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The Top 100 Cubs Of All Time - #52 Bill Nicholson


Bill Nicholson in 1940

Profile by BCB reader Clark Addison

Real Cubs fans never called him Swish. To us, he was Big Bill, or Nick. The Swish nickname originated in Brooklyn. The big left handed hitter always leveled his bat across the plate several times when stepping in to face an opposing pitcher. Dodger fans would yell, "Swish, swish, swish," in unison with his practice swings. The name caught on on the east coast, but was soundly rejected in Chicago. Because news is made in New York, the Swish designation has survived and Big Bill has been all but forgotten. But you won't see Swish used here.

Nicholson was the archetypical home run hitter of the 1940s. His numbers don't look impressive today, but in that low octane era, 20 homers was a big deal. He led the Cubs in home runs eight seasons in a row, a mark that was tied by Ernie Banks and finally broken by Sammy Sosa. From 1940 through 1944, he never finished lower than fourth in the National League in home runs. Although he topped 30 only once, he led the league in homers and RBI's in back to back seasons, 1943 and 1944. Only Babe Ruth and Jimmie Foxx had done that previously. Sure, those were war years, but he had solid seasons before and after World War II depleted major league rosters.

He was the most popular Cub of the decade, the idol of urchins everywhere who identified with the North siders. A husky 205 pound six footer, he was usually seen on the field with a big chaw of tobacco bulging his cheek. When the Cubs were losing, people didn't start leaving the park until his last at bat. That successful formula of one big slugger and a beautiful ballpark wasn't lost on Phil Wrigley. In subsequent years of futility, although high profile boppers like Hank Sauer and Ernie Banks were surrounded by inferior supporting casts, the turnstiles kept clicking as long as they were hitting.

Nicholson became a Cub in midseason 1939, just after the end of a dynasty when the Cubs won four pennants in 10 years (but lost every world series). That dominant team was breaking up as a result of old age (Gabby Hartnett, Charlie Root) and bad trades (Billy Herman to the Dodgers). But the deal for Nicholson was a good one. For $35,000 they bought the .334 hitting right fielder from the Chattanooga Lookouts. He hit a home run in his first game as a Cub, had three hits including a triple in his second game, and never looked back.

It had been a three year struggle to get back to the majors after an abortive tryout with the Philadelphia A's in 1936. The personable outfielder was signed out of Washington College in his hometown of Chestertown, Maryland. After he went 0 for 12, Connie Mack sent him down, and forgot about him when he continued to struggle in the minor leagues. Things turned around when his manager at Chattanooga, former Cubs star Kiki Cuyler, tinkered with Nick's stance and batting style. He had Bill crouch more and stop lunging at outside pitches. Cuyler not only is credited for transforming the failed prospect into a feared power hitter, but also recommended the kid to the Cubs' scouting staff.

Nicholson quickly settled in as the Cubs' regular right fielder and cleanup hitter. A National League All-Star in 1940 and 1941, he hit 25 and 26 homers, and drove in 98 runs both years. In the field, he gained a reputation for his strong throwing arm, and throughout his career was one of the toughest hitters to double up, hitting into DPs only once in every 91 at bats.

Teammate Don Johnson recalled, "Nick was one of the neatest guys you ever wanted to meet...built like a fullback, a quiet guy...he was a real good outfielder, covered more territory than you thought...I don't think I ever saw him throw to a wrong base."

The next few years provided plenty of highlights. The first back-to-back-to-back homers in Cubs history were hit by Phil Cavarretta, Stan Hack, and Nicholson on August 11,1941. But it wasn't enough, as the Cubs lost to the Cardinals 7-5.

On August 15, 1942 Nicholson hit three home runs, two doubles, and a single in a doubleheader against the Pirates. Again it was to no avail as the Cubs got swept. They did better a week later when catcher Clyde McCullough, shortstop Lennie Merullo, and Cavarretta turned a triple play against the Reds in the top of the 11th. Big Bill sent the fans home happy with a walkoff homer in the bottom of the inning.

Nicholson's career years came during the war, in 1943 and '44; he had been deferred because he was color blind. Despite his efforts, both were losing seasons for the North Siders. The numbers only begin to tell the story. In '43 he hit .309  led the league with 29 homers and 128 rbi's. The following year he hit .287, leading the league with 33 homers, 122 rbi's and 116 runs scored. He lost out by one point in the MVP voting to Cardinal shortstop Marty Marion, a .267 hitter who didn't lead the league in anything but fielding percentage. But the Cardinals won their third straight pennant, while the Cubs languished in fourth place.

Big Bill provided Cubs fans with some unforgettable moments during those dismal years. The Cubs went 32 games in 1943 before their first home run. Nicholson ended the drought with two on May 30. Two months later, Phil Cavarretta hit a home run off Wrigley Field's foul pole against the Dodgers' Johnny Allen. The ball was retrieved (due to wartime shortages), put back in play, and Nicholson hit it out of the park. It might have been the only time that two consecutive home runs were hit off the same ball.

Nicholson's greatest day in baseball occurred on July 23, 1944 in a double header against the Giants. New York manager Mel Ott paid him the ultimate tribute by ordering him intentionally walked with the bases loaded in the 8th inning of the second game. Until then, only Ott and Napoleon Lajoie had received intentional passes with the bags packed. Barry Bonds joined the club many years later. Nick had hit three home runs in the opener, one in the nightcap, and one in his last at bat the day before. That set records with four consecutive home runs, and four in a double header. Ott's strategy didn't work as planned, because the Cubs scored three runs in the 8th to tie the game. But New York scored twice in the last of the 8th to finally win, 12-10. An interesting sidelight was that Ott and Nicholson were tied at the time for the league lead with 23 home runs each.

After five solid years of stardom the bottom suddenly dropped out for Nicholson just as the Cubs got it together for their surprise pennant in 1945. His batting average dropped to .243, with only 13 homers and 88 rbi's. He hit only .214 in the world series, but drove in 8 runs in the 7 games. That tied a record at the time. Things got even worse in 1946, an injury plagued season as he hit just .220 with 8 homers and 41 rbi's. Despite the anemic power numbers, he still tied Cavarretta for the team lead in jacks. Nobody has ever satisfactorily explained the reason for that two year slump. Nick was diagnosed with diabetes in 1950 while playing for the Phillies, but it's doubtful whether he was suffering from its effects that early.

In 1947 he made a comeback of sorts, hitting 26 homers with 75 rbi's, and leading the league's outfielders in fielding average. He also led the league in strikeouts with 83, barely a half season's output for Sammy Sosa or Corey Patterson; but this was before the free swinger era. Nick struck out 90 times only once in his career, yet was in the top three in the league six times. That's another reason why the name Swish stuck.

There were still some highlights left in his big bat. On August 8, 1947 Cubs' lefty Johnny Schmitz was locked in a classic pitchers' duel with the Reds' stringbean sidearmer Ewell Blackwell. The score was 1-1 in the bottom of the 11th when Nicholson launched one of The Whip's fastballs into the right field bleachers.

A year later he hit one of the longest home runs in the history of Wrigley Field, a towering blast just to the right of the scoreboard, that hit a building across Sheffield Avenue. Several years afterward, Roberto Clemente hit one to the left of the board. Nobody has ever hit the scoreboard, but if steroid testing isn't improved soon, who knows?

At age 33, 1948 was Bill's final season as a regular, and his last with the Cubs. As soon as the season ended, he was traded to the Phillies for former batting champion Harry Walker. After a couple of months in 1949, Walker was shipped on to the Reds for Hank Sauer, who continued the Nicholson power hitting tradition, albeit in left field instead of right.

With the Phillies, Nick was a steadying influence on the young Whiz Kids, who would stun the baseball world with a pennant in 1950. Throughout that season he lost 20 pounds, and on Labor Day was diagnosed with diabetes, missing the rest of the season including the World Series. Nicholson came back to play three more seasons, primarily as a pinch hitter. He retired at age 38, after 16 seasons in the major leagues.

During his career with the Cubs he hit 205 home runs, which still ranks seventh on the club's all time list. Eight of them were grand slams, second only to Ernie Banks.

After baseball, Nicholson retired to his farm outside his home town, Chestertown, Maryland. He died in 1996 at the age of 82.

Bill Nicholson's career stats at baseball-reference.com

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Mr. Nicholson
Great bio there. I didn't know that nobody called him "Swish" around these parts - everything I had ever seen cited that as his nickname.

As far as hitting the scoreboard goes, we can count on probably two hands the current players who are capable of doing it, and they would probably benefit from the wind blowing out too. Because the scoreboard is off-center just a tad towards right-center, my money on a current player would be Adam Dunn, who hit the longest home run at Wrigley I've seen in person (he cleared Sheffield, over our heads, back when Al was in right field, and hit a building on one bounce).

Question to Al: you've probably seen more BP than any of us. Have you seen anybody hit the scoreboard in BP, or come quite close?

by gauchodirk on Dec 29, 2006 1:58 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

No, but...
... I did see Barry Bonds, back in his Pirates days, hit one that went just to the right of the lower part of the scoreboard and onto the street.

And a Pirate named Doug Frobel once hit a HR to the very top row of the CF bleachers.

That's as close as anyone ever has come to hitting it. With a baseball, that is. On April 18, 1951:

In the pregame ceremonies at Wrigley Field, Sam Snead tees off from home plate and hits a golf ball off the CF scoreboard, the only ball ever to reach the structure.

by Al on Dec 29, 2006 2:03 PM CST up reply actions   0 recs

Snead
I didn't mention Snead because I knew you wouldn't appreciate the implication that you were old enough to have seen it!

by gauchodirk on Dec 29, 2006 2:12 PM CST up reply actions   0 recs

LOL
No, I am not THAT old!

by Al on Dec 29, 2006 2:16 PM CST up reply actions   0 recs

Clemente
Rumor has it Roberto Clemente once hit a ball just to the left of the scoreboard during a game.

by cubby23 on Dec 30, 2006 5:09 AM CST up reply actions   0 recs

I have heard that one too.
Not sure exactly when, though.

by Al on Dec 30, 2006 8:48 PM CST up reply actions   0 recs

Very nice profile
These are the guys I really like seeing.  Mostly forgotten players who had some good years for the Cubs.  

by rlpete on Dec 29, 2006 2:28 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Swish
Nice profile!  Bill (or his family) must not have minded the nickname because it is on his headstone.

by 08 Cubs on Dec 29, 2006 2:40 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Corrections?
Actually, several newspaper accounts and authors have referred to Bill as "Swish," giving credence to a counter-theory that his nickname continued on into Chicago. Check Art Ahern and Eddie Gold's "The New Era Cubs" 1941-1985.

by cubby23 on Dec 30, 2006 5:06 AM CST reply actions   0 recs

There was an article
in Sport Magazine around 1948 entitled "Old Swish can Still Swat" that probably nationalized and perpetuated the nickname.  I too have seen photos of his tombstone with "Swish" written on it.  But don't forget it's located in Maryland.  I'll stand by my opinion that real Cubs fans never called him Swish.

BTW, I'd rank him between 25 and 35.  Al most likely dinged him because his biggest seasons were during the war.

by Clark Addison on Dec 30, 2006 8:39 AM CST reply actions   0 recs

Nice article
The Cubs did draw well during Nicholson's days with the team but it's a stretch to say Banks' heroics put a lot of fans in the seats.  No doubt the fans who did come were there to see Mr. Cub, but even in his MVP seasons the Cubs were only sixth and seventh in attendance out of the eight NL teams.

by TR on Dec 30, 2006 11:52 AM CST up reply actions   0 recs

Wartime Deferment
Great profile.

In the New Bill James Historical Abstract, James recalls that Nicholson grew up in rural Maryland and, as a boy, was obsessed with the idea of going into the Navy and becoming an officer.  He read Navy books, was a straight-A student, and wranged an appointment to Annapolis.  When he got there for his physical, however, he was found to be color blind. As a result, while players throughout MLB were enlisting for military service, Nicholson had to stay stateside.

by deJesus Freak on Jan 4, 2007 10:31 AM CST reply actions   0 recs

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