| If
They Hadn’t Gone
How World War II Affected Major League Baseball
By Thomas E. Allen
Foreword by Jerry Lumpe
If
They Hadn’t Gone is an encyclopedia of biographical
and statistical information covering 472 baseball players
whose careers were affected by war. Its lists include brief
biographies and lifetime stats for replacement players who,
before Pearl Harbor, would have been over-the-hill or below
major-league quality. But, in war or in peace, baseball was
the American pastime. Writing early in 1942, President Roosevelt
urges Kenesaw M. Landis (then baseball commissioner) to “play
ball!” for the sake of morale. Allen prints the letter
in facsimile: “It would be best for the country to keep
baseball going,” writes Roosevelt, “even if the
quality of the teams is lowered by the greater use of older
players.”
“Since
baseball is a game of statistics, . . . people have often
wondered what a player would have achieved if he had not lost
playing time during his military service. This is where If
They Hadn’t Gone comes to the front. The predictions
. . . are sure to invoke a lot of discussion and comment.
. . . If They Hadn’t Gone is excellent reading
for the true baseball fan.”
—Jerry Lumpe, from the foreword
Tom
E. Allen is retired from Missouri State University,
where he served for thirty-four years as vice president of
finance. A CPA, one-time semi-pro ballplayer, and member of
the Society for American Baseball Research, Allen spent years
gathering the statistics and documentary evidence recorded
in his book. He is a die-hard Cardinals fan.
Jerry
Lumpe is a Missourian, U.S. Army veteran,
and former baseball All-Star who played second base for the
NY Yankees (1956–1959), Kansas City Athletics (1959–1963),
and Detroit Tigers (1963–1967).
2004
7 x 9, 392 pages
22 b/w historic photographs
$14.95 paper
978-0-9748190-2-0
Distributed for Missouri State University / Moon City Press.
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