William Jennings Bryan Herman - Second
and First Baseman, Manager -
DeceasedNickname:
BILLY HERMAN
HERMAN, William Jennings Bryan ("Owl Eyes," "Old Popeyes")
- born July 7, 1909, New Albany; died Sept. 5, 1992, West Palm Beach,
Fla. Chicago (NL) 1931-1941, Brooklyn (NL) 1941-1943, 1946, Boston (NL)
1946, Pittsburgh (NL) 1947. 2B, 3B, 1B. 1,922g, 7,707ab, 47, .304. MGR,
Pittsburgh (NL) 1947, Boston (AL) 1964-1966 (189-274). Debuted Aug. 31,
1931. 5-11, 180, BR, TR. Hall of Fame, 1975.
Billy Herman, an adroit defensive player and an excellent
hit-and-run man, was the National League's premier second baseman during
the Thirties and early Forties. The Hall of Famer spent 50 years in
baseball as a player, manager, coach and scout. Born on a farm, Herman
was named for a three-time Democratic presidential candidate. At New
Albany High School Herman was a steady, if unspectacular,
pitcher-infielder. He developed into a prospect while playing sandlot
ball in the Louisville area and signed a contract with the Louisville
Colonels (American Association). Herman's first year in professional
baseball was in 1928 with Vicksburg (Cotton States). He hit over .300
for every minor league team he played for.
Despite a .350 season at Louisville in 1931, New York Giants manager
John McGraw rejected Herman as "too frail." The Chicago Cubs acquired
Billy as the heir apparent to second baseman Rogers Hornsby, another
future Hall of Famer. An ideal number-two hitter, Herman batted over
.300 eight times in a 15-year career and helped the Cubs to pennants in
1932, 1935 and 1938. In 1935 his 227 hits and 57 doubles led the
National League. Contemporary accounts say that Herman covered second
base "like a blanket." He would eventually tie a record by leading the
N.L. in putouts for seven years. In ten All-Star games Herman batted
.433.
Traded to Brooklyn in May 1941, he helped the Dodgers to their first
pennant in 21 years. Herman spent the next two seasons in the navy. When
he returned in 1946 the Dodgers traded him to the Boston Braves, who
dealt him to the Pittsburgh Pirates for the 1947 season. His last year
as a player was in 1950, when he batted .307 in 71 games for Oakland
(Pacific Coast) at age 41.
In his lone season at Pittsburgh, Herman was a player-manager. He had
one other major league managerial post, with the Boston Red Sox from
1964 to 1966. He also managed in the minors at Minneapolis (American
Association) in 1948, Richmond (Piedmont) in 1951, Bradenton (Gulf Coast
Rookie) in 1968 and Tri-City (Northwest) in 1969. Herman coached for six
big league teams, including Brooklyn (1952-1957), Milwaukee (1958-1959),
Boston (1960-1964), the California Angels (1967), Oakland A's
(1968-1974) and San Diego Padres (1978-1979). He made Florida his home
starting in 1968. The legendary Casey Stengel, a shrewd judge of talent,
appraised Herman as "one of the two or three smartest players ever to
come into the N.L."
Herman, whose prominent brown eyes led to his nicknames, was also an
excellent golfer. A member of the Baseball Hall of Fame's Class of 1975,
he was inducted into the Indiana Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979. Herman's
son, Billy Jr., briefly played in the minor leagues. Cheri Daniels, the
wife of Indiana governor Mitch Daniels, is Herman's granddaughter.
From The Encyclopedia of Indiana-Born Major League Baseball
Players, copyright (c) 2007 by Pete Cava. Reproduced with the
author's permission. |