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Last Wednesday, most of us woke up to news that the larger-than-life Yogi Berra passed away, leaving behind one of the greatest on- and off-field legacies in baseball history. In the past week, you might have read about Yogi’s remarkably consistent production, the output of the quote machine residing between those big ears, the amazing fact that he caught both ends of a doubleheader 117 times, or the accomplishment of winning a World Series ring for all 10 of his gnarled fingers. As when any great, admired person leaves us, we honor him or her by gathering, recounting achievements, telling stories, and remembering the ways they touched our lives. It seems we could do that forever with Yogi.

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There are four days left in 2015’s regular season and there’s not much I can tell you at this point that will help you win your fantasy league, so it’s time to have a little fun.

Yogi Berra was major-league regular from 1947-1963, so while he snuck in to the earliest versions of Strat-o-Matic, nobody had the pleasure of owning him in a roto league. While I can’t offer you that satisfaction, I can take a look back to see how Berra would’ve stacked up if fantasy baseball were a thing six decades ago.

I’ll spare you the ins and outs of how I valued the players because this is supposed to be a fun piece not a #gorymath one, but it’s probably necessary to know that I assumed a 12-team league with a $260 budget, 13 starting hitters, and nine starting pitchers. It’s probably also instructive to appreciate some of the major contextual differences between Yogi’s era and today. For example, if you could only pitch one inning you couldn't even make the league in the 1950s, much less publicly assault your team's best player. More relevant for this exercise, the number of players who appeared in a major league game was far fewer, primarily because there were far fewer teams. When Yogi came up in 1946, there were 16 clubs and it stayed that way for most of his career, expanding to 18 in 1961 and 20 in 1962.

To put some numbers on it, 310 non-pitchers made a plate appearance in 1948 (Yogi’s first full season), 365 did in 1961 (the first expansion during Yogi’s career), and 398 did in 1962 (second expansion). To date in 2015, 633 players have come to the dish. As a result, the player pool for mid-20th century, mixed-league purposes would have been much shallower than today’s. The roster depth and valuations took on something much closer to what an NL- or AL-only league feels like today.

That’s enough context, let’s look at some numbers. Here are the relevant stats:

Year

G

AB

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

1947

83

293

41

11

54

0

0.280

1948

125

469

70

14

98

3

0.305

1949

116

415

59

20

91

2

0.277

1950

151

597

116

28

124

4

0.322

1951

141

547

92

27

88

5

0.294

1952

142

534

97

30

98

2

0.273

1953

137

503

80

27

108

0

0.296

1954

151

584

88

22

125

0

0.307

1955

147

541

84

27

108

1

0.272

1956

140

521

93

30

105

3

0.298

1957

134

482

74

24

82

1

0.251

1958

122

433

60

22

90

3

0.266

1959

131

472

64

19

69

1

0.284

1960

120

359

46

15

62

2

0.276

1961

119

395

62

22

61

2

0.271

1962

86

232

25

10

35

0

0.224

1963

64

147

20

8

28

1

0.293

And here are how those translate to 5×5 return and rankings among catchers and all hitters:

Year

$

C Rank

Hitter Rank

1947

5.99

5

109

1948

16.30

1

37

1949

14.57

2

45

1950

25.86

1

7

1951

19.32

2

27

1952

22.70

1

19

1953

18.01

2

35

1954

20.73

1

24

1955

16.15

2

37

1956

18.70

1

26

1957

12.46

1

60

1958

11.27

1

61

1959

11.71

3

60

1960

9.08

3

78

1961

7.75

4

84

1962

-2.97

23

185

1963

-0.60

17

167

A 22-year-old Berra broke camp with the Yankees in 1947 and split catching duties with a veteran Aaron Robinson, himself coming off a season in which he earned some marginal MVP consideration. Robinson made the All-Star game in ’47 and caught Game Seven of the World Series for the Yankees that year, but Berra was far superior offensively, finishing as fantasy’s fifth-best catcher despite being a part-timer.

The Yanks traded Robinson in the offseason and with full-time catching duties all to himself, Berra finished as a top-four fantasy backstop the next 14 seasons, including a first- or second-place finish in 11 consecutive years. His best fantasy season was 1950, which was amazingly not one of the three times he won an MVP award. Berra finished behind Phil Rizzuto (fine) and Billy Goodman (indefensible) in the MVP voting but may well have been fantasy’s MVP. Only Duke Snider, Sam Jethroe, Stan Musial, Earl Torgeson, Dom DiMaggio, and Larry Doby out-earned Berra among hitters in 1950 and given that they all played relatively rich positions, you could make a case for Yogi as fantasy’s most valuable hitter.

Berra won the real life MVP in 1951, 1954, and 1955 but was fantasy’s second best catcher two of those three years. While it’s fun to simply marvel at Yogi’s numbers, the thing that struck me most about the first half of his run was the back and forth between he and Roy Campanella, who also won three MVP awards in the 1950s.

Have a look at this seasonal comparison from 1949-1955, which excludes 1954, a year in which Campanella was plagued by a wrist injury:

1949

Player

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

$

C Rank

Hitter Rank

Berra

70

14

98

3

0.305

14.57

2

45

Campanella

65

22

82

3

0.287

16.49

1

40

1950

Player

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

$

C Rank

Hitter Rank

Berra

116

28

124

4

0.322

25.86

1

7

Campanella

70

31

89

1

0.281

14.90

2

46

1951

Player

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

$

C Rank

Hitter Rank

Berra

92

27

88

5

0.294

19.32

2

27

Campanella

90

33

108

1

0.325

22.97

1

16

1952

Player

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

$

C Rank

Hitter Rank

Berra

97

30

98

2

0.273

22.70

1

19

Campanella

73

22

97

8

0.269

20.69

2

28

1953

Player

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

$

C Rank

Hitter Rank

Berra

80

27

108

0

0.296

18.01

2

35

Campanella

103

41

142

4

0.312

29.08

1

7

1955

Player

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

$

C Rank

Hitter Rank

Berra

84

27

108

1

0.272

16.15

2

37

Campanella

81

32

107

2

0.318

20.84

1

22

Yogi or Campy finished first among catchers every year from 1949-1955 but neither one went back-to-back. These two men would have certainly been ranked first and second in some order in any preseason ranking during that span, but speculative rankings made in spring almost never hold year after year for seven straight seasons. The fact that only a wrist injury, and not one single out-of-nowhere season —Smoky Burgess’ fringe top-50 1955 season came closest—interrupted their reign is remarkable.

It’s hard to pick a winner. Campanella out-earned Berra in those six seasons by a combined $8.36 and his peak-season earnings were a few bucks higher than what Berra delivered at his own peak level. However, Berra finished first among catchers in 1954, the year I excluded above. Over the course of their full careers, Berra wins in a landslide, of course. Campanella was tragically paralyzed in 1958 but his 1956 and 1957 seasons showed significant decline. Meanwhile, Berra was already fantasy’s top catcher when Campy arrived in 1949, then continued producing at a high level into the 1960s.

Retrospective fantasy value obviously isn’t the way to measure a baseball player’s on-field legacy but so many of us follow baseball partially through the lens of fantasy that I think it’s interesting to investigate how one of the game’s greats would have been treated as a fantasy commodity. What I found, unsurprisingly, is that Berra would have been highly desirable on the terms of his production alone.

That said, some of what makes fantasy enjoyable for me is winning with players who are fun to follow, injecting some humanity into what is otherwise a game that can be played with a spreadsheet. Going the extra dollar to squeeze additional enjoyment out of Manny being Manny, Fernando-mania, Wade Boggs drinking his 64th beer, or Josh Hamilton breaking the Home Run Derby is well worth it, in my opinion. I can’t think of a player I’d rather have won with than Yogi Berra. Not only was the box score always full, so were the laughs of anyone who heard him speak, and seemingly, the hearts of anyone he encountered. And for all of Berra’s absurd wisdom, he was wrong when he said, “it ain’t over ‘til it’s over.” When you’re as accomplished and beloved as Yogi, it ain’t ever over. RIP.

Thank you for reading

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swarmee
10/01
Good work.