Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

The Post WWII Baseball Trinity

July 19, 2010

(L>R) Ted WIlliams, Stan Musial, Joe DiMaggio (It took a cigarette ad to bring baseball's "Big Three" together).

In the years following World War II, Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox, Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals, and Joe DiMaggio of the New York Yankees were baseball’s unholy trinity of swat. Of course, they were unholy. They were neither the three natures of God in One Divine Being, nor were they clean of endorsement money from the tobacco industry. Of course again too, cigarette smoking was not the cultural sin in the 1940s and 1950s that it was later to become. Ted, Stan, and Joe were just normal American males as cigarette users, although DiMaggio may have been the only one who chain-smoked through games. The stories of him ducking into the clubhouse tunnel from the dugout between innings at Yankee Stadium are the stuff of legend by now.

All I know is – I had to use the attached crop from an old Chesterfield ad to get the three great ones of my childhood aspiration years in one photo. If they ever made a photograph together, and I’m sure they did, it was too obvious an attention-grabber to miss. No self-respecting news-hound of that era’s All Star Games could have allowed that photo opportunity to have passed every year they were there together – and that was just about every season they all shared in common. I just could not find the expected photo of all three guys smiling and waving bats over their hitting shoulders in one tight pictorial.

I thought it would be interesting to take a brief broad ban look this morning at how The Big Three’s statistical accomplishments and honors compared over the years. Let’s start with tenures of service and batting averages.

Joe DiMaggio started earliest, finished earliest, and played the least time in the big leagues. DiMaggio broke into the majors in 1936, missed three years, 1943-45, due to World War II, and then finished his 13-season career (1936-42, 1946-51).

Ted Williams reached the majors second in 1939. Technically, Williams played 19 seasons in the big leagues, but he also lost 1942-45 fully to World War II and all but 43 games total of the 1952-53 seasons to a second tour as a fighter pilot in Korea. Williams concluded his career (1939-42, 1946-60) with a home run in his last time at bat.

Stan Musial started last and played for the longest tenure of time. Musial’s 22-season career (1941-44, 1946-63) cost him only the 1945 season to military service.

For their careers, Ted Williams batted .344, Stan Musial batted .331, and Joe DiMaggio batted .325. Not a shabby tab for any single outfield that might have had both the good fortune and the bucks to have afforded all three. – Williams, of course, was the only one to ever hit over .400 (.406 in 1941) and Joe D. is the only man (period) to have ever hit in 56 consecutive games (also in 1941). All Musial could do was lead the three-man pack in batting championships with 7 National League titles (1943, 46, 48, 50, 51, 52, & 57). Williams finished a close second with 6 American League titles (1941, 42, 47. 48, 57, & 58). Joe DiMaggio won only two American League batting titles in 1939-40.

All three guys could hit for power, but only Stan Musial never led his league in home runs. Williams took 4 HR crowns in the AL with 37 in 1941, 36 in 1942, 32 in 1947, & 43 in 1949. Joe DiMaggio took a couple of crowns, early and late. Joe D. won the AL title with 36 HR in 1937 and again in 1948 with 39. For their careers, Williams struck 521 homers; Musial blasted 475; and Joe DiMaggio hit 361.

On the most runs batted in side, Williams won 4 times (1939, 42, 47, & 49); DiMaggio won 2 times (1941-48); and Musial also won twice (1948, 56). Joe D’s 1941 total of 125 rbi to Ted’s 120 cost Williams the triple crown that year. Williams is the only triple crown winner in the group. Ted took the big trifecta two times, winning the triple crown in 1942 and 1947.

Oddly, Ted Williams failed to win the AL MVP award in his .406 BA 1941 season or in either of his 1942 or 1947 triple crown years. Writers gave the MVP nod in 1941 and 1947 to Joe DiMaggio. Joe Gordon of the Yankees received the award over Ted Williams in 1942. Go figure.

MVP totals include 3 for DiMaggio (AL: 1939, 41, & 47); 3 for Musial (NL: 1943, 46, & 48); and 2 for Williams (AL: 1946 & 49).

World Series Experience. All three stars played only for their original teams: DiMaggio played  for the Yankees; Williams for the Red Sox; and Musial for the Cardinals. DiMaggio, of course, got to play for the most World Series winners. Joe D. played for 10 winners  in 11 World Series tries (1936, 37, 38, 39, 41, 42, 43, 47, 49, 50, & 51). Joe’s 1942 Yankee loss to the Cardinals was his only disappointment. Stan Musial played on World Series winners in 1942, 44, & 46, losing only in 1943 to the Yankees. Ted Williams got into only a single World Series that his Red Sox lost to the Cardinals in 1946.

DiMaggio played for World Series winners in 1950-51 and then retired. Williams and Musial labored for the all of the 50’s and into the early 60’s, winning nothing more with their teams. Even the greatest stars cannot do it alone.

Williams and Musial both hit from the left side; DiMaggio from the right. The two American Leaguers from California (Williams and DiMaggio) were egoists of the first order; one was just louder than the other. The other guy (Musial) was as humble, nice, and down-to-earth as the people who raised him in the coal country of western Pennsylvania, but so what? All three were baseball greats of the first order.

I personally like Ted Williams as the greatest hitter of the era, Joe DiMaggio as the greatest fielder of his time; and Stan Musial as the greatest all around player from that period of the greatest generation. That was the 1940’s.

The 1950’s weren’t about these three guys. By the mid-50’s, the discussions of the greatest player had shifted to Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays, or Duke Snider – with Hank Aaron, Roberto Clemente, and Al Kaline all showing up soon enough with their own support for recognition.

Keeping those latter guys from the 50’s separate from the mix, what do you guys think of Teddy Ballgame, the Yankee Clipper, and Stan the Man? Who among them was the greatest in your opinion?

Frogtown Memories

July 18, 2010

Soil collected from the old home plate area of yesterday's Eagle Field in Pecan Park. It still glitters with magic promise of great games and good times to come. Even the the ghosts of croakers in nearby Frogtown still stop by to pay their respects to the joy that once covered all the free-standing earth of American cities and towns in the form of sandlot baseball.

I confess. I never “outgrew” my emotional attachment to the old dedicated city vacant lot in the east end of Houston that once so faithfully served as home to our sandlot baseball games – and to the dedicated club we Japonica-Myrtle-Kernel street kids called the Pecan Park Eagles. The critical time for me was 1947 to 1953. Before that time, I had yet to awaken to baseball. After that period, work took over much of my summer month and after school time. I had to help pay for my upkeep and I was also playing a little   organized baseball away from Pecan Park by that time.

From 1954 forward, “the song had ended, but the melody lingered on.” I didn’t realize it at the time, but none of us really did: As some of you have heard me say, those sandlot baseball days were far and away the greatest era of joy in life that most, if not all of us, would ever again know. None of our dreams and plans for tomorrow would ever be so fulfilling, everyday fresh, and so free of stress and disappointment as any day on the sandlot.

Even losing didn’t hurt for long because there was always tomorrow. And tomorrow’s game could start at sunrise, if we wanted it to begin with the dawn. And tomorrow was nothing more than an extension of today. It was all wrapped up in our non-stop time, adult expectation-free time zone of our united summer love for baseball. From the end of school at Memorial Day to the return of school on the first Tuesday after Labor Day, all of the boys and a couple of the girls in our east end Houston neighborhood, like kids all over town, were playing sandlot baseball.

The two girls that played sandlot baseball with us back then were distinguishable for different reasons. Eileen was a cute little blonde, but she didn’t get there on her looks. Eileen could hit as well and just about out-pitch any guy on the field. Eileen got to be one of us on merit alone. Sissy, on the other hand, had very little ability, but she was overrun with a battling heart. Her two older brothers played with us, but that only got her on the field. She stayed there by trying her damnedest to overcome the crippling effects of some childhood illness we never discussed. It was probably polio that gave her the limp, but we simply didn’t talk about things like that back in the day. Whatever it was, it didn’t stop her heart. When Sissy played, she gave it her all.

Eagle Field (Japonica at Myrtle, Houston) lives on forever in my heart.

Last spring, when good friend and fellow SABR member Bob Dorrill and I toured a few old ball field sites in Houston’s past, I couldn’t resist adding Eagle Field to the tour agenda. I also came prepared that day to dig up a little dirt from the old home plate area so that I could take it home with me as a physical souvenir of that magical time and space. That’s a small sparkling sample of the hallowed ground you see in the first photo up top.

I found the little frog emblem nearby, the product of a more recent Pecan Park childhood era, but a gentle reminder to me of the once enormous “Houston Toad” population that thrived in Pecan Park back in the day prior to their loss of insect food supplies to Houston’s exterminators. So many toads abounded. We may have been scientifically inaccurate, but we  even named one section of the Japonica-Kernel alley “Frogtown” because of all the toads we found there.

The sun shines forever on my sandlot memories.

I’ll try to not repeat myself too often on this subject, but it was just that special to so many of us. The loss of the sandlot experience is one of the great losses to our American childhood in today’s generations. For one thing, and from what I both see and sense, the loss of the sandlot stood hard as the demise of the greatest “kids’ court” that ever existed. It was where we kids of the old days learned to both compete and cooperate with others our age without the perpetual direction, control, and rescue of parents and other authority figures. My dad had to get involved once when we started mixing baseball with a pipe gun war, but, for the most part, we kids of that era  worked things out without killing each other.

Those were the days, my friends. We can’t live in the past, but I do wish we could revive the sandlot. If only we could build enough safeguards far enough back for  kids today to work and play together again, away from the threat of pedophiles and free from the obvious presence of parents or purchased adult supervision.

Under today’s conditions, kids don’t have much chance to find and name their own “Frogtowns” – and that loss of free play and safe exploring opportunity in childhood should sadden us all.

Postscript: Speaking of special days, Roy Oswalt goes for the Astros against Pittsburgh today with a chance to tie Joe Niekro at 144 wins for the greatest number of pitching victories in franchise history. Either way, this sure would be a great day for the Astros to announce that they are retiring Joe Niekro’s number 36 next Saturday, July 24th, when Roy O. has his next shot at home to either tie or break the record.

If you support the idea of the Astros retiring Joe Niekro’s number 36 as a long overdue no-brainer, please go to that column site through the following link and post your opinion there. It’s important that we all speak up for Joe.

Here’s the Niekro comment link:

https://thepecanparkeagle.wordpress.com/2010/07/13/its-time-to-retire-joe-niekros-astros-36/

Have a nice Sunday, everybody!

1980: Astros take Playoff with Dodgers, 7-1

July 17, 2010

Texas Baseball Hall of Fame Induction, 2005: Artist Opie Otterstad, Presenter Greg Lucas, Inductee Joe Niekro.

The date was October 6, 1980. By tailspinning into a three game sweep loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers on the West Coast, the Houston Astros found themselves facing the same club to break a dead heat tie for first place in the National League West. The winner would advance to play the Philadelphia Phillies for the National League pennant. The loser would go home to a winter of discontent that overflowed with thoughts of what might have been. Whomever advanced and then lost to the Phillies might surely do the same from a steeper cliff, but today the business was about winning the opportunity to simply try.

By an earlier coin flip, LA had won the right to be the home team n the event that the Astros and Dodgers ended up in a tie and needed a playoff. Their LA win on coin flip for the special one-game playoff site was convenient to staging since the Astros were already in town, still trying to recover from dropping a three-game series that left them in a 92-70 identical finish with the Dodgers, anyway, but that didn’t make the game any easier as a proposition for the staggering club from Houston. Down hearts came out of the woodwork with their predictions for our Astros’ full demise, but there was no giving up in us hard-core fans, or in manager Bill Virdon, or in the Astros themselves.

Astros manager picked Joe Niekro (19-12) to pitch the biggest game in franchise history. Niekro would be opposed by Dodger manager Tommy Lasorda’s selection, Dave Goltz (7-10). By league rules, stats from the special playoff game would be included in the regular season team and individual records of each club. Therefore, the stakes for Knucksie Niekro of Houston were even higher. Houston’s first division championship, a shot at the World Series, and a second straight 20-win season were all riding on what he did on the mound this special day.

Houston got on the board early. In the top of the 1st, Terry Puhl reached first base on a leadoff E-4 by Davy Lopes and then advanced to third on a single by Enos Cabell. With Joe Morgan batting, Cabell then stole second to amp the Astros threat into a “runners at second and third with nobody out” situation.

After Morgan fanned, Jose Cruz appeared to reach on a fielder’s choice, but the play at the plate was muffed by the Dodger catcher Joe Ferguson, allowing Puhl to score. With Cabell now on third and Cuz on first with one out, Houston led, 1-0.

Cabell then scored on a Cesar Cedeno ground out to make it Houston, 2-0, but that would be it for the first stanza. An Art Howe single would move Cruz to third, but Dodger starter Dave Goltz would pitch his way out of further harm.

Joe Niekro didn't just throw the ball. He fluttered wobblers by the dozens.

After Joe Niekro retired the Dodgers in order over the first two innings, the Astros added two more runs in the top of the third to increase their lead to 4-0. They got those tallies with the old “Here’s Howe” recipe. After Cesar Cedeno singled and stole second, Art Howe went deep to push the comfort zone a little softer for pitcher Niekro, but nobody was taking anything for granted – not after the standings earthquake the Astros went through in their final series of the season.

After Niekro again stopped the Dodgers in the third, the Astros added a final touch with three more runs in the top of the fourth. After Puhl reached on a bunt single and steal of second, Cabell and Morgan walked to load the bases. Puhl then scored on a sacrifice fly by Jose Cruz – and Cabell-Morgan both tallied on a 2-rbi single by Art Howe. Four rib-eyes? Here’s Howe! Going to the bottom of the 4th, it was Houston 7 – Los Angeles 0.

The Dodgers broke up the shutout in the bottom of the 4th when Dusty Baker singled, moved to second on an error of Steve Garvey’s batted ball by Astros third baseman Enos Cabell. Baker then scored on another single by Dodger center fielder Rick Monday, but that would be it and far from enough in the Dodger cause on this special day in Astros history.The Dodgers threatened again by loading the bases in the 6th, but Niekro shut the door on any further scoring. From there, Joe went into overdrive, giving up only one more hit over the last three innings, a two-out single in the 9th, but that would be all and it for the doomed Dodgers.

Joe Niekro (20-12) had pitched the Houston Astros to a 7-1, 6-hit, 2 walks, 6 strikeouts, no earned runs complete game stop on the Los Angeles Dodgers, advancing the Houston Astros to their very first regular playoff appearance in the NLCS. In the scheme of things, Joe Niekro had won the most important game in franchise history to-date and he also had become the first pitcher in Astros history to mark twenty-win seasons for two years in a row.

What else does the guy need to do deserve having his number 36 retired by the Astros? Nothing. He already did it – a long, long time ago. He simply needs to be duly recognized by the retirement of his number 36,

Roy Oswalt takes the mound tomorrow, Sunday, July 18th, with a better than fat chance of tying Joe Niekro for the most franchise pitching wins at 144. If the rotation holds and Roy isn’t traded earlier than the July 31st deadline, Oswalt will get two additional starts at home to either tie or break the Niekro 144 mark against the Reds July 24th and then against the Brewers on July 30th.

Now is the time to act. When something is the right thing to do, now is always the time for action. We just need to hear from the one person in this world who can make it happen as it should – and that man is Drayton McLane, Jr. So far, he’s batting 1.000 on the number retirements he’s called into history and this one is just as obvious. It just fell in the cracks during the John McMullen Astros ownership years and now needs to be restored to the light of its proper place of honor in franchise history.

If you support the hope that the Astros will see fit to retire Joe Niekro’s #36 now, please go to the primary column on that subject and post your strong opinion there. Here’s the link you need to get there.

https://thepecanparkeagle.wordpress.com/2010/07/13/its-time-to-retire-joe-niekros-astros-36/

Mighty Superstition

July 16, 2010

Hope he's not a pinch hitter with the game and his job riding on what happens this time up..

Those of us who grew up in the baseball sub-culture don’t hold a copyright on superstitions. We simply invented most of them.

Who do you think came up with the two basic superstitions about stepping on long white lines on the ground? Depending on their point of view, a player, and especially a pitcher, may decided that it’s bad luck to step on the white foul line when he’s running, walking, or jogging to his position on the field. On the same team, another guy my believe that it’s bad luck not to step on the line. Other teammates may be working with “white line ideas” that are variants on each touch/don’t touch thought – ideas that they are too embarrassed or superstitious to even share with their best friends.  Example: You have to avoid the line while taking the field, but step on it when you come back to the dugout. Mind-boggling.

The rally cap is supposed to also "turn the game around."

The rally cap is a fairly new collective superstition in baseball. A variant on the old “cross-your-finger-for-good-luck” behavior, players are hoping that the reversal of their caps will also result in a reversal of fortune on the field when their club is trailing in the later innings. Whatever works.

I’m not sure if Hall of Fame shortstop Rabbit Maranville ever personally carried any rabbit’s feet for good luck, but I’m willing to bet you that he had plenty of teammates over his long multi-team career that felt lucky to have a guy with a name like rabbit joining their lineups. Superstition runs silent and deep in baseball. It exists at levels that don’t get talked about openly in baseball.

"You've just been traded to Pittsburgh!"

Sometimes you can’t take a road trip somewhere without running into a sign that suggests good or bad luck. Other times you just have to pass through certain days that are associated with bad luck, notably Friday 13th, but I knew a guy once who was convinced that nothing good could ever possibly happen on the “29th” of any month. He also felt that players should avoid wearing the number “29” at all costs. If a relief pitcher wearing #29 came in and gave up a grand slam, he would just say something like, “What did you expect?” and move on. If the same pitcher got his club out of the jam with a two-out “K” and the bases loaded, he would simply shrug and say, “he was lucky that time.” There is no arguing with the “BIG S!” When superstition exists, it rules. And reason goes on permanent holiday in the area covered by the superstitious belief.

Malevolent Superstitions

The mala ojo, or evil eye, may be more prevalent in baseball countries that also practice voodoo, but that doesn’t mean that players would not try to use it an American-based baseball game. The evil eye is simply based on the superstitious idea that ill fortune can be transmitted from one person to another through a powerfully evil look that has been charged with all kinds of bad wishes. It is nothing to play around with and, as far as I’m concerned, it does all its harm to the would-be sender. Negativity always finds a way to fall back on the sender. You don’t have to be an historian of Captain Marvel comic books to get how that works, but it helps. SHAZAM!

Maligned from the Middle Ages

In this so-called enlightened 21st century, it may be time to put aside the enemies of reason that have haunted society from the dawn of civilization and tortured everyday life for black cats since the Middle Ages. Just don’t count on it happening over night. And don’t jump to any conclusions that it’s gone when people stop admitting that is still has a home in the game of baseball. Superstition is also more of  an old-fashioned word for a form of obsessive-compulsive behavior – and those skins of human affinity are long, strong, and powerful.

This subject is like the game of baseball. Theoretically, it could go on forever. I’ll take rain check on coming back to it at any time, as long as it’s not the 29th of the month. (Just kidding.) For toady, I’d like to comment on a couple of superstitions that haunt our Houston Astros. These are superstitions that some feel may explain our difficulties in reaching and winning the World Series

Just remember. I do not believe in either of these ideas, but some people do:

(1)  The Apache Junction Curse. Because the franchise originally trained in Apache Junction, Arizona at the base of the Superstition mountains, some people feel that the Houston club fell victim to the same curse that befell prospectors who came to this area in the 19th century searching for the gold they hoped to find in the famous “Lost Dutchman’s Mine.” Because the region had been cursed by the Apaches for the disturbance to their scared mountains, seekers would be pulled to the area as though drawn by an invisible magnet. – They would seek, but they would not find! CONCLUSION: The curse rubbed off on the Astros in their 48-year fruitless search for a World Series championship.

(2) The Astrodome Indian Burial Grounds Curse: Similar to the Apache Junction idea, the belief behind this one is that the Astrodome was built on land that once served as a Karankawa or Comanche Indian Burial Ground. I remember discussing this theory with former Astros pitcher Vern Ruble back in the early 1980s, when we were all still recovering from that tough loss in the NLCS to the Phillies at the “Dome. Vern had not heard the legend previously, but his eyes lit up when I told him about it. “That’s it,” Ruhle exclaimed, “That’s got to be it! Otherwise, there is no other good way to explain how we lost to the Phillies in 1980!”

Superstition is mighty, allright. It’s just sometimes mighty wrong.

Beyond superstition, don’t forget to weigh in on the “Retire Joe Niekro’s # 36 Discussion.” Please write your thoughts on the matter in the comment space beyond the following article:

https://thepecanparkeagle.wordpress.com/2010/07/13/its-time-to-retire-joe-niekros-astros-36/

1951: New York Yankees 15 – Houston Buffs 9.

July 15, 2010

Sorry to be getting this story to you so late. It’s actually my third attempt. The first time I wrote it up back in 2003, it became part of the book I did with the late Buff slugging star Jerry Witte, “A Kid rom St. Louis” in slightly different form. Today’s version is pretty much of a reprint on the column I wrote over at ChronCom, the Houston Chronicle website, on July 7, 2008.

What stirred to repeat it here was the news that longtime Yankee Stadium public address announcer Bob Sheppard has died at age 99. Sheppard had worked the Yankee Stadium games from 1951 through 2006, becoming the franchise’s iconic voice over the process of time.

Thanks to my dad, I got to see the Yankee club that started Sheppard’s career in New York – and that 1951 team included Joe DiMaggio in his last season and Mickey Mantle in his first. And I got to see them both together in the same outfield at Buff Stadium, even getting to stand there on that field with them behind the spillover spectator ropes as a kid fan on the first standing room row.

How blessed can a lucky kid from the East End have been, so, in honor of Sheppard, my father, and the memory of a lifetime, here it is again, one more time.

The Houston Post, April 9, 1951

The date was April 8, 1951. It was a typically hot and humid 3:00 PM Sunday afternoon baseball game at Buff Stadium. Because of the very special circumstances, my dad had driven 13 year old me, my 9 year old little brother John, and my 13 year old Pecan Park best friend Billy Sanders to a pre-season exhibition game at the old ballpark.

The New York Yankees were coming through town to play the Houston Buffs in a single game. The great Joe DiMaggio was set to play center field for the Yankees, with 18-year old rookie spring training phenom Mickey Mantle playing right fieldI. Everybody in Houston wanted to see this game. And it would turn out to be a game and afternoon that all of us would remember forever.

Oh my! I only wish that I had been able to take my Kodak Brownie camera with me to that special game on that particular day, but I learned too late that I had no more film and, with Dad springing for the tickets, I knew better than to ask him for extra money as an advance on my allowance – just for film. Dad had his own ideas about what was important and he didn’t suffer well from requests that seemed extravagant. As a result, 57 years later, you will just have to settle here for pictures that still exist vividly in my mind as best I am to develop them for you in words.

We left for the game only about forty-five minutes prior to its scheduled start. That fact alone bothered me. Since we didn’t have tickets, I worried that we might not be able to get into the ballpark due to an almost certain sellout. Anxiety didn’t matter. Dad already had settled into his “don’t worry about it” mode and there was nothing left for me to do but keep my fingers crossed and pray. Yes, I prayed about stuff like this when I was 13.

When we reached the Cullen Boulevard exit going north up the Gulf Freeway from the southeast, our red 1950 Studebaker immediately oozed into bumper-to-bumper traffic and slowed to an inch-by-inch pace over the last 500 feet of street-trekking into the Buff Stadium parking lot.

“Oh, My God!” I muttered from the back seat.

“Don’t get the Lord involved in this one!” Dad affirmed, as he lit another Camel and began to bongo the steering wheel with his right hand.

I didn’t say it, but I thought it: “If we had gotten the Lord involved earlier, we wouldn’t be going through this and left the house earlier, and with my Kodak Brownie camera already loaded with film!”

By the time we reached the ticket gate, we already knew that we would be lucky if the SRO tickets were still available. Buff Stadium held 11,000-seated tickets, but club president Allen Russell was already roping off about twenty feet from the outfield in left and right field. By taking that measure and just making every ball that flew or rolled into the outfield SRO section a ground rule double, Russell would be able to get an extra 2,500 to 3,000 fans into the ballpark for the big game.

Once Dad bought our tickets for the left field crowd, I didn’t mind at all. I knew that we now had a chance to fight for a front-of-the-rope position deep as possible toward center field – and very near the great Joe DiMaggio.

It happened. We did it. We battled for four spots in left center on the front rope line and won. To our left during the game, the great Joe D. was often no more than fifty feet away. Once he even came over and, running toward us, he caught a fly ball directly in front of us. In my mind I whispered, “Nice catch, Joe!”, but the actual words could not escape my lips. I can still hear the sound of his footsteps as his charge came closer and closer. For whatever reason, I wasn’t worried about him crashing into us. And he didn’t.

I could squint into the further distance and see the young Mickey Mantle in right field. He looked so very young because he was. He was only five years older than my friend Billy and me. I remember thinking, “Wow! In five years, I could be either playing pro baseball too or else, serving with the army in Korea.”

Neither happened. I never had the talent of a Mickey Mantle. And they settled the Korean War before I could get there.

Once in a while during the game, when the Yankees were in the field, I would close my right eye to block out the sight of Yankee left fielder Gene Woodling. As I did, it was to help my fantasy that it was I, not Woodling, playing left field for the Yankees. What an outfield that was on April 8, 1951: Mantle in right; DiMaggio in center; and McCurdy in left!

In my dreams, small things never occurred to me.

The game itself did not disappoint, except for the fact that none of my Yankee adulation had removed my first loyalty to the Buffs. The Buffs jumped on the Yankees early, but couldn’t hold them for the full nine innings.

Going into the 9th, the Yankees led, 13-6, paced by Mickey Mantle’s 5th inning, 3-run homer over our heads and over the double-deck fence in left center that rose behind us. 2-run homers earlier by both Russell Rac and Frank Shofner had not been enough to keep the Buffs in contention.

Then something happened in the 9th that may have never occurred before or since. I know the facts of this story from my interviews with former Buffs slugger Jerry Witte, when we were working on his biography “A Kid From St. Louis” a few years ago.

Jerry Witte had been asking Joe DiMaggio all day for a souvenir bat. Nothing happened until the top of the 9th, when Joltin’ Joe crashed a homer of his own to left with one man on base. As the game moved to the bottom of the 9th with the Yankees now leading 15-6, DiMaggio sent his home run bat over by way of a bat boy as his gift to Jerry Witte.

When Jerry Witte came to bat against veteran hurler Max Peterson with two Buffs on base in the bottom of the 9th, he decided on impulse to use the DiMaggio bat for his last time up against the Yankees.

Lo and behold! Deploying the same bat that Joe D. had used to crank a homer in the top half of the 9th, Jerry Witte unloaded a “Fair Maid Bakery” blast to center field in the bottom of the 9th to make the final score in the game New York Yankees 15 – Houston Buffs 9!

As Witte trotted home at the end of his home run pace, he says he stole a look for DiMaggio in the Yankees first base dugout. He said that DiMaggio was falling all over himself with laughter for having supplied Witte with his weapon of last productive resort.

After the game. Jerry Witte got Joe DiMaggio to sign the bat for him. He still owned the bat at the time of his death in 2002. If there was ever another instance in organized baseball of two players from opposite teams both homering in the 9th, or any other inning, of the same game, using the same bat, I’ve never heard of it.

I will always be grateful to my Dad for taking us to the biggest game in my childhood memory. I’m also glad that he didn’t buy our tickets in advance. Had he done so, we would have missed out on our up close and personal experience in the outfield with the great Joe DiMaggio on a hot April day in Houston back in 1951.

Things do have a way of working out for the best. Sometimes.

Pitching and the Hall of Fame

July 14, 2010

Cy Young's Pre-Modern Media Era & Physique Didn't Help Him Build His Case Much for the First Hall of Fame Class, But Those 511 Career Wins Spoke Loud & Clear Enough!

Cy Young

Charlie Sheen

Which of these Cleveland pitchers looks more like a Hall of Fame candidate? The guy on the right with the fit-looking body and the”Wild Thing” nickname? Or the guy on the left with the big waist and the 511 big league wins?

You guessed it. The Baseball Hall of Famer in the above photos is the one and only Cy Young. Charlie Sheen may earn one in the Hall of Fame for OC/Addictive Disorders someday, but that’s neither here nor there for our purposes in this discussion. Charlie’s image is just here to show again how you can’t judge a book by its cover when it comes to the Baseball Hall of Fame.  If they expelled all members who got to Cooperstown with something less than an Adonis-like body this afternoon, Babe Ruth, Cy Young, Yogi Berra, Honus Wagner, and Ernie Lombardi, among so many others, will be on the street by nightfall.

I want to talk about pitchers and Cooperstown today? What s the benchmark for greatness that gets some people in the door while keeping other, perhaps, even more deserving members out? Has it changed over the years? Or does it simply hang on the thin air of popular spin, a candidate’s personality dominance, or a political pull with veterans committee members, or simply a guy’s eternal association with some great moment in baseball history?

With pitchers, “300 wins” seems to have become the standard for serious Hall of Fame consideration of starting pitchers, although, if you look at all pitchers in the Hall of Fame, it’s easy to see that the “300” club line has not always been the standard. Just look at the career records for all pitchers in the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, New York (Graph Courtesy of Baseball Almanac.Com):

PitchersBOLD Indicates Statistical Leader For HOF Pitchers
Name [Link To Full Stats] Games Starts Wins Losses ERA K BB
Grover Alexander (bio) 696 600 373 208 2.56 2,198 951
Chief Bender 459 334 212 127 2.46 1,711 712
Mordecai Brown 481 332 239 130 2.06 1,375 673
Jim Bunning 591 519 224 184 3.27 2,855 1,000
Steve Carlton 741 709 329 244 3.22 4,136 1,833
Jack Chesbro 392 332 198 132 2.68 1,265 690
John Clarkson 531 518 328 178 2.81 1,978 1,191
Stan Covelski 450 385 215 142 2.89 981 802
Dizzy Dean 317 230 150 83 3.02 1,163 453
Don Drysdale 518 465 209 166 2.95 2,486 855
Dennis Eckersley 1,071 361 197 171 3.50 2,401 738
Red Faber 669 483 254 213 3.15 1,471 1,213
Bob Feller 570 484 266 162 3.25 2,581 1,764
Rollie Fingers 944 37 114 118 2.90 1,299 492
Whitey Ford 498 438 236 106 2.75 1,956 1,086
Pud Galvin 697 682 360 308 2.87 1,799 744
Bob Gibson 528 482 251 174 2.91 3,117 1,336
Lefty Gomez 368 320 189 102 3.34 1,468 1,095
Burleigh Grimes 616 497 270 212 3.53 1,512 1,295
Lefty Grove 616 457 300 141 3.06 2,266 1,187
Jesse Haines 555 388 210 158 3.64 981 871
Waite Hoyt 674 423 237 182 3.59 1,206 1,003
Carl Hubbell 535 431 253 154 2.98 1,677 725
Catfish Hunter 500 476 224 166 3.26 2,012 954
Fergie Jenkins 664 594 284 226 3.34 3,192 997
Walter Johnson 802 666 417 279 2.17 3,509 1,363
Addie Joss 286 260 160 97 1.89 920 364
Tim Keefe 599 593 342 225 2.62 2,543 1,234
Sandy Koufax 397 314 165 87 2.76 2,396 817
Bob Lemon 460 350 207 128 3.23 1,277 1,251
Ted Lyons 594 484 260 230 3.67 1,073 1,121
Juan Marichal 471 457 243 142 2.89 2,303 709
Rube Marquard 536 404 201 177 3.08 1,593 858
Christy Mathewson 635 551 373 188 2.13 2,502 844
Joe McGinnity 465 381 246 142 2.66 1,068 812
Hal Newhouser 488 374 207 150 3.06 1,796 1,249
Kid Nichols 620 561 361 208 2.95 1,868 1,268
Phil Niekro 864 716 318 274 3.35 3,342 1,809
Jim Palmer 558 521 268 152 2.86 2,212 1,311
Herb Pennock 617 420 240 162 3.60 1,227 916
Gaylord Perry 777 690 314 265 3.11 3,534 1,379
Eddie Plank 623 529 326 194 2.35 2,246 1,072
Old Hoss Radbourn 528 503 309 195 2.67 1,830 875
Eppa Rixey 692 553 266 251 3.15 1,350 1,082
Robin Roberts 676 609 286 245 3.41 2,357 902
Red Ruffing 624 536 273 225 3.80 1,987 1,541
Amos Rusie 462 427 245 174 3.07 1,934 1,704
Nolan Ryan 807 773 324 292 3.19 5,714 2,795
Tom Seaver 656 647 311 205 2.86 3,640 1,390
Warren Spahn 750 665 363 245 3.09 2,583 1,434
Don Sutton 774 756 324 256 3.26 3,574 1,343
Dazzy Vance 442 347 197 140 3.24 2,045 840
Rube Waddell 407 340 193 143 2.16 2,316 803
Ed Walsh 430 315 195 126 1.82 1,736 617
Mickey Welch 564 549 307 210 2.71 1,850 1,297
Hoyt Wilhelm 1,070 52 143 122 2.52 1,610 778
Vic Willis 513 471 249 205 2.63 1,651 1,212
Early Wynn 691 612 300 244 3.54 2,334 1,775
Cy Young 906 815 511 316 2.63 2,803 1,217
Name [Link To Full Stats] Games Starts Wins Losses ERA

Yesterday I made the point that Joe Niekro’s 221 career wins places him above fifteen predominantly starting pitchers who are members of the Hall of fame. I might add that Gaylord Perry’s brother, Jim Perry, had a similar experience to Joe Niekro. Both these brothers of Hall of Fame pitchers Phil Niekro and Gaylord Perry were excellent in their own rights, but neither ever earned serious Hall of Fame consideration. And what did Joe Niekro and Jim Perry share in common in this comparison? Both came up about 79 to 85 wins short of the “300” win mark.

The 22-year career of the great Bert Blyleven (287-250, 3.31) is our greatest example of how foreboding that “300 win” gate on the Hall really is. People who oppose Blyleven point to his 250 losses as a barrier to his consideration, but these critics fail to take into account that Bert played for a lot of mediocre teams from 1970 to 1992. He’s lucky to have won 287 games, playing under those circumstances,

The relievers in the Hall of Fame are evaluated more on the basis of “save” totals, but where does that leave the middle relief guys who pick up far fewer wins than starters and virtually no “saves” in this era of increasing specialization?  Other than “out in the cold” from the Hall of Fame, I have no idea.

It’s also going to be interesting to see how things shift on the “300 win” door as time goes by from here. With starters going fewer innings, starters are losing wins to relief staffs that cannot hold leads. (See Roy Oswalt of the Astros, for example.) Where does that leave people like Oswalt who do have the ability to put up Hall of fame numbers, but do not get their wins over time? It most likely leaves them on the same bench with people like Bert Blyleven – on the outside, looking in.

I’m not sure Roy Oswalt is a Hall of Fame candidate, although I once thought he might be. Roy cannot get his wins unless he ends up playing for a club with a strong pen. Plus, we’re not even sure he wants to play long enough to qualify for consideration with enough wins. Players today make so much money that even the really durable ones may choose to walk away from shorter careers as big leaguers for the sake of some other new career or retirement direction. If that happens enough, the “300 win club ” shrinks even  further and the HOF has to either shut the door on new candidates, or else, start looking at pitchers and their qualifications for greatness far differently than their win totals.

What do you think? Please record your own thoughts on what qualifies a pitcher for the Hall of Fame as a reply to this column on the subject.

Also, speaking of greatness locally, please check out the column I wrote yesterday in support of the Astros retiring Joe Niekro’s number 36 this season or asap. If you agree, please weigh in there by leaving a comment on that subject with that column. That link is as follows:

https://thepecanparkeagle.wordpress.com/2010/07/13/its-time-to-retire-joe-niekros-astros-36/

It’s Time to Retire Joe Niekro’s Astros #36

July 13, 2010

Joe Niekro Has Been the Astros Franchise Wins Leader for 25 Years! His Total MLB WIns Exceed Those of 16 Great Starting Pitchers in the HOF at Cooperstown.

Sometime in the next couple of weeks, Roy Oswalt may tie and surpass Joe Niekro as the all time leader in pitching wins for the Houston Astros before he then moves on via a trade to a contending club. That trade may not happen, but it seems likely and right for all concerned at this point in time that it will.

Whether the Oswalt trade happens or not, whether Roy breaks Joe’s Houston record before he goes or just stays, it’s high time we put the contributions of the late Joe Niekro in perspective and see that the time to retire his Astros uniform #36 is not maybe. Not ten years from now. Not five years down the road. But now. Right Now. 2010 Now. Before this season of so much good time to tend the garden of honoring our ball club’s past slips quietly into history. Now is the time to get it done.

Most of you know the bare bones that support the body of work that qualifies Joe Niekro for the number retirement honor, but let’s cover them briefly for those who don’t know:

(1) 144 Franchise Wins. In his eleven seasons as a Houston Astro (1975-85), Joe Niekro compiled more wins than any other pitcher in Houston MLB franchise history. Now Roy Oswalt stands right behind Joe with 143 wins, If Oswalt ties or breaks the record, he won’t be breaking a record that’s only stood for six months to two years. Joe Niekro has held the wins record for a quarter century – ever since he passed Larry Dierker for the honor in 1985 on his way via a deal that would send him to the New York Yankees that same season.

(2) First Back-to-Back Twenty Win Seasons. Joe Niekro rolled in 1979-80. The crafty right handed knuckleballer, who mixed his signature pitch with an excellent fastball and tough change, became the first pitcher in franchise history to win twenty or more games in consecutive seasons. His 21 wins and 5 shutouts in 1979 both led the National League. His performance got him on the 1979 All Star team and his production won him the The Sporting News Pitcher of the Year for 1979 Award. He also finished second to Bruce Sutter in the Cy Young Award voting.

(3) Joe Pitched Houston to It’s First Division Crown in 1980. After the Astros dropped their last three games of the 1980 season and fell into a tie with the Dodgers for the division lead in the NL West, Joe Niekro got the call from Manager Bill Virdon to pitch a one-game playoff in LA that would decide the division crown and send the winner on to the playoffs. Niekro gave up six hits in pitching the Astros to a 7-1 win and their first playoff appearance. Joe then defeated the Phillies, 1-0, in Game Three of the NLCS that the Astros ultimately lost in five outings.

Phil Niekro, Bill McCurdy, Joe Niekro (2005)

(4) Induction into Texas Baseball Hall of Fame, 2005. Joe Niekro was inducted into the the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame in 2005, just a little more than a year prior to his sudden death from a brain aneurysm at his home in Florida. This is also around the time I got to know Joe a little personally due to my work at the time as Board President of the TBHOF. He was a fine fellow, as is his brother, Cooperstown Hall of Famer Phil Niekro. – For their careers, the Niekros are the winningest brother pitchers in MLB history. Both men excelled due to the knuckle ball pitch they learned from their father. Phil Niekro knuckled 318 career wins; Joe registered 221. Their Niekro tab of 539 victories is approached only by the 529 wins put together by brothers Gaylord (314) and Jim (215) Perry in their major league careers.

(5) Joe Niekro’s Place Among the Pitching Greats of Baseball History. Here’s where we get into the less obvious reason why the Astros should honor joe Niekro by retiring his number 36. Get this. – When you really look at the pitching record of Joe Niekro, you are looking at a guy who easily could’ve also gotten the nod for the Hall of fame at Cooperstown and joined with his deserving brother Phil. Joe Niekro’s 221 career wins for his entire MLB career (1967-88) are greater in number than the totals for fifteen predominately starting pitchers who did get the nod for induction into the HOF at Cooperstown.

Again, Joe Niekro won 221 major league games – more than the following fifteen Hall of Fame starters: Chief Bender (212), Jack Chesbro (198), Stan Covaleski (215), Dizzy Dean (150), Don Drysdale (209), Lefty Gomez (189), Jesse Haines (210), Addie Joss (160), Sandy Koufax (165) Bob Lemon (207), Rube Marquard (201), Hal Newhouser (207), Dazzy Vance (197), Rube Waddell 193), and Ed Walsh (195).

Will 2010 be Joe Niekro's Next Rainbow Year? This time at Minute Maid Park?

If Joe Niekro were alive today, he would be the first in line to shake the hand of Roy Oswalt for becoming the career leader in pitching wins for the Astros, if that is to be. Joe Niekro was all class. And he was an even greater pitcher than his lifetime acknowledgements reveal.

It would be both fitting and an act of class for the Astros organization to retire # 36 before this season ends. Joe Niekro is not going to be any more deserving if we wait any longer. He’s deserving now – and he has been justly deserving for a very long while. It’s time to recognize him with the kind of honor that would really be noticed at this point in history. It would be a shame to go into the upcoming 2012 50th anniversary of the franchise celebration with #36 not already hanging from the rafters at Minute Maid Park – and waiting until 2012 is an embarrassing thought in itself.

Please, Astros. Do it now. Retire #36 before this 2010 season ends. A lot of devoted Joe Niekro fans would show up for that one. There’s no question in my mind.

While we are building for the future. Let’s stop long enough to honor someone appropriately who was a major part of our first winning taste of victory. His name was Joe Niekro. His number was 36.

My Choice for Astros’ New Batting Coach

July 12, 2010

"You really want to know what makes me sad, Carlos??? ..."

The causes of bad hitting are not hard to identify. They’re just sometimes hard to pin down and correct in a given situation.

In a general nutshell, the causes of bad hitting are these: (1) good pitching; (2) poor natural hitting ability; (3) bad hitting mechanics; (4) terrible coaching; (5) reflex failure due to injury or aging; (6) eye problems; (7) bad habits off the field that deplete performance ability; and (8) bad mental attitudes at bat that include lack of confidence and everything that falls between trying too hard and not giving a flying-flip what happens at the plate.

Although I like Astros icon Jeff Bagwell, I personally don’t think that the current Mendoza Land Doze of the 2010 Astros has anything to do with the absence of good coaching from Sean Berry. If we were going to fire Berry in the name of “changing something,” I have a guy in mind whom I like better than Baggy for this job. In fact, here’s a link to the fellow whom I think would have been the best new batting coach choice for the problems of the troubled hitters of the current Astros team:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEbzM2FUP9s

Good Luck, Sean Berry, and have a nice Monday, everybody!

Oswalt Closes on Niekro as All Time Astro Winner

July 11, 2010

One win behind Joe Niekro, Roy Oswalt got to the top in Houston faster than anybody!

As of this day and morning date, Sunday, July 11, 2010, Roy Oswalt has compiled 143 wins pitching only as a Houston Astro from 2001 to 2010. Roy trails knuckleballer Joe Niekro by a single victory  on the list of all time biggest franchise pitching winners. Joe Niekro registered 221 total wins in a 22-season total career (1967-1988) and he bagged 144 of these babies as a Houston Astro hurler in eleven seasons from 1975 to 1985.

The question now is: Which will come first – Roy’s Houston franchise record-breaking win as a pitcher – or his trade for future value to a 2010 title contender in this year of the “Expensive Veterans for Sale As We Build For the Future” campaign down at Minute Maid Park?

Time will tell – and time is short. The trading deadline is coming up on July 31st and, as the Houston Chronicle covers more completely this morning, the Seattle trade of the more affordable Cliff Lee to the Texas Rangers has elevated Roy Oswalt to the top rung of most desirable candidates still out there on the vine. Only Roy’s heavy-bucks contract and how much the Astros will have to eat of it to swing a deal stands in the way.

At any rate, if Roy’s going to tie and pass Joe Niekro for the all time lead in franchise pitching wins, he had better get them quickly. In terms of fewest innings pitched to get there, Roy Oswalt already has reached the second rung on the ladder faster than anyone before him.

If we have to give him up, we are going to miss him. As an Astros fan, I will simply hope that the Reds of our own division don’t come up with the best, most workable deal for Roy. His loss to Houston would be greatly compounded if we had to deal with Roy coming back to pitch against us in three home stands each season over the next five to eight years. The only worse trade would be for the Astros to deal Oswalt to the Cardinals. Thank God the Cards are cool on pitching, for now. They are, aren’t they?

For the record, here’s the Top Ten List of Biggest Winners among Houston Pitchers for the entire period of the major league franchise from 1962 through this date in 2010. The list includes the number of innings that each pitcher worked to get there:

(1) Joe Niekro (144 wins in 2270.00 IP)

(2) Roy Oswalt (143 wins in 1923.33 IP)

(3) Larry Dierker (137 wins in 2294.44 IP)

(4) Mike Scott (110 wins in 1704.00 IP)

(5) J.R. Richard (107 wins in in 1606.00 IP)

(6) Nolan Ryan (106 wins in 1854.67 IP)

(7) Don Wilson (104 wins in 1748.33 IP)

(8) Shane Reynolds (103 wins in 1622.33 IP)

(9) Bob Knepper (93 wins in 1738.00 IP)

(10) Ken Forsch (78 wins in 1493.67 IP)

Have a peaceful Sunday, everybody!


1949 Again: An All Star Team from Hell

July 10, 2010

Jackie Robinson and his NL-leading .342 BA is our second baseman.

I had so much fun with the 1949 article yesterday that I couldn’t resist feasting upon all this talent by putting together a starting lineup and roster from hell. Maybe, I should say it more plainly: hell for anybody who played us.

How many clubs in 2010 wouldn’t mind having this lineup and roster in the chase for this year’s World Series? Why, with these guys taking the rosters places of those players who are there now, the Baltimore Orioles, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Houston Astros might even still have a chance at the 2010 World Series title. The problem for owners would be payroll. These guys would have to be signed in 1949 at 1949 prices and then time-traveled here for action in 2010. Any owner who brings this bunch here to 2010 first, and then tries to sign, won’t be able to afford them:

Starting Lineup, ’49 Club,  B/H Preferences, & Notable 1949 Stats:

(1) Jackie Robinson, 2b   (Dodgers) (BR/TR) (.342 BA, Led NL)

(2) George Kell, 3b   (Tigers) (BR/TR) (.343 BA, Led AL)

(3) Stan Musial, 1b   (Cardinals) (BL/TL) (.338 BA, 207 H, 39 HR, 131 RBI)

(4) Ralph Kiner, lf     (Pirates) (BR/TR) (.310, 54 HR, 117 RBI)

(5) Ted Williams, rf     (Red Sox) (BL/TR) (.343 BA, 150 R, 43 HR, 159 RBI) *TW

(6) Joe DiMaggio, cf   (Yankees) (BR/TR) (.346 BA) *JD

(7) Vern Stephens, ss   (Red Sox) (BR/TR) (.290 BA, 39 HR, 159 RBI)

(8) Roy Campanella, c  (Dodgers) (BR/TR) (.287 BA, 22 HR, 82 RBI)

Pitchers (League Leader Totals in Bold Type):

Mel Parnell       (Red Sox) (BL/TL) (25-7, 2.77) (27 CG) (277.1 IP)

Warren Spahn    (Braves) (BL/TL) (21-14, 3.07) (25 CG) (151 SO)

Virgil Trucks       (Tigers) (BR/TR) (19-11, 2.81) (6 SHO) (153 SO)

Ellis Kinder         (Red Sox) (BR/TR) (23-6, 3.36) (6 SHO) (.793 W%)

Bob Lemon          (Indians) 22-10, 2.99)

Vic Raschi          (Yankees) (BR/TR)  (21-10, 3.34) (37 GS)

Don Newcombe    (Dodgers) (BR/TR) (17-8, 3.17) (5 SHO)

Preacher Roe         (Dodgers) (BR/TR) (15-6, 2.79) (.714 W%)

Allie Reynolds      (Yankees) (17-6, 4.00)

Joe Page                (Yankees) (BL/TL) (13-8, 2.59) (27 SV)

Howie Pollet        (Cardinals) (BL/TL) (20-9, 2.77) (5 SHO)

Catcher:

Yogi Berra           (Yankees) (BL/TR) (.277 BA) (20 HR)

Infielders:

Ted Kluszewski, 1b   (Reds) (BL/TL) (.309 BA)

Bobby Doerr, 2b        (Red Sox) (BR/TR) (.309 BA)

Luke Appling. ss/3b  (White Sox) (BR/TR) (.301 BA)

Outfield:

Enos Slaughter    (Cardinals) (BL/TR) (.336 BA) (13 3bh)

Roy Sievers            (Browns( (BR/TR) (.306 BA) ((16 HR) (AL ROY)

*TW WIlliams lost batting championship by percentage points to George Kell in 1949; tied Vern Stephens for AL-lead in RBI with 159.

*JD DiMaggio missed the first half of the season due to a mysterious toe injury, but if Joe can walk on nine toes, I’ll still take him as my center fielder over anyone else.

———————————————————————————————————————

It’s a sweet lineup and roster. I wouldn’t mind seeing these guys in their prime playing the final two games as the Houston Astros in the current home series with the Cardinals this weekend. Of course, it might seem a little weird watching the likes of Musial and his ancient Cardinal buddies going up against the present team from St. Louis.

It probably wouldn’t happen. As we discussed yesterday, Musial was no LeBron James.

It still would be a great collection of talent on one team. Don’t you think? Is the Pope Catholic?