When you think of Connie Mack's Philadelphia A's several hitters immediately come to mind because of their Hall-of-Fame status; such immortals as Frank "Home Run" Baker, Eddie Collins, Al Simmons and Jimmy Foxx. Also such stalwarts as Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker and Joe Jackson graced Connie Mack's line up at various points in their careers.

Yet, somebody is missing from this list.

Max Bishop perhaps? No. Gus Zernial? Not him either. Does the name Bob Johnson ring a bell with anyone? Who's Bob Johnson you ask? He's just one of the great sluggers of the 1930's and 1940's. Unfortunately not very many people remember, or even heard of him because he played his career mostly in the second division of the American League, plus he's not in the Hall-of-Fame. Nothing can be rectified as to who he played for, his not being in Cooperstown is a matter that could, no, should be dealt with.

But first ... who was "Indian Bob" Johnson?

Bob Johnson was an eight-time All-Star outfielder with second-division American League clubs in the 1930s and early 1940s. Columnist Red Smith noted that "Bob was a first-rate outfielder with a powerful and accurate throwing arm. He was righthanded all the way, a flatfooted hitter with power."

Although he led the league with a .431 on-base percentage in 1944 and tied the AL record of six RBIs in a single inning, Johnson should be remembered for one of the most consistent careers on record. During 13 seasons, Johnson hit more than 20 homers 9 times, drove in more than 100 runs 8 times, and earned more than 75 bases on balls 10 times.
The man, the myth, the legend

Johnson was born in Oklahoma in 1906, and his family soon moved to Tacoma, Washington. He left home in 1922 at age 15 and began his baseball career with the Los Angeles Fire Department team. Because Johnson was part Cherokee, he was subjected to the nickname "Indian Bob," just as other players of Native American ancestry had similar epithets foisted upon them in this era.

Johnson was soon playing semiprofessional ball. When his brother, Roy Johnson, became a professional, he felt buoyed. He said, "When Roy became a regular with San Francisco in 1927 I knew I could make the grade in fast company. I had played ball with Roy and felt I was as good as he was."

However, Johnson failed trials with San Francisco, Hollywood, and Los Angeles. He did not play professionally until Wichita of the Western League signed him in 1929. He was soon moved up to Portland. In 1931 the righthanded hitter went to spring training with the Philadelphia A's but was sent down because he had trouble hitting the curveball.

In 1933 Philadelphia sold off veteran Al Simmons to the White Sox, and Johnson beat out Lou Finney for the center field job. In his rookie season, Johnson collected 69 extra-base hits, including 44 doubles. On June 16, 1934, Johnson had his best single day at the plate. He went six-for-six, with a double and two homers. Three years later, on August 29, 1937, Johnson had the best inning of his career when he drove in an AL-record six runs.

During a series of poor seasons for the Athletics it seemed that on some days Johnson alone constituted the offense. On June 12, 1938, he drove in all eight runs in an A's win over the Browns. After the 1942 season, Johnson thought Philadelphia was underpaying him and demanded a trade. Owner Connie Mack complied and sent the valuable outfielder to Washington for another flyhawk and cash. Johnson was still a valuable player but no longer the power threat he was in his youth. After hitting only seven homers for Washington in 1943 he was sold to the Red Sox at the end of the season. Aided by Fenway Park's short left-field wall, Johnson had his best overall season in 1944. Although he hit only 17 homers, he smashed 40 doubles and led the league in on-base percentage and batting runs. He left the Red Sox after the 1945 season and spent five years in the minors.

A .296 career hitter with a .393 on-base percentage, and 288 home runs, Johnson also accumulated 74 fielding runs. He died on July 6, 1982, in Tacoma, Washington.

Let's have a look at his career highlights it is very impressive, and measures up with many whose visage is displayed at the Hall. For example;

Of all players active in the period 1920-1941 he places 9th in home runs (288) the eight ahead of him are all Cooperstown enshrined ... in RBIs he places 14th in this era, the only one of the top 15 not inducted ...

In the thirteen seasons that he played he garnered more RBIs (1283 in 6920 AB) than Hall of Famer Heinie Manush (1183 in 7654 AB) ... if you want to get fussy and point out that Manush outhit Johnson .330 to .296 I'd like to remind you that a much more important offensive statistic (OBP) Johnson is well ahead of Manush .393 to .377 ... the high BA is more eye catching but OBP is more valuable.

In the thirteen seasons that he played he garnered more RBIs (1283 in 6920 AB) than Hall of Famer George Sisler (1175 in 8267 AB) and others ...

When you think of keen batting eyes what names come to mind? How about Rogers Hornsby? Would you say he had pretty good plate judgement?

Johnson might've had a better eye ... Hornsby walked 1038 times in 8173 AB, Johnson walked 1075 times in just 6920 AB

Or perhaps Honus Wagner? Do you think he'd know the difference between a ball and a strike?

Johnson despite 3510 fewer AB walked 112 times more. I'm not going to say it means anything, but ...

Rod Carew ... bunch of batting titles, he knew the strike zone pretty well you would think ... did Johnson know it a little bit better? He drew fifty seven more walks than Carew. Nit picky you say? Oh ... I forgot, Carew also had almost 2 600 more AB than "Indian Bob"

If you insist on being picky about the fact he wasn't a lifetime .300 hitter (there'll be some additional thoughts on that later) it's good to bear in mind while people rave about batting averages, it's OBP that wins ballgames. For example, I'll contrast a pair of second basemen.

Who would you rather have on your team? Carlos Baerga who in 442 AB hit; .314 19 80 with the 1994 Cleveland Indians.

Or Max Bishop, who in 441 AB hit .252 10 38 with the 1930 Philadelphia Athletics?

Superficially most would pick Baerga. But when you look a little deeper Bishop was far, far more productive. One stat I left off was walks. Bishop drew 128 freebies that year, Baerga just ten.

So ... Baerga, who out hit Bishop by 62 points was actually left in the dust by Bishop in OBP by a whopping 93 points! (For the record Baerga's OBP in 1994 was .333, Bishop's in 1930 was .426)

Let's look how this affected run production ... Bishop produced more runs than Baerga 145 to 142. Baerga barely eclipsed Bishop in OPS .858 to .834, but Bishop hammered Baerga in runs created (hits+walks)(total bases)/(AB+BB) 88 to 75.

So actually, despite Baerga's numbers being more eye popping, Bishop was actually more productive offensively.

But it all boils down to first getting on base.

Now back to Johnson ...

His lifetime on base percentage (.393) is higher than ...

Frank Robinson (.392)

Honus Wagner (.391) and ...

Willie Mays (.387) Hall-of-Famers all

Lifetime, Johnson slugged .506 better than players such as ...

Ernie Banks (.500 ... and played his entire career at Wrigley Field ... a lot of it at a traditional "power position" -- first base)

OF Reggie Jackson (.490)

OF Al Kaline (.480 ... in a hitter's park) ... three Hall-of-Famers.

A quick check on the man Johnson replaced in the Athletic's outfield; Al Simmons, a no-questions-asked Hall-of-Famer. Total Baseball actually gives Johnson a higher Total Player Rating than Simmons (35.1 to 27.4). Now, quite frankly, I feel quite strongly that Simmons was the better ballplayer but it's good to keep in mind that there's little to choose between them in career OPS (Simmons .915 Johnson . 899).

Of course it's good to see how he compares with other Hall-of-Fame outfielders of his era.

So ...

I decided to do a little comparing between Bob Johnson and the Hall-of-Fame outfielders that were Johnson's contempararies. The players used were ,Earl Averill Chuck Klein, Ducky Medwick and Paul Waner.

The results?

Player  AVG  Runs  Hits  2B 3B HR RBI Xtra BH  Runs prod. OBP
Johnson .296  1239 2051 396   95 288 1283 779 2234 .393
Averill .318 1224 2019 401 128 238 1164 767 2150 .395
Klein .320 1168 2076 398   74 300 1201 772 2069 .379
Waner .333 1190 2305 442 139   82 957 663 2065 .404
Medwick* .324 1085 2246 489 102 185 1253 736 2153 .362

*Projected with same number of AB as Johnson, stats in boldface indicate totals higher than Johnson's.

I'd say he matches up pretty well.

So we can see that Johnson's power and production levels were of Hall-of-Fame caliber, but why was Johnson's batting average so much lower than the others? Well, he was the only real threat in the Athletics lineup after Foxx left, so it was a simple matter of his (most likely) being pitched around. Either that, or as mentioned earlier, he had a marvellous batting eye. Whichever it was, it works into the Hall-of-Fame argument.

When Jimmy Foxx left the A's in 1935 Johnson was quite literally the only real threat in the A's attack. Now bear these numbers in mind remembering that this was the era of the "big boppers." From 1936-1941(see charts below) only one player ... Steve Chapman topped 100 RBI's in a season (1941), nobody topped 30 HR and the only ones to top twenty were Wally Moses in 1937 (25), Franklin Hayes who hit 20 in 1939 and Steve Chapman hit 23 in 1940 and 25 in 1941. In this enviroment, from 1935-1941 Bob Johnson batted .298 he had a staggering OBP of .401 so either he was incredibly selective or got pitched around frequently. During that span of eight seasons he ripped 202 doubles, nailed 55 triples and blasted 184 HR. He drove in 878 runs and scored 805. He slugged .529 during that stretch. You also have to consider that he averaged just under 100 runs and 100 RBI every year for his entire career.

How many players of any era can make that claim?

Those that can are probably in the HOF.

To the best of my knowledge he and Gil Hodges are the only players with seven consecutive 100 RBI seasons not inducted. Hodges is a popular HOF candidate. So consider his supporting cast when considering his qualifications. Look at the offensive support Hodges had around him, also Ebbets Field was a much better place to hit than Shibe Park. Hodges never again topped 30 HR or 100 RBI once the Dodgers left Brooklyn.

He, quite literally produced Hall-of-Fame numbers without much support from his teammates. Most of the guys in the Hall had a degree of support in the line-up, Johnson did not. Yet he averaged almost 100 Runs + 100 RBI a season with few runners to drive in or few players to drive him in for that matter. Just for a small sampling, Jimmy Foxx left the Athletics before the 1936 season. So for six years he had meager support in the lineup. Below are, according to Total Baseball, the regulars in the Athletic's lineup from 1936-41 ...

1936
Finney
Warstler
Newsom
Higgins
Moses
Puccinelli
Hayes
AVG
.302
.250
.225
.289
.345
.278
.271
2B
26
  8
15
32
35
30
25
3B
10
  6
  2
  2
11
  3
  2
HR
1
1
0
12
7
11
10
RBI
41
24
46
80
66
78
67
OBP
.351
.354
.266
.366
.410
.369
.335
SLG
.377
.357
.265
.420
.479
.429
 .388
1937
Dean
Peters
Newsom
Werber
Hill
Moses
Brucker
AVG
.262
.260
.253
.292
.293
.320
.275
2B
14
17
22
31
12
48
16
3B
 4
 6
 1
 4
 3
13
 5
HR
2
3
1
7
1
25
6
RBI
31
43
30
70
37
86
31
OBP
.350
.339
.312
.386
.314
.374
.356
SLG
.353
.372
.315
.414
.293
.550
 .397
1938
Finney
Lodigiani
Ambler
Werber
Chapman
Moses
Hayes
AVG
.275
.280
.234
.259
.259
.307
.291
2B
21
15
21
22
17
29
19
3B
12
 1
 2
 7
 7
 8
 3
HR
1
1
0
12
7
11
10
RBI
48
44
38
69
63
49
55
OBP
.333
.361
.317
.377
.353
.369
.396
SLG
.441
.388
.298
.397
.461
.424
 .475
1939
Siebert
Gant-bein
Newsom
Lodigiani
Chapman
Moses
Hayes
AVG
.294
.290
.222
.260
.269
.307
.283
2B
28
14
 9
22
24
28
28
3B
 3
 4
 0
 4
 6
 7
 5
HR
 6
 6
 1
 6
15
 3
20
RBI
41
24
46
80
66
78
67
OBP
.329
.353
.277
.337
.338
.370
.348
SLG
.423
.388
.266
.382
.432
.423
 .510
1940
Siebert
McCoy
Brancato
Rubeling
Chapman
Moses
Hayes
AVG
.286
.257
.191
.245
.276
.309
.308
2B
31
26
11
16
26
41
23
3B
 6
 5
 2
 6
 3
 9
 4
HR
5
7
1
 4
23
 9
16
RBI
77
62
23
38
75
50
70
OBP
.325
.345
.265
.330
.337
.396
.389
SLG
.383
.373
.252
.351
.474
.469
 .477
1941
Siebert
McCoy
Brancato
Suder
Chapman
Moses
Hayes
AVG
.334
.271
.234
.245
.322
.301
.280
2B
28
12
20
20
29
31
27
3B
 8
 7
 9
 9
 9
 4
 4
HR
5
8
2
 4
25
 4
12
RBI
79
61
49
52
106
35
63
OBP
.385
.384
.311
.271
.378
.388
.369
SLG
.460
.368
.317
.339
.543
.418
 .442

Remember Johnson began that stretch at the age of twenty nine. During this period Johnson provided 25% of the Athletic's total offense.

Getting back to the comparison between Waner, Averill et al ...

Although he is overshadowed in the BA department, as Bill James states, you don't focus on hits, you focus on runs. Of this group he leads in runs, RBIs and naturally runs produced. He is also first in extra base hits, third in OBP (bearing in mind that he is just .011 points from Waner and a miniscule .002 behind Medwick). He's second in HR (comfortably ... he's 50 HR up on Averill who finishes third) and just twelve back of Klein. Suffice it to say, his numbers are well within the "group" of these HOF outfielders of his era who are in the Hall.

If its true that you have to; "play for a contender, or they'll never remember" then Bob Johnson's career would have to be Exhibit A. There is no excuse for him not being named to the Hall of Fame. He did not play in the current era, when, a top notch performer who is in the last year of his contract would be shipped to a contending team. These were the days of the odious "Reserve Clause" so he couldn't help the fact that he played for the A's during one of the lowest points in franchise history. I think it can be safely said that, if he played in the same Yankee outfield as the recently departed Joe DiMaggio (just imagine, they would have been known as Joltin' Joe, and Bashin' Bob, just as Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle were known as the M 'n M boys) he would be most certainly a Hall-of-Famer. To the best of my knowledge, he has done nothing to besmirch the game of baseball, so it is a marvel why is not a Hall-of-Fame member.

Here are Johnson's career numbers ...

"Indian Bob" Johnson - BATTING TOTALS
YR
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
TM
Phi
Phi
Phi
Phi
Phi
Phi
Phi
Phi
Phi
Phi
Was
Bos
Bos
LG
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
AL
POS
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
G
142
141
147
153
138
152
150
138
149
149
117
144
143
AB
535
547
582
566
477
563
544
512
552
550
438
525
529
AVG
.290
.307
.299
.292
.306
.313
.338
.268
.275
.291
.265
.324
.280
R
103
111
103
91
91
114
115
93
98
78
65
106
71
H
155
168
174
165
146
176
184
137
152
160
116
170
148
2B
44
26
29
29
32
27
30
25
30
35
22
40
27
3B
4
6
5
14
6
9
9
4
8
7
8
8
7
HR
21
34
28
25
25
30
23
31
22
13
7
17
12
RBI
93
92
109
121
108
113
114
103
107
80
63
106
74
OBP
.387
.375
.384
.389
.425
.406
.440
.374
.385
.384
.362
.431
.358
SLG
.505
.563
.510
.525
.556
.552
.553
.514
.478
.451
.400
.528
.425
Totals G
1863
AB
6920
BAVG
.296
R
1239
H
2051
2B
396
3B
95
HR
288
RBI
1283
OBP
.393
SLG
.506

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