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Charlie Comiskey Stats & Facts

 

 

Charlie Comiskey

Position: First Baseman
Bats: Right  •  Throws: Right
6-0, 180lb (183cm, 81kg)
Born: August 15, 1859 in Chicago, IL
Died: October 26, 1931  in Eagle River, WI
Buried: Calvary Catholic Cemetery, Evanston, IL
School: St. Louis University (St. Louis, MO)
Debut: May 2, 1882 (519th in major league history)
Last Game: September 12, 1894
Hall of Fame: Inducted as Pioneer/Executive in 1939. (Voted by Old Timers Committee)
View Charlie Comiskey’s Page at the Baseball Hall of Fame (plaque, photos, videos).
Full Name: Charles Albert Comiskey
Nicknames: Commy or The Old Roman
View Player Info from the B-R Bullpen
View Player Bio from the SABR BioProject

 

Players Who Debuted Same Year 

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Notable Events and Chronology

No banning the bunt

No banning the bunt

 

Biography

 

Had the Black Sox scandal not exposed the pettiness that characterized most of Comiskey’s later dealings, he might have been among the most respected elder statesmen of sport. Charles Comiskey was the son of a famous long-time Chicago alderman who represented the Irish ghettos of the near West Side. The boy rebelled against his father’s plans to apprentice him to a plumber. Instead, he played semi-pro ball on the Chicago sandlots. In 1879 Comiskey hooked up with baseball promoter Ted Sullivan, who taught him the art of playing first base. Until the 1880s, most first basemen started each play with a foot on the bag. Comiskey increased his range by playing off the bag, and his success popularized that style. As a player-manager for the St. Louis Browns of the American Association, Comiskey won four league titles (1885-1888).
Comiskey’s greatest fame came not as a manager, but as a mogul. When Ban Johnson took over the fledgling Western League (formed November 21, 1893), few imagined that eight years later it would challenge the National League for baseball supremacy. Comiskey assisted Johnson by purchasing the Sioux City franchise, which he shifted to St. Paul, and in 1900, to Chicago, where it was christened the White Stockings. For the next 31 years “The Old Roman” was the driving force behind the White Sox, who won championships in 1901, 1906, 1917, and 1919.

Comiskey’s own greed is considered to have been the real motivation for the “Black Sox” selling out to gamblers in 1919. When it was revealed that the players threw the Series for $10,000 because Comiskey had underpaid them for years, his sterling reputation was tarnished. Nonetheless, he was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1939, as an executive.

 

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Factoids, Quotes, Milestones and Odd Facts

For nearly 50 years, Charlie Comiskey was a key part of professional baseball as a player, manager, owner, and league heavyweight. He was a ruthless negotiator, shrewd businessman, and generous philanthropist. As owner of the Chicago White Sox, his team won three American League pennants and two World Series titles. His legacy is forever tainted by the 1919 Black Sox scandal, when eight of his players conspired to throw the World Series, but Comiskey was a seminal figure in the success of the American League.

Quotes From Charlie Comiskey

“Baseball is the only game that is complicated enough to always be interesting and yet simple enough to always be understood.”

“There are seven who never will play on this team again.” — quoted after Game Eight of the 1919 World Series, which was thrown by as many as eight of his own players

Teams Charlie Comiskey Played For

St. Louis Browns, National League (1882-1891)
Cincinnati Reds (1892-1894)

Teams Charlie Comiskey Managed

St. Louis Browns, National League (1883-1889)
Chicago Pirates, Players League (1890)
St. Louis Browns, National League (1891)
Cincinnati Reds (1892-1894)

 

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