
Collect the Top Players from 1911-1920
The second decade of the 1900s falls squarely within baseball’s “dead-ball era” — a time defined by low-scoring games, dominant pitching, and tactical precision. Despite the scarcity of home runs, this was a decade full of unforgettable players whose influence shaped the modern game. Their names endure, not just in record books, but on some of the most cherished trading cards in The Hobby.
This list highlights the best players of the 1910s by position, alongside some of their most iconic cards ever produced.
Best Baseball Players & Their Cards: 1911-1920

Catcher: 1915 Cracker Jack #61 Ray Schalk RC
Player info
• 1917 world series champion
• hall of famer
• played and managed in the mlb
Set info
• 176-card set
what they said
• “Schalk is unquestionably the hardest working catcher in baseball as he is doubtless also the brainiest, the nerviest, the most competent.” – john c. ward of baseball magazine

First Base: 1940 Play Ball #179 George Sisler
Player info
• Hall of famer
• 1922 AL mvp
• four-time al stolen base leader
set info
• 240-Card set
What they said
• “”He is probably the only player other than Gehrig who can reasonably be considered the greatest first baseman ever in terms of peak value.” – Sports writer Rick Huhn

Second Base: 1909-1911 T206 American Tobacco Company Eddie Collins
Player info
• hall of famer
• six-time world series champion
• four-time al stolen base leader
set info
• 524-Card set
What they said
• “He was the greatest infielder I ever saw.” – fellow hall of famer Frankie Frisch

Shortstop: 1909-1911 T206 American Tobacco Company Honus Wagner
Player info
• One of the five original Baseball hall of Fame inductees
• 1909 World Series Champion
Card/Set info
• 524-Card Set
• One of the rarest and most valuable Baseball cards of all time, sold for $7.25 million in 2022
What they said
• “He is not only a marvelous mechanical player, but he has the quickest baseball brain I have ever observed.” – john mcgraw

Third Base: 1915 Cracker Jack #159 Heinie Groh
Player info
• Two-time world series champion
• Cincinnati Reds hall of famer
set info
• 176-Card set
what they said
• “Heinie Groh was undoubtedly the National League’s best third baseman of the Deadball Era.” – Sean Lahman of the Society for American Baseball Research

Left Fielder: 1910 T210 Old Mill Shoeless Joe Jackson
Player info
• cleveland guardians hall of famer
• 1917 world series champion
Set info
• 640-Card Set
what they said
• “I copied Jackson’s style because I thought he was the greatest hitter I had ever seen, the greatest natural hitter I ever saw. He’s the guy who made me a hitter.” – babe ruth

Center Fielder: 1933 Goudey #89 Tris Speaker
Player info
• hall of Famer
• Three-time world series champion
• 1912 al mvp
set info
• 240-Card set
What they said
• “At the crack of the bat he’d be off with his back to the infield, and then he’d turn and glance over his shoulder at the last minute and catch the ball so easy it looked like there was nothing to it, nothing at all.” – Smoky Joe Wood

Right Fielder: 1909-1911 T206 Ty Cobb Red Portrait
Player info
• One of the five original Baseball hall of Fame inductees
• 1911 al mvp
• 12-time al batting champion
set info
• 524-Card set
What they said
• “I never saw anyone like Ty Cobb. No one even close to him. He was the greatest all time ballplayer. That guy was superhuman, amazing.” – Casey Stengel

Starting Pitcher: 1911 T205 Walter Johnson
Player info
• hall of famer
• 1924 world series champion
• two-time al mvp
set info
• 198-Card Set
What they said
• “That young fellow is another Cy Young. I never saw a kid with more than he displayed.” – Addie Joss