Another Edition of Baseball’s Forgotten Stars: Wally Berger

Another Edition of Baseball’s Forgotten Stars: Wally Berger



Baseball History Comes Alive Now Ranked #2 by Feedspot Among All Internet Baseball History Websites and Blogs!

Guest Submissions from Our Readers Always Welcome!

Click here for details

Subscribe to Baseball History Comes Alive! for automatic updates (sign-up block found in right side-bar)

As a Free Bonus for subscribing, you’ll get instant access to my two Special Reports: Memorable World Series Moments and Gary’s Handy Dandy World Series Reference Guide!

 Wally Berger Photo Gallery
Click on any image below to see photos in full size and to start Photo Gallery:

Another Edition of “Baseball’s Forgotten Stars”:

Wally Berger




A few years ago, I worked on player identifications for the Boston Public Library Leslie Jones Baseball Collection. In this SABR project, I helped identify ballplayers in almost 3000 old baseball photos from the 1930s and ’40s. While working on the project, I soon realized there were many fine ballplayers from this era whose names and accomplishments have been lost over the passage of time.

Wally Berger

With today’s post, I’ll continue featuring a forgotten star from one of baseball’s  Golden eras. Each post turns the spotlight for a brief moment on a long-forgotten player who was a recognized star in his day.  I’ll be featuring many of the fine ballplayers from decades gone by who were overshadowed by the likes of Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio, Feller, Hubbell, and Greenberg.

Today I’ll turn the baseball spotlight on the 1930s star, Wally Berger. I’d guess many of you may not be familiar with him. What if I told you this player’s stats compare favorably to at least three Hall-of Famers: Hack Wilson, Chick Hafey, and Larry Doby. That’s pretty good company. He was a star player on some pretty miserable Braves teams. In 1935, his best year, the Braves had the fourth-most losses in major league history. Yet he’s been lost to history and is a virtual unknown to all but the most informed baseball historians. 

Wally Berger is a long-overlooked star who played for the Braves (1930-’37), Giants (1937-’38), Reds (1938-’40), and Phillies (1940). Wally was born in Chicago but was raised in San Francisco, where he was a teammate of Joe Cronin at Mission High School. Over his 11-year career, the 6’2” slugger hit for a career .300 average, with 298 home runs, 898 RBIs, a .359 on-base percentage, and a .522 slugging average. His 138 OPS+ places him well above average for major leaguers of his era (100 being the major league average). He was the seventh player in baseball history to hit 200 home runs. 

In the featured photo above, we see Wally Berger in 1935 with his new Braves teammate, Babe Ruth. 

Wally Berger had one of the greatest rookie years ever, hitting 38 home runs which set a major league record that stood for 56 years. It was a National League record until broken by Cody Bellinger in 1987. His average that year was .310, and his 119 RBIs were also a National League rookie record until 2001. He is one of only three players to hit 20 or more home runs in his rookie year before July, and he still holds the record for being the fastest player to hit 20 home runs (51 games).

One of the league’s top sluggers of the early 1930s, Wally Berger was the National League’s starting centerfielder in the first All-Star game (1933), and was selected for the first four All-Star games (1933-37). Of the 18 starters in the 1934 World Series, Berger is the only one not in the Hall of Fame. His best year was 1935, when he hit .295 and led the league in home runs (34), RBIs (130), and outfield putouts (458). He appeared in the 1937 World Series with the Giants, and 1939 World Series with the Reds.

In 1933 Wally finished third in the Most Valuable Player voting after hitting 27 home runs (half the Braves’ total), which was second behind Chuck Klein’s 28. That same year, Babe Ruth named Wally Berger as his centerfielder on his annual selection of the game’s best players. Eddie Mathews broke Berger’s Braves’ franchise record of 38 home runs in 1953, and surpassed his franchise record of 199 home runs in 1957.

Following his retirement as a player, he was a scout for the Yankees and managed in their minor league system. Wally Berger passed away in 1988 at age 83.

Let’s take a minute to remember a pretty good player from the 1930s whose accomplishments have largely been lost over the passage of time, Wally Berger.

 

Shop MLB.com. The Official Online Shop of Major League Baseball.

Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts edited from Wally Berger Wikipedia page

Do you have a writing project in mind and need an editor? I’m an experienced freelance writer, proofreader, and copy editor. I can help with all your writing needs including ghostwriting, blog content, and original composition. Contact me: Livac2@aol.com

Check out my latest books both now available on Amazon in e-book (paperback soon to follow),  Reflections On the 1919 Black Sox: Time to Take Another Look. All profits go to the Illinois Veterans Foundation

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. Click here to view Amazon’s privacy policy

I'm a baseball historian who also enjoys writing. My forte is identifying ballplayers in old photos, and my special interest is the Dead Ball Era.

2 Comments

  1. DD Dillard · November 25, 2019 Reply

    Great story of a great player I didn’t know about,

  2. David Anthony Denny · November 25, 2019 Reply

    Nice article. Berger played in the ’39 WS for the Reds, not ’40 — he was released by the Reds in ’40 and signed by the Phillies 5 days later.

    One sour note for him: 0 for 18 batting in the ’37 and ’39 WS.

Leave a reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.