Moe Berg: The Baseball Player
Who Became a Spy
Moe Berg wasn’t just a baseball player—he was one of the most intriguing figures in American espionage during World War II. Known as “the brainiest man in baseball,” Berg played 15 seasons as a catcher in Major League Baseball (MLB), but his greatest achievements came off the field when he joined the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the precursor to the CIA.
A Scholar on the Field
Berg was no ordinary athlete. He graduated from Princeton University, attended law school at Columbia, and spoke a dozen languages fluently. His teammates called him “Professor,” and he was known to read books in Sanskrit in the dugout! His intelligence and multilingual skills caught the attention of U.S. intelligence officials during World War II.
The Spy in Disguise
After joining the OSS, Berg was sent on missions across Europe to gather information on Nazi Germany’s atomic bomb research. One of his most daring missions involved attending a lecture by renowned physicist Werner Heisenberg in Switzerland. Berg’s task was to determine how far along the Nazis were in developing nuclear weapons—and if necessary, to assassinate Heisenberg if he posed a significant threat. Fortunately, Berg concluded that the Nazis were not close to success, sparing Heisenberg’s life.
Filming Tokyo in Secret
During a goodwill baseball tour in Japan in 1934, long before his spy days, Berg snuck off to the rooftop of a Tokyo hospital and filmed the city’s industrial landscape. The footage he captured was later used by American intelligence for planning bombing raids during World War II. Even then, Berg was blending his passion for baseball with a knack for espionage.
A Mysterious Legacy
Despite his espionage adventures, Berg remained an enigmatic figure. He never married, never wrote memoirs, and rarely spoke about his intelligence work. After the war, he declined the Presidential Medal of Freedom and remained a mysterious figure until his death.