Knot Hole Gang Vet wrote:skmsw wrote:Swirls wrote:Wasn't that one of Whitey's famous quotes?
He traded Johnny Mize, and created a huge hubbub in St.Louis, but The Big Cat was on the downhill side of his career then.
Actually, Mize is a poor example - he had several good seasons with the Giants, and a number of years as the Yankees' top pinch-hitter after that. It was Mize's 40 homers (along with Kiner's 40) in 1948, for instance, that stood in the way of Stan Musial's winning the Triple Crown that year (Stan wound up with 39 homers).
Chick Hafey might be a better example, or even Joe Medwick - two very good players who were never as good after Branch traded them away. Mort Cooper is another good example, although we probably should have kept his brother Walker a while longer.
You have to be careful with the whole "trade a player a year early" bit, though - the Reds, for instance, considered Frank Robinson to be an "old 30" when they dealt him to Baltimore after the 1965 season for Milt Pappas.