Felipe Alou is arguably better known in baseball for being a manager where he would helm the Montreal Expos for years and was named the Manager of the Year in 1994 but this was also a former player who accumulated over 2,000 Hits over his career.
Jimmy Collins did a lot of things beautifully on the baseball diamond that may not be considered sexy but it they went noticed and he generated a Hall of Fame career out of it, which included five seasons with the Boston Beaneaters.
Charlie Buffinton began his career with the Boston Red Stockings in 1882 and in the following year when the team renamed themselves the Beanaters Buffinton became a star Pitcher where he would win 20 Games each year from 1883 to 1885. The sinkerball specialist had an incredible 1884 campaign where he went 48 and 16 with a 2.15 ERA and he was third overall in bWAR for Pitchers. It should also be mentioned that Buffinton was a good hitter who would bat .255 for Boston over his career. Boston thought that Buffinton was done after a bad 1886 season and they sold him to the Philadelphia Quakers where he rebounded and would go on to win 233 Games.
We return to the potent Milwaukee Braves team of the 1950’s where we have Joe Adcock, a slugger who went yard for the franchise 239 times including a 38 dinger season in 1956.
Billy Hamilton arrived to Boston at age 30 and while his best years were behind him he was still a very good and fast player who changed baseball games with his speed. In the six years he was with the Beaneaters he hit the 100 Runs Scored mark in four of them, with two of them exceeding 150. In 1897, his 152 Runs were enough to lead the National League. In the past, Hamilton led the NL in Stolen Bases four times (plus one in the AA). He didn’t have the same speed with Boston but he still swiped bases 274 times. His batting eye was still excellent as he led the NL in Walks his first two seasons as a Beaneater and he had two OBP titles. His Boston numbers would see him collect 885 Hits with a .339 Batting Average and an incredible On Base Percentage of .456.
David Justice at one time was one of the most recognized sluggers in baseball. A star for the high profile Atlanta Braves, Justice was the star hitter for the perennially playoff-bound team, he was named one of People’s Magazine’s Most Beautiful People (1994) and was married to Halle Barry. The last two might be interesting but it doesn’t help propel him on this rank does it?
Prior to joining the Boston Braves, Bob Elliott was already a proven commodity in professional baseball, having been a three-time All-Star for the Pittsburgh Pirates. His first season in Boston would be his best, as in 1947 he posted a career-high .317 Batting Average with 22 Home Runs and 113 RBI.
As a Boston Brave, Bob Elliott was nicknamed “Mr. Team,” a moniker that reflects how selfless and excellent a teammate he was and why his value to the Braves extended beyond his stat line. The Third Baseman continued his strong performance in Boston, being named an All-Star again in 1948 while helping the Braves win the National League Pennant as their clean-up hitter. He was with the Braves for three more seasons, and in his five years in Boston, he had 101 Home Runs with a Slash Line of .295/.398/485.
In 1914, the Boston Braves would win their first World Series Championship. Dick Rudolph went 2-0 in that series with a 0.50 ERA over 18 Innings. Safe to say if there was a World Series MVP, he would have won it, right?
Prior to joining the Braves, Rudolph had a cup of coffee with the New York Giants, and after plying his trade in the minors, he received another opportunity with the Boston Braves. In his first season in Boston, he went 14-13, and he fit in like a glove. The following year was the season of his postseason triumph, during which he went 26-10 in the regular season and finished 7th in MVP voting. He would win 22 and 19 Games in the two years that followed, but his efficiency would decline in the years after, and he would be officially released in 1927 after years of playing.
His overall career with the Braves would see him go 121-108 with five top ten finishes in bWAR for Pitchers.
We have another member of the 1957 World Series Championship team with Del Crandall who would represent Milwaukee in eight All-Star Games. Crandall lost a couple of years early due to serving his country during the Korean War but upon his return stateside he established himself as one of the best defensive Catchers in baseball and an elite pitch caller who Pitchers trusted implicitly. Crandall won four of the first Gold Gloves issued to Catchers in the National League (the first was win was issued to one person regardless of the league) and had that piece of hardware been issued before 1957, he would have probably won another four. Crandall would lead all National League Catchers in Total Zone Runs six times and Fielding Percentage four times.
Brian McCann was one of the top hitting Catchers in the National League for a long period of time. From 2006 to 2011 McCann was named an All-Star and in five of those years, he was also a Silver Slugger. He would show off good power with seven 20 Home Run seasons with 176 total as a Brave with 1,070 Hits for Atlanta. McCann’s defense wasn’t always the best (he allowed a lot of stolen bases) but his above-average offense more than made up for it.
There was a famous saying around the Boston Braves that waxed poetic about the late 1940’s Boston Braves:
Hugh Duffy was somewhat of a maverick in early baseball as he bounced from the National League to the Federal League to the American Association and back to the National League in a four year span. It was the latter that would see him join the Boston Beaneaters, the precursor to the Atlanta Braves.
Walter “Rabbit” Maranville was known for quite a few things: his sense of humor, his durability, and defensive skills, the latter two of which ranked him on this list of all-time Braves.
Maranville would become Boston’s full-time Shortstop in 1913, where he dazzled the Majors with his glove, and he was third in MVP voting. In 1914, he finished second in MVP voting and led them to a World Series win. While nobody was aware of Defensive bWAR (or any kind of WAR for that matter), Maranville was a two-time leader with Boston in that category and ranked in the top ten another seven times while he played in Massachusetts. Defense was his expertise, and while his offensive numbers aren’t that great, this was a 23-year veteran who would accumulate 2,605 Hits over his career, 1,696 as a Brave. Maranville was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates before 1921, but he returned in 1929 and was still effective.
Rabbit Maranville entered the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1954 on his 14th year of eligibility. The Braves would later induct Maranville into their franchise Hall of Fame in 2014.