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Ernie Banks

Chicago Cubs legend Ernie Banks dead at 83

USA TODAY Sports
Ernie Banks walks off the field before a baseball game between the Cubs and Diamondbacks at Wrigley Field in 2014.

Ernie Banks, known simply as "Mr. Cub" after hitting 512 home runs over a 19-year career spent entirely in Chicago, died Friday night at 83.

Best known for his effusive "Let's Play Two" phrase that epitomized the joy he felt for the game and brought to Wrigley Field, Banks was an 11-time All-Star, a first-ballot Hall of Famer and won consecutive National League MVP awards in 1958-59. Yet, he never appeared in a postseason game, toiling for Chicago Cubs teams that famously finished in the bottom half of the National League in his first 14 seasons. His 277 home runs as a shortstop rank second in baseball history to Cal Ripken Jr.

Banks' death was confirmed by the Cubs on Friday night. Banks would have turned 84 on Jan. 31.

In 1977, Banks was elected to the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility, but that simple honor hardly explained the greater significance he had for baseball fans in the Second City and beyond. In 2013, Banks received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Obama, alongside former President Clinton, Oprah Winfrey and others.

"Michelle and I send our condolences to the family of Ernie Banks, and to every Chicagoan and baseball fan who loved him," the Obamas said in a statement released early Saturday. "Ernie came up through the Negro Leagues, making $7 a day. He became the first African-American to play for the Chicago Cubs, and the first number the team retired.

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"Along the way, he became known as much for his 512 home runs and back-to-back National League MVPs as for his cheer, his optimism, and his love of the game. As a Hall-of-Famer, Ernie was an incredible ambassador for baseball, and for the city of Chicago. He was beloved by baseball fans everywhere, including Michelle, who, when she was a girl, used to sit with her dad and watch him play on TV.

"Somewhere, the sun is shining, the air is fresh, his team's behind him, and Mr. Class – 'Mr. Cub' – is ready to play two."

"He was one of the great crossover baseball players of his day," The Rev. Jesse Jackson said. "His personality was a racial bridge builder. He treated all people with dignity and respect. He never stopped reaching out to bridge the racial chasms."

"Words cannot express how important Ernie Banks will always be to the Chicago Cubs, the city of Chicago and Major League Baseball. He was one of the greatest players of all time," Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts said in a statement. "He was a pioneer in the major leagues. And more importantly, he was the warmest and most sincere person I've ever known."

"Approachable, ever optimistic and kind hearted, Ernie Banks is and always will be Mr. Cub. My family and I grieve the loss of such a great and good-hearted man, but we look forward to celebrating Ernie's life in the days ahead."

Banks' infectious smile and non-stop good humor despite his team's dismal record endeared him to Chicago fans, who voted him the best player in franchise history. One famous admirer, Saturday Night Live star Bill Murray, named his son Homer Banks Murray.

Banks won't live to see the next World Series flag atop Wrigley Field, which hasn't been home to a world champion since 1908.

But his career - and life - spanned countless historic checkpoints in the game.

Banks was playing for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Leagues when the Cubs discovered him and purchased his contract for $10,000. He made his major league debut at shortstop on Sept. 17, 1953, just six years after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier.

The Cubs' futility - they produced just one winning season in his first 14 years with the club - scarcely overshadowed his mammoth accomplishments on the field and his undeniable charisma off it.

By 1969, expansion and divisional play came to baseball and the Cubs nearly capitalized, winning 92 games and holding a five-game lead on Sept. 3. But they promptly lost eight consecutive games and 17 of 25 in September, and so went Banks' best chance to play for a pennant winner.

He retired at the age of 40, in 1971, with no shortage of resounding achievements. From 1955-1960, Banks hit at least 41 home runs in five of six seasons, all of them coming at shortstop before a move to first base in 1962. He had a lifetime .500 slugging percentage, and 2,583 hits.

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

PHOTOS: The life and career of Ernie Banks

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