Eddie Waitkus | |
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First baseman | |
Born:(1919-09-04)September 4, 1919 Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. | |
Died: September 16, 1972(1972-09-16) (aged 53) Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, U.S. | |
Batted: Left Threw: Left | |
MLB debut | |
April 15, 1941, for the Chicago Cubs | |
Last MLB appearance | |
September 20, 1955, for the Philadelphia Phillies | |
MLB statistics | |
Batting average | .285 |
Home runs | 24 |
Runs batted in | 373 |
Stats atBaseball Reference ![]() | |
Teams | |
Career highlights and awards | |
Edward Stephen Waitkus (September 4, 1919 – September 16, 1972) was aLithuanian American professionalbaseball player who played as afirst baseman. He played a total of 11 seasons inMajor League Baseball (MLB), before and after serving inWorld War II (1941 and 1946–1955). He played for theChicago Cubs andPhiladelphia Phillies in theNational League and for theBaltimore Orioles of theAmerican League. He was elected to the National LeagueAll-Star team twice (1948 and 1949).
Waitkus, the son ofLithuanian immigrants, grew up inBoston and attended theCambridge High and Latin School andBoston College. He began his professional career in 1938 playing for the Worumbo Indians, a semi-professional team sponsored byWorumbo Woolen Mill inLisbon Falls, Maine. As a rookie, he was known as "the natural," which gave the title to the book loosely based on his life.
Waitkus saw some of the bloodiest fighting ofWorld War II with the U.S. Army in thePhilippines, and was awarded fourBronze Stars. DuringOperation Cartwheel, Waitkus saved the life of a badly bleeding fellow soldier, leaving his foxhole during an attack on his position, and finding some safety pins to stop the bleeding.[1]
Upon his return to baseball, he quickly became a star for theChicago Cubs. He also became a popular media figure, as he was well-educated and was fluent in Lithuanian, Polish, German, and French.[2] Following the 1948 season, the Cubs traded Waitkus withHank Borowy to thePhiladelphia Phillies forMonk Dubiel andDutch Leonard.
Just a few years into the start of what seemed a very promising career,Ruth Ann Steinhagen, an obsessed fan, shot Waitkus atChicago'sEdgewater Beach Hotel on June 14, 1949,[3] in one of the earliest recognized cases of criminalstalking.[4]
Steinhagen had become infatuated with him when he was a Cub, but seeing him every day in-season may have kept her obsession in check. Once he was traded to the Phillies, Steinhagen's obsession grew to dangerous proportions. She checked into the hotel using the alias "Ruth Ann Burns" and left a note at the desk, asking him to come to her hotel room on an urgent matter.[5]
When he arrived in her room, she shot him with a.22 caliber rifle, abolt-actionRemington model 510.[6][7] The bullet entered his lung, barely missing his heart. She immediately called the desk to report the shooting and was found cradling his head in her lap.[4] Waitkus was taken to theIllinois Masonic Hospital,[8] where he nearly died several times on the operating table before the bullet was successfully removed. Steinhagen never stood trial but instead was confined to a mental institution for a few years.[9][10]
After being shot in Chicago, Waitkus did not play again in the 1949 season, in which he compiled a .306 batting average with 27 RBI and 41 runs scored in 54 games played.[11] However Waitkus did return in uniform, although not to action, on August 19, 1949, for "Eddie Waitkus Night" atShibe Park, at which he was feted by the Phillies and showered with gifts.[12]
Waitkus returned to play in the1950 season as the leadoff hitter for theWhiz Kids team that won the 1950 National League pennant. Waitkus led the team in scoring with 102 runs.[13] Waitkus made his only post-season appearance in the1950 World Series. After the 1950 season, Waitkus was named theAssociated Press Comeback Player of the Year.[14]
Prior to the 1954 season, theBaltimore Orioles purchased Waitkus from the Philadelphia Phillies for $40,000 (equivalent to $468,000 in 2024). Released by the Orioles in 1955, he returned to the Phillies[15] for the remainder of the season. After the 1955 baseball season was complete, the Phillies released Waitkus.[16]
Following his baseball career, Waitkus worked in trucking inBuffalo, New York, and later as a manager at a department store inWaltham, Massachusetts.[17] Waitkus died in a Boston hospital in 1972 fromesophageal cancer, aged 53.[18] A resident ofCambridge, Massachusetts, at the time of his death, he was survived by a son and a daughter.[17]
AuthorBernard Malamud may have woven the basic elements of the Waitkus story – including that some called Waitkus "The Natural" because of his natural swing – and other baseball legends (notably that ofJoe Jackson) intoThe Natural.[12][19] The book was published in 1952 and was made into aHollywood film starringRobert Redford released in 1984.
However, it is unclear if Malamud was solely inspired by the shooting of Waitkus, or if he also borrowed from the life of Cubs shortstopBilly Jurges, who was shot by his ex-girlfriend in 1932 at the Chicago hotel in which they lived.[12][20]