Mickey Mantle
Mickey Mantle (October 31, 1931, Spavinaw, Oklahoma – August 13, 1995, Dallas, Texas) was an American baseball player of the mid-20th century who played for the New York Yankees. Renowned for his almost unique combination of speed and power, he played mostly in center field for the first 16 years of his career and at first base for the final two. Only 19 years old when he made his debut, he was expected to step into the boots of his famous predecessor in center field, the graceful Joe DiMaggio, and for a number of years was frequently criticized for not, apparently, living up to these expectations.
It was not until around 1960 that he was finally recognized as a great player in his own right. Today he is almost universally considered to be one of the 25 greatest players of all time. Excluding pitchers, he is, for instance, ranked as the 10th greatest batter in baseball history by the Bill James Win Share system, far ahead of the fabled DiMaggio at number 45, and at number 13 by the Total Baseball encyclopedia's Total Player Wins system, which ranks DiMaggio at number 33. But even before Mantle's talents were fully recognized by his contemporaries, the Win Share system now rates him as having become the best player in the American League in only his fourth year, at the age of 22—a rating he would hold for a remarkable ten out of 11 years, from 1954 through 1964, interrupted only in 1963 when, because of injuries, he played less than half the schedule. No one else, including the legendary Babe Ruth or the record-breaking Barry Bonds has ever showed such sustained excellence over so long a period. And, along with Yogi Berra and Whitey Ford, he was the heart of an unparalleled baseball dynasty that won 12 pennants and seven World Series in 14 years.