On December 2, 1980 the Milwaukee Brewers acquired Ted Simmons in a seven-player trade. The trade paid immediate dividends for the team as Simmons helped them reach the post season for the first time in franchise history.
The next season Simmons and the Brewers were even better. The catcher followed up his All Star campaign of ’81 with 23 homers and 97 RBI to help lift the Brew Crew to their first American League pennant. Simmons continued to hit in ’83 when he hit .308 with 108 RBI in what proved to be his final All Star appearance.
Simmons’ production faded after ’83. In his last five seasons in the bigs – two with the Brewers and three with the Braves – Simmons hit .248 with a .312 on-base percentage and a negative WAR.
In total Simmons played in 21 major league seasons. Remarkably consistent, switch-hitting Simmons hit .287 with a .350 on-base percentage as a lefty and .281 with a .345 on-base percentage as a righty.
The Cooperstown man hit .300 or better in seven seasons, highlighted by his .332 mark in 1975. Simmons drove in 90 or more runs eight times, topping the century mark in three of those seasons.
At the time of his retirement no catcher had ever recorded as many hits or doubles as Simmons. As of 2026 his 1,389 RBI ranks second among catchers and his 248 homers have him 14th. Simmons may have been overshadowed by Johnny Bench’s play and Gary Carter’s personality but the numbers are there.
After earning just 3.7% of the vote in his first year on the Hall of Fame ballot, Simmons was removed from the writers’ ballot. In December, 2019 the Veterans Committee recognized his greatness, voting him to Cooperstown. He is the first one-and-done on the writers’ ballot to earn a plaque.
Shown here is a 1983 Topps Super Veteran baseball card autographed by Simmons.
Simba is one the most underrated catchers in the game, in my opinion. Easily the most prolific switch hitting backstop in the game’s history and second all times in career hits as a catcher, only behind Pudge Rodriguez. Very glad to see him get inducted a few years back. It was overdue.
Same feeling here. I think Simmons knew during his playing career he was very over shadowed by a few other contemporaries, such as Bench, Fisk, Carter, to name a few at the same position. Not sure why it took so long for the vote to turn in his favor but glad it finally did because as a player he should be in the Cooperstown Hall of Fame, let alone the Cardinals Hall.