
going, my attack is directed at the third baseman, I try to worry him" (Current Biography
1951, 112) 
Usually people saying anything about Ty did not bother him, like about the way he played.
Although in 1912 he went into the stands and administered "physical punishment" on an
abusive and cruel spectator, who turned out to have no hands. For this, he was given and
indefinite banishment from baseball. The ban only lasted 10 days. Detroit "regulars" went
on strike and refused to play without him.
Mostly because of weak pitching, the Tigers dropped to seventh place in 1921. In 1922, he
managed his team to third. In addition, in 1923 he got them to second. This was the best
he did and in 1926, after 
Stevenson, 6
the Tiger's dropped to sixth place when manager George Moriarty replaced him. (Current
Biography 1951, 112 
Ty finished out his career with Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics, for when he played
two seasons. When he retired at the end of 1928, he had played in 3,033 professional
games, more than anyone else on record. When the first balloting for the Baseball Hall of
Fame took place in 1936, Ty Cobb received more votes than Babe Ruth. Ty Cobb was the
first plaque to be placed in the gallery of baseball immortals at Cooperstown, New York.
He retired with 4,191 major league hits. As a memorial to his parents, Ty donated
$100,000 in 1948 for the erection of a modern hospital in his hometown. (Current
Biography 1951, 113)
On July 17, 1961, a month after checking himself into Emory Hospital, with a paper bag
filled with around $1 million dollars and his Lugar pistol, he died in his sleep.
Although most of his family did not like him, they did go to see him in his final days.
In his will he took a quarter of his $11 million dollars and donated it to the Cobb
Educational Fund, and the rest to his children and grandchildren.
If Ty Cobb had left an effect on society, it would have been one of mixed feelings.
Angry, sad, lonely, hard working, caring, and pleased with how his life had turned out.
People interpret things that he did differently, he had a temper, but he is not the only
one in the world with one. In 1996 
Stevenson, 7
a band called Soundgarden wrote a song about the famous Ty Cobb, It is an angry song and
one of their only songs where there is any swearing in the lyrics, so the effect that the
band saw of him was probably not good, but I'm sure they saw, like most people should,
that he was an overall good person deep down, though it was rarely shown. In the last
words of his autobiography Ty writes; 
Edgar Guest, one of my favorite poets, wrote:
For man must live his life on earth,
Where hate and sin and wrong abound.
'Tis here the soul must prove it's worth,
'Tis here the strength of it is found,
And he had justified his birth
Who plants one rose on barren ground.
I sit on a Georgia hill, or by a shimmering California Mountain lake, and am happy. The
pain that may attack my flash is eased in so many ways. I commune often with my God. I
ask him to guide me in all my decisions. Every young fellow should do the same. It will
leave him strong, confident, and able to fight for what he clearly sees is right. The
book I once believed that I never would write is finished. End of game, inning, and time
at bat. (Cobb, 282) 
Bibliography
here you go you lazy people. this is my 6 hours of work all here for you. I did this
paper because we needed soemthing fromt he 20's, and my favorite band Soundgarden did a
song called Ty Cobb so i did a report on him. well here you go, mail me and tell me what
you think about it. Soundgarden RULES!
-Mike
Works Cited
Stump, Al, Cobb, Ty. My Life in Baseball-The True Record. Garden City, New York:
Doubleday & Co., 1961
Rothe, Anna, ed. "Ty Cobb" Current Biography. New York: H.W. Wilson Company, 1951.
"Ty: The Early Years." (Online) Available
Http://wso.williams.edu/~jkossuth/cobb/youth.htm, 2/8/2000.
"Aggressive play defined Ty Cobb." (Online) available
http://augustachronicle.com/history/cobb.html, 2/8/2000.
Encyclopedia Britannica online. "Cobb, Ty." (Online) available
http://search.eb.com/bol/topic?eu=24925&sctn=1, 2/8/2000.

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