The Top 100 Cubs Of All Time - #97 Bill Lange
I'm going to start this profile of Bill Lange, who is perhaps the most overlooked of the nineteenth-century Cubs stars, by telling you a little story about how easy it is for someone to tell you a joke -- with a straight face -- and have you believe it for more than three years, only to have it debunked at the last minute, causing quite a bit of embarrassment.
What the heck is Al talking about, you're asking. I'll explain.
Scott Lange is one of the bloggers at The Northside Lounge, and he also became a friend of mine in 2003 when he came to Wrigley Field from his home in Atlanta to see the amazing September Cubs/Cardinals series. In fact, there's a photo of Scott and me in the bleachers here, on my old blog.
During the course of conversation, Scott happened to casually mention, with a totally straight face, that Bill Lange was his great-great-grandfather.
I didn't think anything of it, really, at the time -- seemed plausible, here's a guy in his 20's, whose dad grew up in Evanston (though Scott himself was born and raised and still lives in Atlanta), who might have had a great-great-grandfather who played and then lived in Chicago. At the time I didn't know that Bill Lange the ballplayer was born and raised in San Francisco and returned there to live after his playing career ended.
I only found this out last night when I emailed Scott to see if he had any pictures of great-great-granddad that I could post here (since I hadn't been able to locate any elsewhere), and he informed me that there was no familial relation, and further, as he said in his email:
Anyway, I thought I had a great story about someone I knew being related to a long-ago Cub, and instead, Bill Lange's story shall have to stand on its own. Scott was nice enough to do some research for me, and he found the following newspaper article image -- it's from a Chicago Inter-Ocean article from July 9, 1893, where Lange committed a key error at 2B (a position he played only that year), costing the Cubs (then called the Colts) a ballgame. Worth reading for the florid 19th-Century newspaper language alone.
Bill Lange was born June 6, 1871 in San Francisco. He came to the Cubs at age 22, in 1893, and immediately cracked the starting lineup, hitting .281 with 47 stolen bases. He was a big man for his time -- 6-1 and 190 pounds -- and kept hitting and stealing bases throughout the seven seasons he played for the Cubs. He holds the club record for steals -- 84, in 1896, and also holds the club record for batting average in a single season, .389 in 1895. Think of him as Johnny Damon with a slightly higher batting average -- he had a career mark of .330 with 1055 hits, and that's in an era when teams played only 140 games per season, and Lange never played in more than 123 games. Had he stayed with the game, he could have been, as he was once termed by Sporting News founder Al Spink, "Ty Cobb enlarged".
But Lange liked the high life. In the offseasons he returned to his native San Francisco to dabble in real estate, where he met the woman who would eventually cause him to leave baseball after the 1899 season, never to return, despite repeated entreaties to do so from his teammates and Cubs management. Lange was good enough to perhaps become a Hall of Fame player, given the numbers he had put up over his brief seven-season career, and also a key part of the Cub title teams of the first decade of the 20th Century. Instead he left baseball to marry the San Francisco woman whose father didn't want her to marry a ballplayer. That didn't have a happy ending, though, as Lange and his bride eventually divorced.
Before he left the game, though, he left something for the Cubs that would help them perhaps even more than his presence on the field would have, in the succeeding decade.
In 1898, while in his native Bay Area, he happened on a semipro game in Irvington, CA, a town near present-day Fremont. Among the players in the game was a 22-year-old dental student named Frank Chance. Lange took a chance on Chance, and convinced Cubs management to sign him -- as a catcher. Within five years, Chance had become the Cubs' first baseman and manager.
Despite NOT being related in any way to Scott Lange, Bill Lange DID actually have baseball family connections -- he was an uncle to Hall of Famer George "Highpockets" Kelly, and Kelly's brother Ren, who had a cuppacoffee with the Philadelphia A's in 1923.
Lange lived out the rest of his days in his hometown of San Francisco, passing away almost forgotten in the baseball world on July 23, 1950. In addition to the season records I mentioned above, Lange also has the second-highest career average (minimum 2000 PA) in Cub history, .330, the third-highest OBA (.401), and held the club record for stolen bases in a career, 399, until it was broken -- by one -- by, of all people, Chance.
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funny
His ranking actually seems low considering his career stats. Seven years of pretty stellar play for the organization, you'd think he'd rank in the top 30 or 40 at a minimum. Did you discount his stats because he's 18th century?
by MikeJ on Nov 13, 2006 9:43 AM CST 0 recs
19th Century, actually.
by Al on
Nov 13, 2006 11:54 AM CST
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yep
As for the discounted stats, I'm not going to start an argument about how a guy from the 1800s should rank. I really don't care if he's number 10 or number 97. But if you are to rank old era guys at all, this one should rank fairly well. In comparison to the rest of his league, his name shows up all over the leader boards in various categories. So it's all relative.
In that respect, it looks to me like he put up Andre Dawson type numbers for the team. Seven years, tons of black and gray ink.
by MikeJ on
Nov 13, 2006 1:11 PM CST
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That's true.
by Al on
Nov 13, 2006 1:23 PM CST
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Why is his saying he's related to Lange
by TR on Nov 13, 2006 10:50 AM CST 0 recs
Al
It happens.
by mike b on
Nov 13, 2006 12:13 PM CST
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Yabbut...
Are you this negative in real life?
by Al on
Nov 13, 2006 12:23 PM CST
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how was that negative?
by mike b on
Nov 13, 2006 2:17 PM CST
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Is this stuff cure for insomnia?
by BlueMike on Nov 13, 2006 12:01 PM CST 0 recs
If...
by Al on
Nov 13, 2006 12:21 PM CST
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Al, I was having fun
by BlueMike on
Nov 13, 2006 12:46 PM CST
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LOL!
by Al on
Nov 13, 2006 12:50 PM CST
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And if you asked me to write a piece on him,
;)
by cubbiejulie on
Nov 13, 2006 12:52 PM CST
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And in keeping
by cubbiejulie on
Nov 13, 2006 1:38 PM CST
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I can relate to
by Smooth Jazz Man San Diego on Nov 13, 2006 12:29 PM CST 0 recs
article
In his book on hitting, Pete Rose said there were some pitchers who gave their fielders a hard time when fielders made an error behind the pitcher to extend an inning. Rose said something like, "If a pitcher did that to me, he'd be eating my knuckles!"
by danimal15 on Nov 13, 2006 12:49 PM CST 0 recs
My favorite part of the clipping
This just works for the Cubs in so many ways.
Therefore, I am changing my sig from STRODE! to a portion of this quote.
by zambranofan on Nov 13, 2006 1:19 PM CST 0 recs
What I want to know is
by rlpete on Nov 13, 2006 2:42 PM CST 0 recs
I googled around too...
There's a recipe here.
See the types of things you can learn here?
by Al on
Nov 13, 2006 4:38 PM CST
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Dammit
I DIDN'T KNOW WE WERE SUPPOSED TO INCLUDE RECIPES!
by Josh77 on
Nov 13, 2006 4:45 PM CST
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I think
The 1870s too--I mean, it's pretty difficult to call the National League a "major league" in that period with a straight face. The 1880s are a little trickier. That was the golden era of 19th Century baseball.
But back to the 1890s, the good thing about them is that the rules now pretty much conform to the modern game: overhand pitching, gloves, four balls, fouls counting as strikes, 60' 6" to the mound.
Everything else about the game was suspect.
Play was dirty--people cheated all the time. And when they weren't cheating, they were fixing games. And the game was violent--physical intimidation of umpires was a common practice. There was only one league with twelve teams, and some owners owned two teams and traded all their best players to one team and left the other one with nothing.
I think you can make an argument that Lange should be ranked higher. He was a good player for about seven years. But he really fails on the "Black ink" test--those gaudy OBPs look really impressive, but in the 1890s those numbers only put him in the league's top ten once.
It would have been interesting if he had stuck around baseball longer and if we might not be more familiar with him. He could have jumped to the AL in 1901 and put up the numbers that make Nap Lajoie so famous today.
Al may have him a little low, but I don't think this rating is completely out of line. I doubt anyone would put him in the top 75, for example.
by Josh77 on Nov 13, 2006 5:03 PM CST 0 recs
Thanks for...
Trust me, some heads are going to explode when you see #96 tomorrow. But there's a good explanation of the ranking, and I'm sure you'll understand when I explain it.
by Al on
Nov 13, 2006 7:19 PM CST
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