Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Bill Gilbert: Astros Bats on Fire in July

August 3, 2017

SABR colleague and analyst Bill Gilbert presents his monthly report on the July portion of the 2017 Houston Astros MLB season. As always, it is both confirming and informative to anyone who cares to follow the Astros season on a more complete level. As always too, The Pecan Park Eagle thanks Bill Gilbert for all of his contributions to our efforts here.

 

Astros Bats on Fire in July

By Bill Gilbert

billcgilbert@sbcglobal.net

 

When a pitching staff allows a 5.08 ERA as Astros pitchers did in July, a downturn could be expected. Not so with the 2017 team as the Astros batters recorded possibly their best month ever, leading the major leagues in essentially every offensive category by a wide margin and posting a 15-9 record to increase their lead in the AL West division from 13.5 games at the end of June to 16 games at the end of July.

In July, the Astros led the major leagues in batting average (.323), on-base percentage (.380), slugging percentage (.568), runs per game (7.25), home runs (44) and stolen bases (23). Their on-base plus slugging average of .948 was more than 100 points higher than the runner up Colorado Rockies at .840.

Essentially everyone contributed to the offensive explosion in July. Jose Altuve led the way, batting .485 for the month with an on-base average of .523 and a slugging percentage of .727, leading the major leagues in all three categories. Included in the month were a 19 game hitting streak and six straight games with three hits. Carlos Correa and George Springer both batted over .400 and six others batted over .300. Ten players had slugging averages over .500, led by Correa at .833. Evan Gattis and Marwin Gonzalez had a team-leading six home runs and Josh Reddick and Altuve each drove in 21 runs. Altuve was named the league’s player of the month in July and Yuli Gurriel was named rookie of the month. Unfortunately, Springer and Correa, both having MVP caliber seasons, suffered injuries and finished the month on the disabled list.

The pitching was another story. Ace Dallas Keuchel was on the DL for most of June and July. He made only one start in July after returning and lasted just 3 innings. Lance McCullers Jr. came off the DL in late June and made four starts in July, none of which were successful (0-2, 9.64 ERA), before returning to the DL with back problems. Collin McHugh, on the DL all season, finally came back and made two starts. He struggled in his first start but pitched well in the second one.

Another impact of the starting pitcher problem is the toll it puts on the bullpen. Astro relievers posted an ERA of 2.91 in April but it has declined every month since then to 3.88, 5.14, and 5.79 in July. The team used 19 different pitchers in July. Relievers, Will Harris, Michael Feliz and Tony Sipp, finished the month on the disabled list.

Compounding the pitching problem was the failure by the Astros to trade for a front line pitcher before the July 31 non-waiver trading deadline. Unfortunately, their likely opponents in the post season (Red Sox, Yankees, Nationals, Cubs and Dodgers) did. The Astros did pick up a left-handed relief pitcher (Francisco Liriano) who should help but the big need is for more depth in the starting rotation, especially in view of the injury history of the current starters. Before the deadline, the Astros were widely considered to be a likely World Series participant but that sentiment seems to have shifted to the Yankees and Dodgers.

Fortunately, second line starters Charlie Morton, Brad Peacock and Mike Fiers all pitched reasonably well as the team won 11 of the 14 games started by these three pitchers.

The Astros placed six players in the All Star Game played on July 11. Altuve, Springer and Correa were all in the starting lineup but went 0 for 7 with 4 strikeouts, suggesting that the strong pitching they are likely to see in the playoffs will be a notch above what they are seeing in the regular season. Chris Devenski pitched a scoreless inning but Keuchel and McCullers did not appear in the game.

Probably the most remarkable aspect of the Astros successful season is their consistency, particularly in road games, where their record is 32-14. They have done well in interleague games against NL teams with a record of 9-1. Through July, they had played 33 series winning 23 and losing only 8 with two series splits. They have lost only two series on the road and the only teams with a winning record against Houston are the Cleveland Indians, Boston Red Sox and Kansas City Royals, all potential playoff opponents. From June 14 through July 28, the Astros never lost two straight games.

Can the Astros continue this record pace? It will be difficult with the questionable condition of the pitching staff and the uncertain availability of Springer and Correa.   It’s not reasonable to expect July’s offense to continue. Their lead in the AL West Division appears insurmountable with the other teams in the Division unable to mount a serious threat. The focus should be in preparation for the playoffs where they will need to be at full strength to prevail.

8/3/17

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Who’s Going to Show Up in October?

August 3, 2017

“He comes the third time home …” (Coriolanus)
~ Willie Shakespeare
In implicit comment upon the 3-0 Rays win over the Astros on 8/02/2017.

 

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST STANDINGS

THROUGH GAMES OF WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2017 

RANK AL WEST W L PCT. GB
1 ASTROS 69 38 .645  
2 MARINERS 55 54 .505 15.0
3 ANGELS 53 55 .491 16.5
4 RANGERS 51 56 .477 18.0
5 ATHLETICS 48 60 .444 21.5
           

 

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST SCORES

GAMES OF WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2017

 RAYS 3 – ASTROS 0. 

RANGERS 5 – MARINERS 1.

ANGELS 7 – PHILLIES 0.

ATHLETICS 6 – GIANTS 1.

 

AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING AVERAGE

THROUGH GAMES OF WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2017

RANK PLAYER TEAM AB H 2B 3B HR BA
1 JOSE ALTUVE HOU 410 148 33 3 15 .361
2 JOSE RAMERIZ CLE 402 130 33 5 18 .323
3 ERIC HOSMER KC 407 131 22 1 16 .322
4 CARLOS CORREA HOU 325 104 18 1 20 .320
5 JEAN SEGURA SEA 329 105 20 0 6 .319
NR * MARWIN GONZALEZ HOU 287 90 19 0 19 .314
6 BEN GAMEL SEA 333 104 19 4 6 .312
7 GEORGE SPRINGER HOU 368 114 22 0 27 .310
8 STARLIN CASTRO NYY 316 97 14 1 12 .307
9 JOSH REDDICK HOU 326 100 24 3 10 .307
10 DUSTIN PEDROIA BOS 336 103 17 0 6 .307
25 YULI GURRIEL HOU 363 103 28 0 13 .284
44 ALEX BREGMAN HOU 347 93 26 2 12 .268
       

NR * = NEEDS MORE “AB”S TO QUALIFY FOR RANKING.

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ASTRO*NOTES ….

Astros’ Odds of Winning the ALW Remain Almost “Un-Losable.” In spite of all recent disappointments, including last night’s shut out by the Rays and Keuchel’s first loss in his second struggling return start in the middle of another slumbering bats, double play Hari Kari game, the Astros remain the overwhelming favorites mathematically to win the AL West crown.

If the 69-38 Astros go 28-27, about .500, in their final 55 games, they will finish with a record of 97-65 record.

To beat the Astros’ 97-65 at the wire, the second place Mariners (currently at 55-54) would have to go 43-10 in their remaining 53 games to finish one game ahead of a Houston club that only did the improbable by playing down to .500 the rest of the way.

It just ain’t going to happen, folks. In the amount of time we have left in this season, as measurable by the games that remain on the schedule, the Astros don’t have enough time left to get that sick, that bad, that untalented on a level that will allow Seattle, or any of the other ALW bunches, to start playing like the reincarnation of the 1914 Braves.

The issue now is – and all of Astros Nation knows it – is this singularly simple and complex question: How ready and healthy will this 2017 Houston Astros team be when it’s time to start competing in the short series, winner-takes-all playoff baseball season that’s coming up in October?

Our Literary Efficacy Source. Willie Shakespeare said it best, did he not? Whether we are longing for the answer to something so profound as the meaning of life – or so important as whether or not this is the year the Astros finally win a World Series, all the angst behind either inquiry is fully contained in the bard’s famous words:

To be, or not to be: that is the question:
Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, *
And by opposing end them?

~ Hamlet, Act 3, Scene 1

* The Astros already know how to take arms against a sea of troubles, but, like most everyone else, they don’t know how to keep those arms pitching in the strike zone in ways that help keep them off the “DL”.

As for those two big questions we proffered earlier, I guess we’ll find out one of those answers in October. And who knows? Perhaps one joyous result will fill the needs of both.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Cool Hand Luke Gregerson Gets It

August 2, 2017

“Old Luke has a right to be tired after that great job he did in the 8th against the Rays last night. I’m afraid we need all of ’em to get and respond to the same message of our near shutout at the trading deadline. If our Astros are going to reach and win the World Series this year, we are most likely going to have to get the job done with the current roster or call-up pitchers we have left standing up when all the play-off fun begins!”

What We Have Here Is Not – Failure To Communicate

Cool Hand Luke Gregerson got the word. No “failure to communicate” that we could see in Luke last night during his part in the disappointing 6-4 loss to the Rays in Game 2 of a 4-spot series. Old Luke seemed to dig down deep from inside in the 8th, retiring the side without another run scoring by the Rays, while striking out all three guys in the one inning he worked. He even made some effort to keep his single base runner from stealing second base. Of course, the guy got it anyway, but Luke didn’t let him score, nor did he then give up 2-run Crawford Box delivery pitch to further ice a disappointing starter loss by Mike Fiers.

We need our own Cool Hand Luke to share whatever he was drinking with the rest of the staff, even with those going through this revolving door at the DL Urgency Care Center that most of them are suddenly discovering.

“Disappointment” definitely is the word for how most of us in Astros Nation feel about the failure of successful deal-making at Monday’s deadline, but that doesn’t do us any good now. We don’t know everything that got in the way of Jeff Luhnow making enough quality deals to hopefully meet our starting and relief pitching needs, but we fully respect star pitcher Dallas Keuchel’s right to express his personal disappointment in the shortfall. If someone is paying any of us the big money to get our job done – and then we find that our employer cannot supply us with the kind of support staff we need to reach the goal we all are hoping to achieve, we would have a right to scream bloody murder too.

The facts today are – that unless some kind of new talent now falls into our pitching roster by divine intervention from “the baseball gods” – every accessible pitcher under Astros control is now really under the gun to do what Cool Hand Luke did yesterday – every time they take the mound. The young guys are going to be asked to produce now at levels that are normally two years or so away for players of their age and experience. The older guys (see Cool Hand Luke) are going to have to consistently produce from levels of potentiality they once took for granted, three to five years ago.

It ain’t fair, but it’s how things are. Unless we choose to buckle – and just start mailing in this golden season as our toll on either disappointment in our current roster, our frustration with the injury parade, or our anger from some belief that the club should have done more to protect us from this glaring vulnerability, we’d better hope the word gets out about all that cool stuff that Cool Hand Luke Gregerson really demonstrated yesterday.

Whether your best is either ahead of you, or behind you, every member of the Astros roster and coaching staff is going to have to reach for their best and use it now. And let’s have no “failure to communicate” on that requirement while Mr. Luhnow does all he can still do to make up for our shortfall disappointment at this week’s deadline.

Go Astros!

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AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST STANDINGS

THROUGH GAMES OF TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 2017 

RANK AL WEST W L PCT. GB
1 ASTROS 69 37 .651  
2 MARINERS 55 53 .509 15.0
3 ANGELS 52 55 .486 17.5
4 RANGERS 50 56 .472 19.0
5 ATHLETICS 47 60 .439 22.5
           

 

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST SCORES

GAMES OF TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 2017

 RAYS 6 – ASTROS 4.

 MARINERS 8 – RANGERS 7.

 ANGELS 7 – PHILLIES 1.

GIANTS 10 – ATHLETICS 4.

 

AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING AVERAGE

THROUGH GAMES OF TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 2017

RANK PLAYER TEAM AB H 2B 3B HR BA
1 JOSE ALTUVE HOU 406 148 33 3 15 .365
2 JOSE RAMERIZ CLE 402 130 33 5 18 .323
3 ERIC HOSMER KC 403 130 21 1 16 .323
4 JEAN SEGURA SEA 326 105 20 0 6 .322
5 CARLOS CORREA HOU 325 104 18 1 20 .320
6 BEN GAMEL SEA 332 104 19 4 6 .313
NR * MARWIN GONZALEZ HOU 284 89 18 0 19 .313
7 GEORGE SPRINGER HOU 368 114 22 0 27 .310
8 JONATHAN SCHOOP BAL 393 121 27 0 24 .308
9 STARLIN CASTRO NYY 316 97 14 1 12 .307
10 DUSTIN PEDROIA BOS 336 103 17 0 6 .307
11 JOSH REDDICK HOU 324 99 24 3 10 .306
25 YULI GURRIEL HOU 359 102 28 0 13 .284
       

NR * = NEEDS MORE “AB”S TO QUALIFY FOR RANKING.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Dallas Morning News: Beltre Reaches 3,000 Hits

August 1, 2017
 The Dallas Morning News did a beautiful job covering and charting Adrian Beltre’s march to 3,000 hits as a major leaguer. With the visual help of their talented artist, Michael Hogue, they also have created a fascinating “3,000 Hit Club Family Portrait” of all the other 3,000 hit club members who now welcome Adrian Beltre into their select company. – It shouldn’t take you long to find club member Craig Biggio of the Houston Astros in the referential art work by Mike Hogue for the Dallas Morning News coverage of this rare, but always noted landmark achievement by only a select few big league hitters. It only works for those hitters with a great batting eye who possess the durability over time to win the battle over bad luck and poor life decisions – the kind that either invite injuries or create problems that may cause a fellow to miss too many of the chances he will need to get to 3,000 hits.Adrian Beltre was the steady kind of guy that took full advantage of the opportunities he needed to reach this golden milestone. And we wish him congratulations and continued success.Congratulations too to The Dallas Morning News for your wonderful support of your own hometown hero and his tribe, Adrian Beltre of the Texas Rangers.Here’s the interactive link that will allow you to scroll and use your mouse cursor to identify all the players in the portrait:

Adrian Beltre Joins the 3,000 Hit Club
By Michael Hogue
Of The Dallas Morning News

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Visualizing Adrian Beltre’s march to 3,000 hits

 By Layne Smith | Interactives Editor

On Sunday afternoon (7/30/17), Texas Ranger third baseman Adrian Beltre collected the 3,000th hit of his career with a double in the bottom of the fourth inning from Orioles’ pitcher Wade Miley. Beltre becomes the 31st player in Major League Baseball history to reach the 3,000 hit milestone.

Follow this link to The Dallas Morning News article by Layne Smith. It remarkably charts where each of those Beltre hits landed on the playing fields of Major League Baseball:

https://interactives.dallasnews.com/2017/beltre-3000-hits/

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Astros Monday Wake Like a Paul Simon Trilogy

July 31, 2017

“We may be still crazy after all thes years – and a little on the slip-slidin’ away side this morning, but, what the heck!  Point us to the bridge, anyway. – The big one.”

In the wake of that 13-1 pitching cave-in that the Astros absorbed from the Tigers yesterday (Sunday), which of these Paul Simon songs seem to best fit the participating Astro pitchers? Also, which best fits the sacrificial role that first baseman Tyler White played in driving the wild ride over the final cliff in Detroit? And which best fits the hope of some fans who’ve been waiting for this season since the start of Houston’s major league baseball life?

HINT: Two of the options are not listed in their correct chronological order to the three questions stated above. (At least, as we see it.)

(1) Slip slidin’ away

Slip slidin’ away
Slip slidin’ away
You know the nearer your destination
The more you’re slip slidin’ away

(2) Still crazy after all these years

Now I sit by my window
And I watch the cars
I fear I’ll do some damage
One fine day
But I would not be convicted
By a jury of my peers
Still crazy after all these years

(3) A bridge over troubled water

When times get rough
And friends just can’t be found
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down

Quick Fix Needed Where Nothing is Guaranteed. We fans have the easy job here on the day after a disaster like Sunday. GM Jeff Luhnow, Manager A.J. Hinch, and the Astro players and coaches are the ones left with the tough work today, especially, with the new player acquirement deadline by trade ending at 3:00 PM today.

Hang in there, everybody! ~ It’s going to be a bumpy time for critical thinking and action on all levels.

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SELECT CURRENT STANDINGS, SCORES, AND BATTING AVERAGE

LEADERS THROUGH GAMES OF SUNDAY, JULY 30, 2017

ASTRO*NOTE: In the middle of the worst game the club has played in quite a while, Jose Altuve went 2 for 4 to raise his BA back to .367 and Alex Bregman homered for the Astros’ only run in the 13-1 loss to Detroit.

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST STANDINGS

THROUGH GAMES OF SUNDAY, JULY 30, 2017 

RANK AL WEST W L PCT. GB
1 ASTROS 68 36 .654  
2 MARINERS 53 53 .500 16.0
3 ANGELS 51 55 .481 18.0
4 TEXAS 50 54 .481 18.0
5 ATHLETICS 46 59 .438 22.5
           

AMERICAN LEAGUEWEST SCORES

GAMES OF SUNDAY, JULY 30, 2017

 TIGERS 13 – ASTROS 1.

 MARINERS 9 – METS 1.

 BLUE JAYS 11 – ANGELS 10.

ORIOLES 10 – RANGERS 6.

ATHLETICS 6 – TWINS 5. (12)

AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING AVERAGE

THROUGH GAMES OF SUNDAY, JULY 30, 2017

RANK PLAYER TEAM AB H 2B 3B HR BA
1 JOSE ALTUVE HOU 398 146 33 3 15 .367
2 JEAN SEGURA SEA 322 104 20 0 6 .323
3 BEN GAMEL SEA 323 104 19 4 6 .322
4 ERIC HOSMER KC 396 127 20 1 16 .321
5 CARLOS CORREA HOU 325 104 18 1 20 .320
6 JOSE RAMERIZ CLE 394 126 32 5 18 .320
NR * MARWIN GONZALEZ HOU 280 88 17 0 19 .314
7 GEORGE SPRINGER HOU 368 114 22 0 27 .310
8 STARLIN CASTRO NYY 316 97 14 1 12 .307
9 DUSTIN PEDROIA BOS 336 103 17 0 6 .307
10 JOSH REDDICK HOU 320 98 24 3 10 .306
26 YULI GURRIEL HOU 350 99 27 0 13 .283
       
       

NR * = NEEDS MORE “AB”S TO QUALIFY FOR RANKING.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Altuve Loves Altitude (Plus Today’s Stats)

July 29, 2017

Possible Prototype
For
The Altuve-Altitude Belt Buckle
~ When summoned by the wearer, it plays the famous Mighty Mouse theme, entreating our Astros version of the world’s smallest superhero to raise our club again to even higher altitudes of achievement.

 

 If Bowery Boys leader Slip Mahoney (Leo Gorcey) were around today to give us his take on the value of Jose Altuve to the Houston Astros, he might say something like this: “I not only fail to depreciate the terrific way he plays baseball, but I also am totally compressed by the everyday ‘go-get-em’ altitude he brings to the game! – Jose’s favorite direction is ‘up’ and I like that one too, for a couple of reasons. For one thing, ‘up’ is always where you find the good stuff you can’t see if youse is one of us short guys, plus, ‘up’ is easy to spell!”

With some considerable help from a 5-run rbi night from Josh Reddick that included the game–saving 3-run homer in the 7th at Detroit last night, plus some cool closing by Ken Giles, striking out Miguel Cabrera for the last nail in the 6-5 Astros win over the Tigers, Jose Altuve’s relentless 3 for 4 night also has now pushed his season batting average “UP” to .369 for what now amounts to a .044 pint lead over his nearest competitor, Jean Segura of the Mariners.

Let’s hope that George Springer’s 10 day DL stint heals that “pulled something” from the game in Philly and that we are fortunate enough to have enough good timing on good fortune from other great altitude pushers on this currently great Astros team. For those of us who’ve been around and seen them all since 1962 Colt beginnings, especially if this keeps up, it’s hard to imagine a greater team from the past.

The bats and defensive skills of a healed 2017 Astros team speak for themselves. The biggest wonder is that they have been good enough on offense to make up for some tough losses to the starting pitcher rotation and shown some holes in the pen that still are pretty scary at times. Aside from Keuchel and the still proving himself youngster McCullers and the recent salt of Morton – and of Proud New Papa Peacock – and a steady Mike Fiers – this isn’t a pitching staff of legends like Ryan, Dierker, Scott, Niekro, Johnson, or Clemens out there, but they still have gotten the job done.

Somebody has. You don’t wake up on the last Saturday of July in any year and find what we have on our plate with the 2017 Astros by luck. A guy leading the AL with a .369 batting average and a team that now holds an 18 game lead over its two nearest AL West competitors are never conditions that spring purely from luck. Greatness from several somewhere places has be the stuff that’s needed to fly at this altitude of success.

And we’ve got it.

Keep it “UP”, Astros!

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AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST STANDINGS

THROUGH GAMES OF FRIDAY, JULY 28, 2017:

RANK AL WEST W L PCT. GB
1 ASTROS 68 34 .667  
2 MARINERS 51 53 .490 18.0
3 RANGERS 50 52 .490 18.0
4 ANGELS 50 54 .481 19.0
5 ATHLETICS 44 59 .427 24.5
           

 

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST SCORES

GAMES OF FRIDAY, JULY 28, 2017:

 ASTROS 6 – TIGERS 5.

 METS 7 – MARINERS 5.

 RANGERS 8 – ORIOLES 2.

ANGELS 7 – BLUE JAYS 2.

TWINS 6 – ATHLETICS 3.

 

AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING AVERAGE

THROUGH GAMES OF FRIDAY, JULY 28, 2017

RANK PLAYER TEAM AB H 2B 3B HR BA
1 JOSE ALTUVE HOU 390 144 33 3 15 .369
2 JEAN SEGURA SEA 314 102 20 0 6 .325
3 JOSE RAMIREZ CLE 385 124 31 5 18 .322
4 BEN GAMEL SEA 314 101 19 3 6 .322
5 ERIC HOSMER KC 387 124 20 1 16 .320
NR * MARWIN GONZALEZ HOU 272 87 16 0 19 .320
6 CARLOS CORREA HOU 325 104 18 1 20 .320
7 GEORGE SPRINGER HOU 368 114 22 0 27 .310
8 AARON JUDGE NYY 351 108 13 3 33 .308
9 DIDI GREGORIUS NYY 309 95 14 0 16 .307
10 STARLIN CASTRO NYY 316 97 14 1 12 .307
11 JOSH REDDICK HOU 313 96 24 3 10 .307
25 YULI GURIEL HOU 346 99 27 0 13 .286
       

NR * = NEEDS MORE “AB”S TO QUALIFY FOR RANKING.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

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Roger Metzger by David Skelton

July 28, 2017

Roger Metzger
By
David Skelton

 

Roger Metzger By David Skelton is nothing less than a masterpiece biographical contribution to baseball history. As a lifelong fan of baseball, the Houston Astros, and shortstop Roger Metzger, our Pecan Park Eagle interests are both humbled and honored to present David Skelton’s  fine work and dedication to honest reporting as a gift to the appetites of our readers. At a little more than 3,200 words, Skelton’s work is longer than your normal daily Eagle offerings, but give yourself the time – or a break – to finish later, if need be. We think you will find it worth your time.

And please give both David Skelton and The Eagle some feedback here too. If you would like to see more longer articles like this one, once in a while, please let us know.

David Skelton’s E-Mail address is dsbaseballfan@yahoo.com

Our Pecan Park Eagle E-Mail address is houston.buff37@gmail.com

The comment section, which we encourage everyone to use for sharing all your thoughts and questions, is visible below, immediately following each column.

Thank you very much.

Bill McCurdy, The Pecan Park Eagle

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ROGER METZGER

By David E. Skelton

 Two decades before the celebrated “Killer B’s” of Jeff Bagwell, Craig Biggio, et al, the Houston Astros looked anxiously to the letter “M” as rising prospects Marty Martinez and John Mayberry were expected to join All Star infielders Denis Menke and Joe Morgan and bring success to the woebegone franchise. Another name in the mix was shortstop Roger Metzger, whom Astros assistant general manager John Mullen tabbed as a “Pete Rose type of player.”[i]

A seemingly bold projection for a lifetime .231 hitter, Mullen had considerable support for this opinion. In 1973, Pittsburgh Pirates scout Howie Haak claimed there was “no better shortstop in the field in the National League than Roger Metzger.”[ii] Two years later Astros manager Preston Gomez, who skippered a roster that included sluggers Cesar Cedeno, Jose Cruz and Bob Watson, declared Metzger the “backbone of this club.”[iii]

Roger Henry Metzger was born on October 10, 1947, the eldest of three children of Bruno A. and Evelyn (Petsch) Metzger, in Fredericksburg, Texas, 70 miles north of San Antonio. He was the great-grandson of German immigrant John Peter Metzger who, as a small child, arrived in the Texas Hill Country with his parents in the 1850s. Two decades later, John married Gertrude Hartmann and supported his growing family through farming. Whereas John’s son Albert continued in agriculture, his grandson Bruno, Roger’s father, pursued a career in carpentry both before and after his stint in the U.S. Army during the Second World War. In 1946, Bruno married Evelyn Petsch and, a year later, welcomed their first child. Shortly afterward, the family moved to San Antonio.

The children attended Holy Cross High School, a Roman Catholic college preparatory school located on the west side of San Antonio. Though Roger played prep school baseball, he was overlooked by major-league scouts when he graduated from high school in 1966. This soon changed after he enrolled at St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas. Under the guidance of Tom Hamilton, the university’s athletic director and a former major league first baseman, the wiry shortstop’s career blossomed after converting from a natural left-handed hitter to a switch hitter. “I owe [coach Hamilton] so much,” Metzger said years later. “He gave me the chance to play in college and worked with me a lot. He was a kind of a father away from home for me.”[iv] In 103 at-bats for the St. Edward’s Hilltoppers in 1969, the college junior batted .447 with three homers and 24 RBIs to earn selection as The Sporting News’ College All-American shortstop. Scouted aggressively by, among other clubs, the St. Louis Cardinals, Metzger was selected by the Chicago Cubs in the first round (16th pick overall) of the June amateur draft. He joined the club during the team’s June 13-15 weekend series in Cincinnati before being assigned to the Triple-A Tacoma Cubs in the Pacific Coast League.

 Metzger took over Tacoma’s starting shortstop role and immediately provided stability to the club’s leaky infield defense. Moreover, after a difficult start offensively (just 16 hits in his first 88 at-bats), Metzger rebounded to help lead the Cubs to the Northern Division pennant. His hitting continued over the winter in the Arizona Instructional League where he placed among the circuit leaders with a .346 average in his first 130 at-bats. Throughout the offseason, several major-league clubs inquired of Cubs All Star shortstop Don Kessinger (including an aggressive pursuit by the Astros for outfielder Jim Wynn), assuming Metzger would be advanced to the majors. “Someday that might be true,” Cubs GM John Holland said in December. “[B]ut it certainly isn’t now.”[v]

In 1970, Metzger was reassigned to Tacoma where Hawaii Islanders manager Chuck Tanner declared, “He’s the best shortstop in the league and probably the best in Orgazed Baseball.”[vi] In June, Metzger was recalled by the Cubs when Kessinger was briefly sidelined. On June 16, he made his major-league debut at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park as the Cubs starting shortstop. Nervousness was apparent when, in the second inning, the surehanded Metzger bobbled a ground ball that eventually led to an unearned in the Cubs 3-2 loss. He had no more success batting against future Hall of Famer Gaylord Perry, grounding out twice before being lifted for a pinch-hitter in the eighth. Returned to Tacoma, Metzger concluded his first full season with a .270 average while also placing among the team leaders in nearly every offensive category. But on October 12, in a move that startled many observers, the Cubs traded Metzger to the Astros for utility infielder Hector Torres. Reports suggested that the trade was part of the Cubs purchase of slugger Joe Pepitone from the Astros three months earlier, a claim the Cubs vehemently denied. Shortly after the trade, Metzger reported to Venezuela’s Lara Cardinals where he was teamed with future Astros stars Ken Forsch and Bob Watson. In December, he and Watson were selected to the Venezuelan Winter League All Star team. One month later, Metzger was named the 1970 outstanding Texas-born Minor League Player of the Year by the Houston Chapter of the Baseball Writers’ Association.

 To make room for Metzger, the 1971 Astros made several adjustments to their lineup, moving two-time All Star shortstop Menke to first base and shifting first baseman Watson to the outfield. The effort proved worthwhile when Metzger, following a shaky start to the season, committed just one error over 57 consecutive games (603 chances) through July 4. Twelve days later, his grab of a line drive from New York Mets outfielder Cleon Jones initiated the first triple play in Houston franchise history. Astros fans only had to wait two additional months for the club’s second triple killing, with Metzger again playing a pivotal role. He provided the Astros its “best ever [club] defensively” with a club record (and league leading) 275 putouts, 459 assists and 91 double plays by a shortstop while committing only 17 errors (the second fewest in the NL behind Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Larry Bowa).[vii] In an anonymous poll of Houston pitchers taken at the end of the season, Metzger was voted the team’s MVP by an overwhelming margin.

Metzger’s superb defense more than made up for his offensive lags. “I wasn’t hitting the ball at all,” said the switch-hitter after a .212 average in the season’s first half. “I just wasn’t making good contact.”[viii] But greater gain ensued in the second half when, following a three-hit game against the Montreal Expos on July 30, Metzger got 31 hits in his next 101 at-bats. He finished the season with a .235 average in 562 at-bats while his 11 triples tied with teammate Joe Morgan and Kansas City Royals shortstop Fred Patek for the major-league lead.

Metzger’s offensive challenges returned in 1972 when he finished April with a meager .109 average. He set a dubious club record by going 169 games without a home run before finally connecting for a dinger against St. Louis Cardinals ace Bob Gibson on May 10. Despite a puny .222 average and an equally scant .288 OBP, Metzger was used primarily as the club’s leadoff hitter where his 23 stolen bases placed among the league leaders. Moreover, his 153 appearances trailed only Pete Rose for the NL lead. Despite a career worst 22 errors, Metzger’s defensive prowess proved crucial to the club’s then-franchise best third place finish. Though identification with Rose had dissipated, Metzger drew favorable comparisons to Kessinger and Mets shortstop Bud Harrelson, two of the league’s premier defensive shortstops. “Metzger will be the best shortstop in the National League in a year or two,” predicted Astros lefthander Dave Roberts. “He’ll make a few more errors, but he’s got the range and gets to balls other shortstops don’t.”[ix]

In 1973, Metzger’s offensive difficulties continued when he got a mere six hits in his first 68 at-bats. Benched briefly at the end of April after a franchise record 184 consecutive appearances Metzger, at the advice of hitting coach Deacon Jones, began choking up on a heavier bat ala Nellie Fox.[x] The results proved instantaneous as Metzger produced a .347/.400/.435 slash line in May. On June 17, he tied his career high with four hits, only to match this yield again a month later. Though slowed in the last weeks of the season, Metzger finished with a career high 187 total bases while also establishing a franchise best 14 triples. Moreover, he led all NL shortstops with a .982 fielding percentage to earn his only Gold Glove award. In December, the Houston Chapter of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America selected Metzger as the Astros Most Valuable Player.

 The 1974 season ushered in glasses after Metzger, who his teammates nicknamed “Trout” because of his passion for fishing, discovered he was nearsighted in one eye. This proved to be the least of his worries when, during pre-game drills on April 29, he was knocked unconscious following a violent outfield collision with teammate Don Wilson. The quick actions of catcher Johnny Edwards and third baseman Doug Rader prevented Metzger from swallowing his tongue. He was carted off the field and sent to a hospital where it was learned he had also sustained a chipped bone in his left thumb. It was this latter injury that sidelined Metzger over the next few weeks. “I’m just glad to be here,” he said in classic understatement following his near-death experience. “Somebody up there must like me.”[xi] Following a strong start to the season, Metzger carried a .271 average through July before faltering in the last weeks of the season. He finished with a .253 average in 572 at-bats with a career high 18 doubles.

Except for a 33-for-82 surge in May 1975, Metzger struggled with a .184 average in his first 217 at-bats of a largely forgettable season. Moreover, the solid fielder inexplicably committed 10 errors in the club’s first 35 games. On June 3, during a 4-3 loss to the Mets in Shea Stadium, Metzger connected for the last home run of his career. It was during this or another trip to New York that Metzger’s possessions were stolen from his hotel room (the first of two straight years in which he was robbed in The Big Apple). In July, Metzger was sidelined with an elbow injury that he reaggravated a month later, resulting in his making just 36 appearances throughout the season’s second half. Despite the time missed, Metzger participated in exactly half of the club’s 166 double plays turned—a franchise record that stood for 24 years.

In 1976, following a then-franchise worst .398 winning percentage, the Astros made a radical turn toward youth in which nine players exceeded the rookie limits (three others who did not exceed the limits made a combined 34 appearances during the season). Amid this youth movement Metzger continued his steady play. For the second (and last) time in his career, he led all NL shortstops in fielding percentage while establishing a major league record 59 consecutive games without an error at his position (a record that stood for 13 years). In September, for the first time in his major league career, Metzger played some place other than shortstop, moving to second base while graciously yielding his spot to 20-year-old Alex Taveras as the Astros eyed possible future pursuits. “I’ll even volunteer to catch if it’ll keep me in a ball game,” Metzger said.[xii] During the offseason Metzger’s name surfaced in several trade rumors, with the most aggressive suitor being the New York Yankees before they acquired Bucky Dent from the Chicago White Sox two days before the start of the 1977 season. When nothing came of the other trade rumors, Metzger reported to the Astros training camp the following spring.

 But Metzger’s imminent departure remained a constant over the next 18 months. After missing nearly two months of the 1977 season with a fractured fibula, reports emerged of Metzger’s diminished range at shortstop. Nor was his cause helped by an 0-for-20 slump through July 1 that contributed to a .186 season average. Despite these struggles, Metzger successfully fended off challenges from a host of contending shortstops in 1977 and again during the following spring. “I’ve always felt I had to battle for my job,” Metzger said in March 1978 when facing stiff competition from newly acquired infielder Jimmy Sexton. “I don’t feel any more pressure than any other spring.”[xiii] On April 6, Metzger raced out to his position on Opening Day, the eighth consecutive year in which he did so in an Astros uniform.

After participating in an Opening Day triple play, followed 15 days later by still another, through 2016 Metzger is the only player in franchise history to engage in four triple plays. Despite this milestone achievement, questions soon resurfaced about the veteran’s diminished range. On June 15, after attempts to acquire Cardinals All Star shortstop Garry Templeton and Pirates defensive specialist Frank Taveras both ended in failure, the Astros got infielder Mike Fischlin from the Yankees in a multi-player swap. That same day, Metzger was sold to the NL West first place San Francisco Giants. The sale was engineered by Giants general manager Spec Richardson who, eight years earlier as the Astros GM, had orchestrated Houston’s acquisition of Metzger from the Cubs. “[I] always liked Roger,” Richardson said after Metzger joined the Giants. “Frankly, I didn’t think we had a chance to get him.”[xiv]

Before Metzger’s acquisition, the Giants primary shortstop was Johnnie LeMaster, a former first round draft pick who, following a reasonably successful minor league career, had trouble adjusting to the big leagues. Platooning with the 24-year-old throughout the season’s remainder, Metzger proved the perfect complement to the club’s needs. “My [only] concern is putting on some weight so I don’t blow away at [the Giants windy] Candlestick [Park,]” said the six-foot, 165-pound veteran.”[xv] On June 21, Metzger got two hits including a game winning two-run double to lead the Giants to a 3-0 win over Cincinnati Reds ace Tom Seaver. Two days later, Metzger launched a 23-for-51 surge that helped the Giants maintain its lead atop the NL West. Anxiously looking ahead to his first (and what proved to be only) chance at post-season, Metzger’s hopes were eventually dashed when the club collapsed in September.

Metzger, Roger  On April 4, 1979, Metzger made his last career Opening Day start as the Giants reveled in a lopsided 11-5 win against Seaver in Cincinnati. After winning six of its next eight games, the club appeared poised to erase the disappointment of the preceding season. But a vastly different outcome resulted over the next 16 days when the Giants limped to a meager 2-12 record. As the losses continued, tensions surfaced among the players as the club rapidly tumbled out of contention. An example of these tensions came on August 21 when Metzger, who had continued platooning with LeMaster throughout the season, was involved in a pre-game scuffle with pitcher Ed Whitson, a much larger player. Beginning on the field, the scuffle continued in the clubhouse, doing little to improve the overall environment. In what proved to be Metzger’s last full season in the major leagues, the Giants finished with a disappointing 71-91 record, 19½ games behind the first place Reds.

The fact that Metzger even donned a uniform the next year is remarkable considering the grizzly November 29, 1979 power saw accident that severed the tips of four of fingers on his right (throwing) hand. Within two weeks of the mishap the Giants, who assumed that Metzger was lost for the season (if not forever), acquired two middle infielders as potential replacements. Two more were acquired in March 1980. But Metzger was determined to overcome the casualty. The headstrong veteran worked hard to relearn how to throw a ball. Moreover, he had trouble gripping a bat and eventually turned to a smaller handled device. The hard work paid off when, following a .333 spring training average, Metzger earned a spot on the major league roster.

But Cactus League gains did not translate to regular season success when the Giants, now fully committed to LeMaster, found sparring use for Metzger. He garnered only 25 plate appearances through the first half and only one official at-bat in July—a pinch-hit single against Pirates righthander Jim Bibby that proved to be Metzger’s last major league hit. He was released on August 16 after the Giants activated catcher Milt May from the disabled list. Metzger was immediately signed to replace coach John Van Ornum, who was granted a leave of absence after undergoing minor surgery. Metzger’s release had come 15 days shy of his 10-year pension eligibility. On September 1, when major league teams could expand their rosters, the Giants reactivated him so that he could reach the 10-year threshold.

Metzger retired to Brenham, Texas, midway between Houston and Austin. Several years earlier married Tamy Rue Bailey, a Houston native one year his junior. The union produced two sons. In 1978, after partnering with his father-in-law in a real estate venture, Metzger purchased a 20-acre spread. It was on this same tract of land that he suffered the power saw injury while building a playhouse for his children. For several years Metzger and his wife owned a restaurant in Brenham before the former ballplayer launched a long career as a high school teacher. In 1996, he was inducted into the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame. Nine years later his jersey was retired by St. Edward’s University.

Several years after he retired from baseball, Metzger said, “I just regret one thing . . . I was never on a World Series team. But I was able to experience a dream I had when I was a kid. There were some good times for me in baseball, and there were some bad times, too. I guess the good times outnumbered the bad.”[xvi] Metzger garnered a .231 average in 4,201 at-bats over his 11-year major-league career. More importantly, over this time he was considered one of the finest fielders of his generation.

Sources

In addition to the sources cited in the Notes, the author consulted Ancestry.com and Baseball-Reference.com. The author wishes to thank SABR member Bill Mortell for his valuable research assistance.

Notes

[i] John Wilson, “Astros Tap Hustling Rookie Metzger No. 1 Shortstop,” The Sporting News, January 9, 1971: 48.

[ii] John Wilson, “Cecil Realizes Old Dream . . . He’s Astro,” The Sporting News, May 12, 1973: 16.

[iii] Harry Shattuck, “Maturing Metzger Earns Astro Raves,” The Sporting News, June 14, 1975: 11.

[iv] Joe Heiling, “Metzger Wins Torrid Race for Astro MVP Honors,” The Sporting News, December 15, 1973: 47.

[v] Edgar Munzel, “Deal Kessinger? ‘No!’ Says Cubs,” The Sporting News, December 27, 1969: 35.

[vi] “Rivals Praise Metzger,” The Sporting News, July 11, 1970: 36.

[vii] John Wilson, “A View of N.L. West: Houston Astros,” The Sporting News, April 10, 1971: 10.

[viii] John Wilson, “Roger’s Star-Flecked Glove Lifts Astros to Cloud Nine,” The Sporting News, July 24, 1971: 12.

[ix] “N.L. Flashes,” The Sporting News, May 13, 1972: 28.

[x] Metzger’s record was broken by third baseman Enos Cabell in 1979.

[xi] Joe Heiling, “Rock-Like Roger Sends Astros Into Flights of Oratory,” The Sporting News, August 17, 1974: 16.

[xii] Harry Shattuck, “Metzger Switches to Second, Astros Examine Taveras,” The Sporting News, October 16, 1976: 11.

[xiii] Harry Shattuck, “Astros Line Up Rivals for Metzger,” The Sporting News, March 18, 1978: 52.

[xiv] Glenn Dickey, “Spec Plays ‘Mr. Kleen’ as Trading Giant,” The Sporting News, August 26, 1978: 7.

[xv] Nick Peters, “Giant Newcomers Prove Immediate Hits,” The Sporting News, July 15, 1978: 20.

[xvi] UPI Archives, “There’s Life After Baseball, Says Former Player,” April 11, 1983. Accessed May 2, 2017 (http://bit.ly/2pSsGQW ).

 

********************

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Shrine of Eternals Picks Three

May 7, 2017

the-baseball-reliquary-large copy

Shrine of Eternals Picks Three

In an announcement dated May 3, 2017, the Board of Directors of The Baseball Reliquary has announced that their membership has selected a class of three electees for induction into their “Shrine of Eternals” on Sunday, July 16, 2017, in a public ceremony at the Donald R. Wright Auditorium in the Pasadena Central Library, Pasadena, California.

As Executive Director Terry Cannon explains, the Shrine of the Eternals is the Baseball Reliquary’s equivalent to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Of the 50 eligible candidates on the 2017 ballot, Vin Scully was the top vote-getting electee with a 59.5% appearance on all returned ballots. Bob Uecker was second with 37% and lovable cartoon character Charlie Brown was third – just barely above the 25% minimum qualifying line with a sweet reading of 25.5%.

Runner-ups in this year’s election included Leo Durocher (24.8%), Bob Costas (23.5%), Octavius V. Catto (23%) and Effa Manley (23%).

Further down the list of those not selected were former Astros J.R. Richard (22%), Rusty Staub (15%), and Joe Pepitone (12%) – and Country & Western singer/ballplayer Charlie Pride (12%).  For further information on the event and for their help making your travel plans to the induction this coming July, please go to the Baseball Reliquary site for further information.

Contact: Terry Cannon, Executive Director, The Baseball Reliquary

Phone: (626) 791-7647

E-Mail: terymar@earthlink.net

Website: www.baseballreliquary.org

___________________


Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Dual Cool: Steven Wright and Our MFAH

November 2, 2014
The Jung Center 5200 Montrose Blvd Houston, TX 77006 Tel:  713-524-8253

The Jung Center
5200 Montrose Blvd
Houston, TX 77006

Yesterday, Saturday, November 1st, I spent most of that beautiful and briskly cool periwinkle blue sky day in a Jungian Psychology seminar at the Jung Center on Montrose. During the lunch break, I walked across the street to spend some time in the MFAH Statue Garden at the intersection of Binz and Montrose – which becomes Bissonett and Montrose on the west side of the latter named street.

What a cool place that is, the MFAH Statue Garden. I had not seen it in about a decade, but it was like  a homecoming visit with some art pieces I’ve known almost my entire life. I simply enjoy the visceral sensory experience of being in the company of art sculpture and beauty in a really natural setting that is quiet and peaceful – especially in the noon day sun of a fresh Houston autumn day.

For whatever reason, I’ve almost always associated the ironic thoughts of visionary comedian Steven Wright with these beautiful images in the Houston Museum district. Here are a few photos I took yesterday, along with a quote from Wright, following each. If the quotes are connected to images at all, I’m not conscious of what their connections may be. I simply believe that both Steven Wright and the MFAH Statue Garden are both extremely cool and pleasing to the creative blood that passes through all our veins – and that they are both true givers, no false givers, of all they’ve got to give.

Life is good. Live in the moment as much as possible. Enjoy life. Discover your gifts and give them back to life without concern for your reward. It will come from the giving, but only if we give our hearts to whatever it may be that we fully choose to do without resentment. People who create great works of art give that beauty to us. And people who can make us smile with their everyday observations of life are like the donors of a great curative tonic for the soul and spirit of our being. Whatever we have that is our gift, we need to find it and give it back to life too, even if it means leaving our comfort zone to do so, because it very well may. As an aging Marlon Brando character once uttered in the Don Juan movie he made with Johnny Depp: (paraphrased here in greater detail for even greater clarity):  “No fire, no heat.-  No heat, no warmth. – No warmth, no love. – No love, no life.”

Enjoy your trip to the MFAH Sculpture Garden with Steven Wright, everybody:

 

"On Halloween, I went to a party dressed as The Equator. When anyone came near me, they got warmer."

“On Halloween, I went to a party dressed as The Equator. When anyone came near me, they got warmer.” – Steven Wright

 

"I couldn't repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder." - Steven Wright

“I couldn’t repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder.” – Steven Wright

 

"All those who believe in psychokinesis raise my hand." - Steven Wright

“All those who believe in psychokinesis raise my hand.” – Steven Wright

 

"I almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met. " - Steven Wright

“I almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met.
” – Steven Wright

 

#What happens if you get scared half to death twice?" - Steven Wright

“What happens if you get scared half to death twice?”
– Steven Wright

 

'I went to the museum where they had all the heads and arms from the statues that are in all the other museums."  -- Steven Wright

‘I went to the museum where they had all the heads and arms from the statues that are in all the other museums.”
— Steven Wright

 

"When I was crossing the border into Canada, they asked if I had any firearms with me. I said, "Well, what do you need?"  -- Steven Wright

“When I was crossing the border into Canada, they asked if I had any firearms with me. I said, “Well, what do you need?”
— Steven Wright

 

A conscience is what hurts when all your other parts feel so good." - Steven Wright

A conscience is what hurts when all your other parts feel so good.”
– Steven Wright

 

"Change is inevitable....except from vending machines. - Steven Wright

“Change is inevitable….except from vending machines.
– Steven Wright

 

"A fool and his money are soon partying." - Steven Wright

“A fool and his money are soon partying.”
– Steven Wright

 

Party Hardy, Everybody!

 

Ed Delahanty and the Power of Gravity

August 23, 2014
Ed Delahanty: The 1903 death of this future Hall of Famer remains one of the great unsolved cold cases in baseball history.

Ed Delahanty: The 1903 death of this future Hall of Famer remains one of the great unsolved cold cases in baseball history.

As a matter of course in reading all kinds of ancient baseball history, enough of it, done continuously over time, and you eventually will form your own orbital-steady contact with the story of Ed Delahanty, the ancient Hall of Fame left fielder who died tragically in 1903 after being put off a train for being “drunk and disorderly” at Fort Erie, Canada, at the International Bridge near Niagara Falls that leads to Buffalo, New York.  Some said he was brandishing a knife on the train after having consumed several whiskies that night and threatening other passengers.

At any rate, after the ejection, “Big Ed” as he was often called, apparently decided to cross the expansive rail ridge on foot, but never made it. About a week later, they found his body a short distance downstream, but were never able to determine if Ed Delahanty slipped, jumped, or was pushed off the bridge into the waters below. One account from a later secondary witness suggests that he was last seen being followed by another mysterious figure who was never identified.

Since Delahanty’s body was found without the wallet and jewelry he was known to have had on him at the time of his disappearance, the cause heats up for robbery/murder, but that suspicion alone does not rule out the possibility that he was simply relieved of these personal valuables after his dead body was first discovered. The Ed Delahanty Death lives on as a cold case for the ages. Back then, they either could not, or did not try to determine his exact cause of death. Was it caused by the impact trauma of his fall? Was it the result of drowning? Or was there any evidence of prior trauma from an assailant that might lend credence to the possibility of murder? No one knows today because nothing was ever determined back then.

On July 2, 1903, an investigative writer named Mike Sowell published an investigative study of the Delahanty conundrum  in a work entitled “The Mysterious Death of Big Ed Delahanty.” It was published again by McMillan Publishing Company in 1992. The Sowell Study considers the evidence for all possibilities, but, as it stands to this day, nothing was ever determined that approaches certainty.

The death remains a big confirmation of one rule of wisdom that many people have to learn to survive the delusion of immortality and indestructibility that often accompanies the narcissistic vision of their young adult years. That is – that “being in the wrong place at the wrong time under the influence of drugs and/or alcohol can get you killed.”

Big Ed Delahanty didn’t make it. That’s all we know for sure.

Ed Delahanty was most deserving of his Hall of Fame induction in 1945. In sixteen seasons as a big leaguer (1888-1903), Ed batted over .400 on three occasions, winning two batting championships and finishing with a career lifetime batting average of .346. It’s just too bad, as always is the case, that his own vulnerability to cutting his life short won out over his talent for hitting a baseball.

Willis A (Papa) Teas San Antonio, Texas 1938

Willis A (Papa) Teas
San Antonio, Texas
1938

I can never think of Ed Delahanty without thinking of an answer my maternal grandfather, Willis Teas,  once gave me to a question I asked him when I was about ten years old. We had just met “Pappa” at Union Station in downtown Houston on one of his train trips to visit us from San Antonio. He and I were walking ahead of Mom and Dad on the short trip from the track area to the same great depot hall that now serves as the grand foyer of Minute Maid Park.

“Papa,” I asked, “would a fall from the top of Union Station over there absolutely kill you every time?”

“No,” Papa said with a chuckle as he responded to my early life search for absolute answers with a sense of humor that often embarrassed me for asking  what then felt like a stupid question. “It wouldn’t kill you every time, just the first time. Remember, Billy, we only die once. Remember too, it isn’t the fall from a high place that kills the person falling. – It’s the sudden stop when the body hits the pavement that does him in.”

Papa Teas Reincarnate Houston, Texas 2008

Papa Teas Reincarnate
Houston, Texas
2008

I loved Papa Teas, but it’s a small wonder that I didn’t grow up to be a smart ass too.