What I was interested in was finding guys who were good pitchers and good hitters. So I used Stathead to first call up all the Negro League players who had 1,000+ PAs and the all those who had 200+ IP (these are all career numbers).
There were 175 guys with 1,000+ PAs and 204 with 200+ IP. Of those, there were 8 guys that were on both lists.
Table 1
Player |
PA |
OPS+ |
IP |
ERA+ |
Bullet Rogan |
2376 |
152 |
1500 |
161 |
Cool Papa Bell |
5405 |
126 |
309 |
98 |
Ed Rile |
1703 |
132 |
748 |
130 |
Harry Kenyon |
1312 |
97 |
521 |
86 |
Homer Curry |
2146 |
125 |
526 |
77 |
MartÃn Dihigo |
1640 |
138 |
402 |
141 |
Ray Brown |
1391 |
103 |
1468 |
147 |
Ted Radcliffe |
1329 |
89 |
410 |
121 |
Remember that 100 is average, so there were 3 guys who were well above average at both: Rogan, Rile and Dihigo. Then there was Bell who was a very good hitter and almost an average pitcher. Brown was a slightly better than average hitter while being a very good pitcher.
What about the AL/NL from 1920-48? One issue I don't have a good answer for is how many IP and PAs to use for the minimums in the AL/NL. We have stats from alot more games for them. I don't know what a comparable level would be. Cool Papa Bell was the only batter with 5,000+ PAs in the Negro Leagues and the most IP was 1,603 by Andy Cooper. So I just used the same levels for the AL/NL (which for them is not alot of playing time).
There were 622 guys with 200+ IP and 726 guys with 1,000+ PAs. Of those, there were 41 on both lists.
Table 2
Player |
PA |
OPS+ |
IP |
ERA+ |
Wes Ferrell |
1345 |
100 |
2623 |
116 |
Johnny Cooney |
3675 |
87 |
795 |
106 |
Schoolboy Rowe |
1004 |
87 |
2154 |
111 |
George Uhle |
1468 |
86 |
2992 |
105 |
Red Lucas |
1608 |
85 |
2542 |
107 |
Red Ruffing |
2084 |
81 |
4344 |
109 |
Chubby Dean |
1186 |
79 |
685 |
80 |
Bucky Walters |
2148 |
69 |
3100 |
116 |
Burleigh Grimes |
1424 |
59 |
3489 |
109 |
Clarence Mitchell |
1092 |
56 |
1739 |
98 |
Bob Smith |
1794 |
54 |
2246 |
100 |
Dolf Luque |
1116 |
52 |
3017 |
120 |
Sad Sam Jones |
1270 |
46 |
3261 |
106 |
Tom Zachary |
1214 |
46 |
3056 |
107 |
Lon Warneke |
1080 |
46 |
2782 |
119 |
Ted Lyons |
1729 |
45 |
4161 |
118 |
Freddie Fitzsimmons |
1264 |
36 |
3223 |
112 |
Claude Passeau |
1051 |
35 |
2719 |
113 |
Willis Hudlin |
1006 |
33 |
2613 |
102 |
Earl Whitehill |
1451 |
31 |
3564 |
100 |
Charlie Root |
1192 |
28 |
3197 |
111 |
Herb Pennock |
1186 |
28 |
2932 |
111 |
Eppa Rixey |
1209 |
25 |
3175 |
116 |
Bump Hadley |
1147 |
25 |
2945 |
105 |
Waite Hoyt |
1382 |
22 |
3656 |
112 |
Larry French |
1198 |
22 |
3152 |
114 |
Tommy Bridges |
1144 |
19 |
2826 |
126 |
Carl Hubbell |
1397 |
18 |
3590 |
130 |
Rube Walberg |
1005 |
15 |
2644 |
107 |
Bill Lee |
1099 |
13 |
2864 |
106 |
Jesse Haines |
1214 |
12 |
3203 |
109 |
Bobo Newsom |
1417 |
11 |
3660 |
107 |
Paul Derringer |
1357 |
9 |
3645 |
108 |
Red Faber |
1117 |
9 |
2909 |
119 |
Dazzy Vance |
1106 |
9 |
2933 |
126 |
Mel Harder |
1315 |
7 |
3426 |
113 |
Lefty Grove |
1580 |
6 |
3940 |
148 |
Dutch Leonard |
1039 |
6 |
2753 |
120 |
Guy Bush |
1003 |
3 |
2722 |
104 |
Danny MacFayden |
1008 |
-3 |
2706 |
101 |
Lefty Gomez |
1024 |
-7 |
2503 |
125 |
I sorted them by OPS+ to show that there was only one guy who was even an average hitter. That was Wes Ferrell who had an OPS+ of 100. Maybe he is the only two-way player here. There are 5 others with an OPS+ of at least 80, so that is, perhaps, respectable.
I calculated the harmonic mean of OPS+ and ERA+ to get an average that rewards balance. A high score, above 100, to me means a guy who was good at both. It would be hard to get above 100 and not reached some minimum level of production at both.
Harmonic mean = 2*OPS+*ERA+/(OPS+ plus ERA+)
In the table below, "Harm" is the Harmonic Mean.
Table 3
Player |
OPS+ |
ERA+ |
Harm |
Bullet Rogan |
152 |
161 |
156.4 |
MartÃn Dihigo |
138 |
141 |
139.5 |
Ed Rile |
132 |
130 |
131.0 |
Ray Brown |
103 |
147 |
121.1 |
Cool Papa Bell |
126 |
98 |
110.3 |
Ted Radcliffe |
89 |
121 |
102.6 |
Homer Curry |
125 |
77 |
95.3 |
Harry Kenyon |
97 |
86 |
91.2 |
The Negro Leagues have 6 guys above 100 here. Now the top 8 for the AL/NL where the scores are generally lower with only one guy topping 100.
Table 4
Player |
OPS+ |
ERA+ |
Harm |
Wes Ferrell |
100 |
116 |
107.4 |
Schoolboy Rowe |
87 |
111 |
97.5 |
Johnny Cooney |
87 |
106 |
95.6 |
Red Lucas |
85 |
107 |
94.7 |
George Uhle |
86 |
105 |
94.6 |
Red Ruffing |
81 |
109 |
92.9 |
Bucky Walters |
69 |
116 |
86.5 |
Chubby Dean |
79 |
80 |
79.5 |
Then I ranked all the Negro League batters with 1,000+ PAs by OPS+ and found how many of them in the top 47 had pitched a fairly large number of innings. I used the top 47 since that included Homer Curry, who had an OPS+ of 125 from the group of 8 in Table 3. He is at the bottom end of the hitters among the good hitting pitchers from that list. There was one guy tied with Curry at a 125 OPS+, Lennie Pearson (they were tied for 46th).
Table 5 shows that 10 of the top 47 hitters in the Negro Leagues pitched at least 70 innings.
Table 5
Player |
OPS+ |
PA |
IP |
ERA+ |
Bullet Rogan |
152 |
2376 |
1500 |
161 |
Ed Rile |
132 |
1703 |
748 |
130 |
Homer Curry |
125 |
2146 |
526 |
77 |
MartÃn Dihigo |
138 |
1640 |
402 |
141 |
Cool Papa Bell |
126 |
5405 |
309 |
98 |
Cristóbal Torriente |
158 |
2647 |
179 |
91 |
Steel Arm Davis |
131 |
1727 |
82 |
82 |
Oscar Charleston |
184 |
3962 |
80 |
86 |
Roy Parnell |
136 |
2444 |
72 |
201 |
Johnny Davis |
137 |
1091 |
70 |
66 |
For the AL/NL, I found the top 50 in OPS+ with 1,000+ PAs since the bottom 5 of that group all had an OPS+ of 129 (and 50 is fairly close to 47).
Table 6 shows all the guys from the top 50 hitters in the AL/NL who pitched any innings. There are only 6 and only 1 pitched as many as 70 innings. The good hitters in the AL/NL hardly pitched at all. The blank cell for ERA+ means that guy gave up zero earned runs and an ERA+, which is relative to the league average, could not be calculated.
Table 6
Player |
OPS+ |
PA |
IP |
ERA+ |
Lefty O'Doul |
143 |
3643 |
77 |
83 |
Babe Ruth |
208 |
9294 |
31 |
78 |
Jimmie Foxx |
163 |
9677 |
23 |
261 |
Ted Williams |
196 |
4618 |
2 |
116 |
Jack Fournier |
144 |
4340 |
1 |
|
Ty Cobb |
143 |
4797 |
1 |
|
Table 7 shows how many of the top 45 in ERA+ in the Negro Leagues with 200+ IP had an OPS+ of at least 100 in 500+ PAs. I went with the top 45 because that gets us down to the 121 ERA+ of Radcliffe from Table 3, making him the lowest of the good pitchers from that table. He was actually in a tie for 45th with Rube Curry at a 121 ERA+.
Table 7
Player |
ERA+ |
IP |
PA |
OPS+ |
Bullet Rogan |
161 |
1500 |
2376 |
152 |
MartÃn Dihigo |
141 |
402 |
1640 |
138 |
Ed Rile |
130 |
748 |
1703 |
132 |
Leon Day |
133 |
609 |
653 |
119 |
Nip Winters |
128 |
1114 |
706 |
108 |
Hilton Smith |
142 |
921 |
536 |
108 |
Ray Brown |
147 |
1468 |
1391 |
103 |
So we can say that 7 of the top 45 pitchers in the Negro Leagues were above average hitters since their OPS+ was above 100.
There is no comparable table for the AL/NL. Not one pitcher from the top 46 (there was a tie) in ERA+ with 200+ IP and 500+ PAs had an OPS+ of at least 100. The highest was 74, from Walter Johnson. So we could say that the AL/NL had no good pitchers who were also above average hitters.
If I included all of the top 46 pitchers, Bob Lemon did have a 101 OPS+ but in just 301 PAs. The only other guy higher than Walter Johnson was Gene Bearden at 75 in just 97 plate appearances.
Also, the weighted average of OPS+ for the top 45 Negro League pitchers was 82.4. For the comparable AL/NL pitchers (the top 46 in ERA+), it was just 25.8. So the good pitchers in the Negro Leagues hit much better than the good pitchers in the AL/NL. [Update Aug. 27, 2022: I recalculated the weighted average for the Negro Leagues after removing the top 4 in OPS+, Bullet Rogan (152 OPS+), MartÃn Dihigo (138 OPS+), Ed Rile (132 OPS+) and Leon Day (119 OPS+). The collective OPS+ of the remaining 41 pitchers was 60.3, still much higher than for the AL/NL pitchers]
What about after 1948? Do we see some good hitting pitchers or good hitters who pitched? Table 8 shows the top 10 pitchers in OPS+ from 1949-77 with 200+ PAs for guys who played at least 50% of their games at pitcher (that is the 29 years immediately following 1920-48).
Table 8
Player |
OPS+ |
PA |
Ken Brett |
96 |
362 |
Don Newcombe |
85 |
988 |
Don Larsen |
81 |
653 |
Clint Hartung |
77 |
243 |
Bob Lemon |
77 |
1029 |
Mickey McDermott |
76 |
674 |
Earl Wilson |
76 |
838 |
Tommy Byrne |
75 |
578 |
Jack Harshman |
73 |
513 |
Gary Peters |
70 |
875 |
Since there are no pitchers with at least a 100 OPS+, we can say that there were no good hitting pitchers from 1949-77 in the AL/NL.
Were there any good hitters who also pitched from 1949-77? I looked at all the hitters with at least a 100 OPS+ with 1,000+ PAs. Only 7 of those guys pitched. They are below along with how many innings they pitched:
Update May 30, 2024: Only 44 of 373 guys from the AL/NL mentioned above had an OPS+ of 57 or higher (the weighted average of the Negro Leagues OPS+ was 57.07). So that is only 11.8% of the AL/NL pitchers hit at the level of the Negro League pitchers. 44 of the 102 Negro League pitchers were 57 or higher. That is 43.1% of 102. That is 3.65 times as high as it was for the AL/NL. The two highest in the AL/NL were Lemon 101 and Farrell 100. There were 11 in the Negro Leagues who were at 100 or higher.
Player |
OPS+ |
PA |
Lewis Hampton |
136 |
541 |
Luther Farrell |
127 |
743 |
Pat Scantlebury |
122 |
217 |
Bill Gatewood |
117 |
227 |
Emery Adams |
115 |
352 |
Fred Bell |
114 |
351 |
Hilton Smith |
112 |
544 |
Nip Winters |
108 |
690 |
Eugene Bremer |
108 |
231 |
Frank Stevens |
104 |
392 |
Ray Brown |
101 |
1407 |