Dom DiMaggio
(Redirected from Dom Dimaggio)
Dominic Paul DiMaggio
(The Little Professor)
- Bats Right, Throws Right
- Height 5' 9", Weight 168 lb.
- High School Galileo High School
- Debut April 16, 1940
- Final Game May 9, 1953
- Born February 12, 1917 in San Francisco, CA USA
- Died May 8, 2009 in Marion, MA USA
Biographical Information[edit]
"Dom’s a throwback to the kind of players we used to have." - Ty Cobb
". . . the best defensive outfielder I’ve ever seen." - Joe DiMaggio
Brother of Joe DiMaggio and Vince DiMaggio, Dom DiMaggio had a relatively short career in the major leagues but was a big star in his own right, appearing in seven All Star games. Decades after his retirement, his candidacy for the Hall of Fame was rumored to have been discussed actively by the Veterans Committee.
Dom's entire major league career was spent with the Boston Red Sox, in the 1940's and early 1950's. An outfielder, he played center field alongside Ted Williams, who was constantly being compared to Dom's brother Joe.
Dom was with the San Francisco Seals from 1937-1939, and was a big star for the team, as his older brother had been. In 2006 he was elected to the Pacific Coast League Hall of Fame.
Dom broke in with Boston at the age of 23 in 1940, hitting .301. After a couple years hitting in the .280's, he missed the 1943-1945 seasons because of World War II, entering the Navy in October 1942 and being discharged in January 1946. He came back in 1946 to hit .316 and play in his only World Series. Although often a lead-off hitter in his career, in the 1946 Series he batted third. Turning 30 years old, he hit in the .280's a couple more times before finishing out his career with five seasons that were all over .290, with a peak in 1950 when he hit .328. Dom DiMaggio had a 34-game hitting streak in 1949 (Red Sox record), and a 27-game hitting streak in 1951. Like his brother Joe, Dom left the majors at a time when he could conceivably have played quite decently for several more years.
Dom scored over 100 runs in six of his ten seasons as a regular. He tended to steal 10-15 bases per year (the stolen base was very little used at the time, and these totals would usually place him in the league's top ten), and usually had 30-40 doubles. As a defensive outfielder, his range factors were uniformly excellent, even at the end of his career.
The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract lists him as of the top ten outfielders born in the 20th Century for baserunner kills (assists) per 1,000 innings.
Never much of a factor in MVP voting, he led the league in runs scored twice, in triples once, in stolen bases once, and in hit-by-pitch once. His lifetime batting average was .298, and his career OBP of 38 percent was exceptional. He was chosen as an outfielder on The Sporting News major league All-Star Game in 1946 (over his brother Joe, who had an off-year) along with Ted Williams and Enos Slaughter. Stan Musial was a first-baseman that year.
Based on similarity scores, the most similar players are Pete Fox and Jo-Jo Moore.
After baseball Dom was highly successful in business, running companies that supplied carpeting and foam padding for automobiles.
Notable Achievements[edit]
- 1939 MVP Pacific Coast League San Francisco Seals
- 7-time AL All-Star (1941, 1942, 1946 & 1949-1952)
- 2-time AL At Bats Leader (1948 & 1951)
- 2-time AL Runs Scored Leader (1950 & 1951)
- AL Triples Leader (1950)
- AL Stolen Bases Leader (1950)
- 100 Runs Scored Seasons: 6 (1941, 1942 & 1948-1951)
Further Reading[edit]
- Tom Clavin: The DiMaggios: Three Brothers, Their Passion for Baseball, Their Pursuit of the American Dream, HarperCollins, New York, NY, 2013. ISBN 978-0062183774
- David Halberstam: The Teammates, Hyperion, New York, NY, 2003. ISBN 978-1401300579
Related Sites[edit]
- Dom DiMaggio at the SABR Bio Project
- BR Minors page
- PCL Hall of Fame 2006 - MLN Sports Zone - December 9, 2006
- Pacific Coast League Hall of Fame - 2006 Inductee
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