Jim Norman

Jim Norman could hit.

For the first half of his career, his BA was a bit low, but his control of the strike zone and his power made up for it; from 1910 to 1913–and especially 1911 and 1912–his BA jumps and he becomes a borderline star.

We have added years in 1907, 1908, and 1910 but have followed his collapse in 1914 leading him out of the game. There are a lot of hints in his career that point to a player who was fairly injury prone.

He should appear on league leaderboards a few times in hits, doubles, and strikeouts, but never be a real threat to lead the league in those categories. He was fairly slow, which made him not great on the basepaths and limited his triples output a bit, especially in the final third of his career.

Defensively, Norman was a decent 3B, but his lack of mobility made his time at 2B a bit of a misadvanture.

These projections feel solid in terms of capturing Norman’s offensive shape, the real question is about usage and whether we have over estimated the amount of playing time he would see, whether through injury or the relatively slow start to his career. I would also not be surprised if his walk rate drops slightly in future revisions, but his overall value, especially late in his career, should hold steady.

NameJim Norman (Big Jim)
ID / Statusnorma01jim / Draft
Pos3B
DOB / i9s Career1883 / 1906 - 1914
BirthplaceTN (USA)
Height / Weight /
B / T / R

 

Batting Projections

YearABH2B3BHRBBSOSBCSBAOBPSLGOPS
1906220569202533440.2550.3310.3140.644
19073257212712745540.2220.2810.3110.592
190847010120823760760.2150.2720.3040.576
19095601242314251711080.2210.2860.3230.610
19105791353312362821190.2330.3070.3470.654
191159716442117668823100.2750.3470.4170.764
19126111843179809116140.3010.3820.4190.801
191348412922543672780.2670.3170.3570.675
19147613101319110.1710.2030.2240.426

 

Pitching Projections