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- Stan Musial
-
-
- (September 5, 1949)
-
- Steady-eyed, thin-faced Stanley Frank Musial, 28, has been
- the National League's most consistently spectacular hitter since
- Melvin Ott of the New York Giants was in his prime. He is also
- one of the most unorthodox.
-
- Musial's striding swing brings him diagonally forward in what
- is almost a flank attack on the ball. He can reach an outside
- pitch and send it lining into left field, or rifle it through
- the pitcher's box; he can meet a close-in pitch and thump it to
- right. Nobody pulls the "Williams shift" on a man who can spray
- his hits around the full 90 arc of the playing field.
-
- Almost as usual as his famous crouch is Musial's disposition.
- If he has an iota of fire and imagination, he succeeds in
- keeping it veiled behind his deadpan Slavic features.
-
- The umpires know that Musial has a deadly eye and that he can
- separate the balls form the strikes more accurately than most.
- They are also disconcerted when Musial makes his strongest
- protest; a calm, openmouthed stare that seems to say, "How can
- you be so wrong?"
-
- Such placidity makes him the despair of sportswriters who
- follow the Cards all season and dig in vain for Musial "color,"
- but there is color in every move he makes on the field. He is
- the fleetest man afoot on the 1949 Cardinals, and he is
- versatile enough afield to play right field (his regular
- position), fill in at center field or do a turn at first base.
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