Eddie Robinson, a left-handed batter who threw right-handed, played four seasons in the minor leagues before being briefly called up at the end of the 1942 season by the
Cleveland Indians. He enlisted in the
U.S. Navy after the 1942 season and did not resume his baseball career until 1946. Robinson suffered a leg injury while in the service, and never fully recovered fully due to a botched operation, but did recover sufficiently to enjoy a thirteen-season major league career. He enjoyed his most prominent team moment when, at the age of 27, he contributed to his first team, the
Cleveland Indians, winning the
1948 World Series. Although traded during that offseason, he was still at the top of his game and with his next two teams,
Washington Senators (1949–50) and
Chicago White Sox (1950–52), experienced the most productive seasons of his time in the majors. In 1951 Robinson began his life-long relationship with
Paul Richards when former player Richards started his major league career as a manager with the Chicago White Sox. Overall, Robinson appeared in 1,315 games and
batted .268 with 172
home runs, and 723
runs batted in. Defensively, he finished his career with a .990
fielding percentage, playing every inning at first base. He did not play in the 1943 through 1945 seasons, due to his service in the U.S. Navy during
World War II. A four-time All-Star, Robinson was the American League's starting first baseman for the midsummer classics of
1949 and
1952. The first game was a slugfest, 11–7, won by the American League, with a Robinson first-inning single off
National league starter
Warren Spahn driving in
Joe DiMaggio. In the 1952 game, a rain-shortened 3-2 National League victory, Robinson singled in the American League's first run, scoring
Minnie Miñoso, who had led off the fourth inning with a double. On April 25, 1951, Robinson became one of the few players to hit a home run out of old
Comiskey Park. In 1955, while playing for the New York Yankees as a part-time player, Robinson hit 16 home runs while having only 36 hits. He also had more runs batted in than hits, knocking in 42 runs. For the season he hit only .208 in 173 at bats, and had 36 bases-on-balls. Robinson was the oldest living Major League player who began his career during or after the 1940s, and he was the last living player whose Major League career was interrupted by World War II service. (
Chris Haughey never made it back to the majors, and
Eddie Basinski and
Tommy Brown were civilians throughout the war.) ==Post-playing career==