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SportsMarch 17, 2011

ST. LOUIS -- Marty Marion, the brilliant shortstop and 1944 National League MVP with the St. Louis Cardinals and a former manager of the Cardinals and St. Louis Browns, has died. He was 93. Marion, who played on World Series title teams in 1942, 1944 and 1946, died Tuesday night in St. Louis, Cardinals spokesman Brian Bartow said...

The Associated Press
Former Cardinals shortstop Marty Marion, the 1944 National League MVP, died Tuesday of unknown causes in St. Louis, a Cardinals spokesman said. (AP file photo)
Former Cardinals shortstop Marty Marion, the 1944 National League MVP, died Tuesday of unknown causes in St. Louis, a Cardinals spokesman said. (AP file photo)

ST. LOUIS -- Marty Marion, the brilliant shortstop and 1944 National League MVP with the St. Louis Cardinals and a former manager of the Cardinals and St. Louis Browns, has died. He was 93.

Marion, who played on World Series title teams in 1942, 1944 and 1946, died Tuesday night in St. Louis, Cardinals spokesman Brian Bartow said.

The 6-foot-2, 170-pound Marion was nicknamed the "Octopus" and "Slats" for his long-armed, rangy fielding prowess and was considered the best shortstop in Cardinals history before Ozzie Smith joined the franchise in 1982.

Teammate Stan Musial won all three of his MVP awards in the 1940s, in 1943, 1946 and 1948. He hit .347 with 12 homers and 94 RBIs in 1944, but Marion got the nod on the basis of his defense and team leadership after batting only .267 with six homers and 63 RBIs.

Joe Torre, who also played for and managed the Cardinals, remembered Marion as the franchise's gold standard for defense.

"Around St. Louis, there's a sense of the history of the game," Torre said. "He was the one you measured against."

Hall of Fame second baseman Red Schoendienst played alongside Marion from 1945 to 1950 and said Marion also should have received that honor. The 88-year-old Schoendienst is a special assistant to Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak and still suits up and hits fungoes daily.

"You look at his stats and everything, he should be in the Hall of Fame," Schoendienst said at the Cardinals' spring training site in Jupiter, Fla. "He never ever tried to say that he belonged in the Hall of Fame. He liked baseball. That's why he played it."

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Team president Bill DeWitt III recalled Marion's title-winning teams of the 1940s.

"I think those are legendary teams and he was a big part of it," he said. "He definitely goes down as one of the great Cardinals."

Dick Zitzmann of St. Louis, who represented Marion at autograph signings and other old-timers functions, said Marion spent much of his later years at his farm just outside Springfield, Ill. Zitzmann remembered Marion as the epitome of a "Southern gentleman."

Though he had a career batting average of just .263 and never batted .300, Marion was an eight-time All-Star. His playing career was cut short by a back injury, he managed the Cardinals in 1951, then was player-manager for the Browns in 1952 and 1953. He also managed the Chicago White Sox for part of the 1954 season and all the 1955 and 1956 seasons.

Martin Whiteford Marion was born Dec. 1, 1917 in Richburg, S.C. He was 22 when he made it to the major leagues on April 16, 1940.

Schoendienst's rookie season was 1945, the year after Marion led the way with airtight defense in a six-game World Series victory over the cross-town Browns. The Cardinals committed just one error in the series.

"It was a big break for me to come up as a rookie and play second base with him playing short," Schoendienst said. "That was good, made it easier for me."

Schoendienst said he last saw Marion about six months ago at a baseball card show.

"He's lived good and he was a hell of a ballplayer," Schoendienst said. "I guess it's time, sometimes."

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