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Ted Williams And A Cautionary Tale For The Tigers' Scrimmages

Friday, we passed along the Tigers' plans to have players remain sharp by scrimmaging instructional league players on Sunday and Monday. Saturday, former ESPN anchor Keith Olbermann -- who maintains a blog on MLB.com's blog network -- tells the interesting story of Ted Williams and the 1946 Red Sox.

The basics are that the 1946 Red Sox had a long layoff before the World Series and brought in a collection of American League All-Stars to play against. And the Hall of Famer Williams was plunked on the elbow by an errant Mickey Haefner knuckleball. Williams would play through the pain in the World Series, but he only went 5 for 25 (.200) with no extra-base hits, and the favored Red Sox lost in seven games.

During the regular season, Williams was the AL MVP, having hit .342/.497/.667 with 37 doubles, eight triples, 38 homers, 123 RBI and 142 runs (seriously, what a ridiculous line -- almost a .500 OBP? Insane). So it's pretty easy to see the pain made a difference (Olbermann writes that Williams later admitted as much).

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