Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Friends Honor Kirksey Memory

March 22, 2015
FORMER secretary to the late George Kirksey, Melba Wilson, (left) looks over Kirksey plaque in the Astrodome with The Baytown Sun's Mary H. Brown.

FORMER secretary to the late George Kirksey, Melba Wilson, (left) looks over Kirksey plaque in the Astrodome with The Baytown Sun’s Mary H. Brown.

___________________

Friends Honor Kirksey Memory

By Mary H. Brown, Baytown Sun, Thursday, April 26, 1973, Page 2

(Mary H. Brown was a writer for The Baytown Sun and the daughter of former Baytown Sun Publisher, Leon Brown.)

George Kirksey

George Kirksey

 Special (SP) – There must be some connection between old sportswriters and old soldiers. Neither dies, at least not when they leave friends to perpetuate them.

And so it is with George Kirksey, credited by most who know the score for doing so much to bring major league baseball to Houston. Kirksey was killed in automobile accident near Lyons, France in May, 1971, but his friends honored him Wednesday at the Astrodome with the unveiling of a bronze plaque in his honor. It was inscribed with the singular words: “He helped make a dream come true.”

People who knew George Kirksey think it is a tribute that he would have approved of. No one ever loved baseball or Houston more or thought (as strongly that) the two should join together to become one of baseball’s more popular sports areas.

To many, George Kirksey was just a name linked to baseball in Houston. That’s what he was to me for a long time. That is until he once since my dad a Tyrolean hats from Europe on one his visits abroad. I thought the hat looked better on me than it did on Pap so I took it. Pap complained to George on their next reunion about my intervention. From that time on, every time George went to Europe he sent me a present because he knew I’d end up with it anyway. I got packages of perfume and jewelry from all across Europe. 

Did the Tyrolean hat that turned writer Mary H. Brown into a serious George Kirksey fan resemble this green felt model? If so, maybe her "Pap" was secretly happy to let her have it!

Did the Tyrolean hat that turned writer Mary H. Brown into a serious George Kirksey fan resemble this green felt model? If so, maybe her “Pap” was secretly quite happy to let her steal it from him!

And it is because of similar endearments to friends that they chose to honor him today. The plaque in his honor serves as a lasting reminder of his determination, hard work, and tenacity in fulfilling his dream for big league ball in Houston.

But he got the last word in these ceremonies as he so often did. Fentress Bracewell, George’s executor, announced during the unveiling proceedings that a George Kirksey Scholarship program, “that may reach $150,000”, is being instituted at the University of Houston for future journalism and communications scholars.

Together the plaque and the scholarship program pay tribute to a man loved by many just the way he previously united Houston and baseball. The plaque is located just under the Eddie Dyer Memorial plaque and next to the Dickie Kerr statue at the south entrance in the mezzanine foyer.

“30”

Footnote: According to Mike Acosta, Authentication Manager for the Houston Astros, the George Kirksey plaque that once graced the wall at the Astrodome is now where it should be – on public display at Minute Maid Park.

____________________

First of It's Kind Forever

First of It’s Kind
Forever

A Pecan Park Eagle Note: As this column from 1973 underscores, the Astrodome is not merely one of the unique architectural structures of the world, it is a place where many historical figures in the growth of Houston in myriad ways have come to both contribute and be honored for all they gave to our city and the quality of our community life in Houston. It only makes sense that preserving the Astrodome in a useful way is accomplishable, but only if we, the people, are willing to put as much energy into saving it as those who brought it into being fifty years ago did in birthing this mother of Houston’s status as a world class, big league city and culture.

The Batman and Robin of Astros History

March 21, 2015
BOB HULSEY of ASTROS DAILY

BOB HULSEY
of
ASTROS DAILY

If you never have ventured into Astros Daily.Com, the bat-and-ball cave of the Astros “Batman” historian, Bob Hulsey, you’ve been missing out on reams of detailed information on the 24/7, 53 year old history of Houston’s only MLB franchise, the Houston Colt .45s (1962-64) and Astros (1965-Present Time, 2015). The Batman analogy is intended in the most positive way. If Bob Hulsey is Batman here, we may logically conclude that his compatriot in this quest for the erasure of ignorance about the Houston Astros is our other good friend, Darrell “Robin” Pittman. These guys live, breathe, and sleep Astros history. Any time you need an answer about the Astros, just turn on two searchlights in the sky – each with the Astros logo on it – and point them full blast on – in two directions from Houston – to the west and Austin – and another toward the south and Stafford, Texas – as you also click onto Astros Daily.Com. – If the information exists, Batman and Robin will show up with the answers to your questions.

Just a few notes of caution: (1) No “jokers” need apply. These guys at Astros Daily take Astros history seriously; (2) Astros trivia “riddlers” are similarly warned. Don’t mess with these guys. After your encounter, you will be the one to walk away – “riddled” in amazement at how much these guys really know; and (3) Be upfront and honest in your dealings with the caped researchers at Astros Daily. They don’t cater to “two-faced” people.

DARRELL PITTMAN of ASTROS DAILY

DARRELL PITTMAN
of
ASTROS DAILY

Here’s a small sample of what we mean – and we do mean small sample of all that Astros Daily has to offer.  Here are a few historical events that have occurred on March 20-22, the corresponding dates for this weekend in 2015. “This Day in Astros History”, by Bob Hulsey, contains selective entries for each date of the year and what has happened in Astros history on each date:

March 20
2009 – After winning their first spring game of the year, the Astros fail to win their next 19 Grapefruit League contests until beating the Reds, 4-2, behind six shutout innings from Russ Ortiz. It comes the same day that the Astros sign catcher Ivan “Pudge” Rodriguez to a one-year deal. The 37-year-old Rodriguez is a 14-time All-Star with 13 Gold Gloves and fills a need as none of the other catchers in camp were hitting above .200 in spring action.
1996Jim Pendleton dies in Houston, TX at age 72. His 36 RBIs as a Colt in 1962 were the most of his big league career.
1994 – Both teams train in Florida, yet the Astros and Rangers spar in a two-game series at the Astrodome as part of their in-state rivalry. Tony Eusebio is the hero in a 6-5 victory, driving in Luis Gonzalez with an eighth-inning double. Astro nemesis Will Clark delivers the game-winner for the Rangers the following day. It’s the first Dome visit for new Houston manager Terry Collins. Afterwards, both teams fly back to Florida.
1936Jim Golden is born in Eldon, MO. Jim lives up to his name when he shuts out the Cubs in his first start for the Colt .45s in just the third game in franchise history.

March 21
1996 – Houston sends lefthander Billy Wagner to the minors, intent on converting him to a starting pitcher. By year’s end, he is in the Astros bullpen, winning two games and saving nine in 37 appearances.
1989 – Astros acquire second baseman Steve Lombardozzi from the Minnesota Twins for a player-to-be-named later. Lombardozzi bats .211 in 23 games with Houston.
1939Tommy Davis is born in Brooklyn, NY. The former two-time N.L. batting champ hits .271 as an Astro during parts of the 1969 and 1970 seasons.
1929Prentice “Pidge” Browne is born in Peekskill, NY. As a 32-year-old rookie, Browne hits .210 in 65 games for the Colt .45s. It is his only big league action.

March 22
2007 – After almost 20 years of wearing a pin in his cap to promote the Sunshine Kids charity for cancer-stricken children, Major League Baseball tells 41-year-old Craig Biggio that he can no longer wear the emblem during spring exhibition games. Biggio reacts angrily while the Astros front office refrains from comment. A week later, after a mild media uproar, Major League Baseball rescinds the order.
1986 – Astros lose to the Rangers, 6-2, their ninth loss in the past ten games. They provide as many errors as hits. Pressure is put on rookie manager Hal Lanier to show some imporvement. Pre-season forecasts predict the Astros will do no better than fourth place in the Western Division.
1978Jeremy Griffiths is born in Fairview, OH. Part of the trade in 2004 that sent Richard Hidalgo to the Mets, the 6-6 righthander makes one start for the parent club, lasting 4-1/3 innings.
1966Sean Berry is born in Santa Monica, CA. The scrappy third baseman bats .283 with 38 homers in three seasons with the Astros (1996-1998), including two as division champions.
1926Billy Goodman is born.in Concord, NC. The infielder bats .255 for the 1962 Colts in the final campaign of a 16-season major league career.

For the entire year, check out “This Date in Astros History” at http://astrosdaily.com/history/thisdate/#0317

And for the whole grand ride, go to the home page of Astros Daily for a full picture on all these dedicated Astro historians have to offer:

http://www.astrosdaily.com/

And hey, Astros Daily guys, try to remember – if you’re working in the bat and ball cave this weekend, you will have to order take out meals. This is Alfred’s weekend off.

Bat The2

1896 Houston Buffs: “No Boozers on This Team”

March 20, 2015
"BUFFALO WATCHING" by PATRICK LOPEZ Travis Street Park, 1896 "Where Seldom is Heard, An Inebriate Word"

“BUFFALO WATCHING” by PATRICK LOPEZ
Travis Street Park, 1896
“Where Seldom is Heard,
An Inebriate Word”

“No Boozers on This Bus”, or words to that effect, has been around a long time, and, in Houston, it dates to a documentable occurrence in 1896, but probably got rolled off some pundit’s pen or tongue even earlier, if we look deeper for older evidence. Friend and research colleague Darrell Pittman sent this little gem to us today as a commentary from the March 19, 1896 Houston Post. If you’re not counting, that was 119 years ago. – Just think of all the things we have built – and long since torn down in Houston – over that same range of time, without ever laying a deadly hand on the future of baseball as a big league sport in our fair city – forever, we hope.

____________________

CHICAGO WILL PLAY HERE

_____

Next Saturday and Sunday at the Travis Street Park.

Are those Houston Buffs boozing again?

Are those Houston Buffs boozing again?

Cap Anson

Cap Anson

 Arrangements have been completed with Adrian Anson whereby the “Runaway Colt” will bring his Windy City aggregation to Houston to meet the Bayou City team in battle royal next Saturday and Sunday, at Travis street park. The Houston team was to play the Chicagos in Galveston next Saturday, but it was thought advisable by the management of the Houston Base Ball association to induce Captain Anson to bring his club down here next Saturday and Sunday, so the Cap. was rung up by telephone this morning and was convinced by the eloquence of (Club) President Bailey that Houston is the best base ball town in the State, and that the Chicagos would draw more people in Houston than the World’s Fair drew visitors to the Windy City; so, the Captain accepted and his gigantic form will be seen here on the above named dates.

Manager Garson and Captan (sp) Shaffer had the boys out again yesterday afternoon and all the boys show(ed) up in first class shape. George Reed, the “Adonis” of the Texas League, is in first class shape and is as full of ginger as John L. Sullivan was in his best fighting days.

The dates of the games were changed in order to give the people of Houston an opportunity to see the article of ball the team is capable of putting up, and no doubt large crowds will attend both games. The management is especially gratified in getting Captain Anson to play here Saturday, as the Saturday game will give those who are unable to attend Sunday a chance to see the team play.

The boys had a running race coming in from the park yesterday, and Henry J. Cote, the best minor league catcher in America, beat all the boys, with Charles Becker, the fleet-footed left fielder, a close second.

Jimmy Slagle

Jimmy Slagle

 Manager Garson received  telegram from James F. Slagle, the center fielder of the Houston team, notifying him that he left Brookville, Pa., last Monday, which will bring him into Houston this morning at 5:30.

The baseball enthusiasts of the city who HAVE seen the boys are gratified to see the change in the team, compared with the teams that represented Houston on the diamond in former years, as they are all gentlemanly, and not one boozer on the team.

~ Houston Post, Thursday, March 19, 1896

____________________

ADDENDUM: Thanks to this question from Mark W.: “What was the outcome of the game between the Buffs and Anson’s Windy City team?” – And thanks to the Galveston Daily News for making the line scores of each game so easily retrievable. we must regretfully report that the Houston Buffaloes got blown away by the swiftness and power of the Chicago White Stockings in Game One. The Buffs then rallied with two little, too late in the  Sunday contest. For the record, the crowds hardly came close to Buffs President Bailey’s “eloquent” hyperbole appeal. They hardly rivaled the crowds that rushed to Chicago for the World’s Fair.

As often was the custom in those days, Houston chose to bat bat first as the home team:

Game One Line Score: Travis Street Park in Houston, Saturday, March 21, 1896:

GAME 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 F
HOUSTON 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
CHICAGO 1 1 3 0 4 0 2 2 X 13

Game Two Line Score: Travis Street Park in Houston, Sunday, March 22, 1896:

GAME 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 F
HOUSTON 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3
CHICAGO 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 1 X 5

And don’t forget our wonderful SABR book on the rich early history of Houston baseball. “Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961” by a diligent and meticulous team of researchers and writers from our Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR is now available through Barnes and Noble and Amazon.Com. – If you are interested in a closer-to-home better deal that helps our future SABR work even more, please contact our chapter chair, Bob Dorrill, to see what he has in stock:

The contact e-mail address and cell phone number for Bob Dorrill are listed below for those of you interested in either the book or membership in SABR:

Bob’s e-mail:  bdorrill@aol.com

Bob’s Cell Phone: 281.630.7151

 

 

The Simplicity of a Baseball Sim Game Joy

March 19, 2015
As a young kid, his was/is the pin-ball game that started me on the trail to APBA Baseball.

As a young kid, his was/is the pin-ball game that started me on the trail to APBA Baseball.

Many of us lifelong baseball fans started out as gamers. And we have remained so. I never played Stratomatic Baseball, but I latched on to the cards and dice version of APBA Baseball at a pretty tender age and was simply swallowed up by the idea of playing a baseball game based upon my growing understanding of the mathematical probabilities. To think that I now could actually manage simulated big leaguers on the hard wood of my bedroom floor on rainy summer days or anytime during the school year – players who would actually come through in the competition very close to their actual performances on the real life diamond over a full season – just swept me up to a new level of Ecstasy.

APBA was/is wonderful. When I first discovered it, it lifted me up from “pin ball” baseball – which was totally about the laws of motion and energy from physics and a player’s developing skill to pull the game knob at just the right time and release speed to achieve the best results. I didn’t want the game to be about me – or chance – or special effects.

As a kid, I once briefly owned the baseball version of that old vibrating field football game – the one where the players moved on little metal fins across a vibrating metal surface to only appear as players in action, but it was physics at its worst. Football carriers in this “electric” game would often turn around and run the other way. Baseball runners – who traveled the bases in a little grooved track, would sometimes do the improbable. For example, on a base hit to right field, a runner on first might stop a few steps from 2nd base because of some litter or defect-scratch on the base paths that halted him – and then – here would come the batter/runner – racing to 2nd base behind him – only to be halted by the obstructively stuck first base runner so both could be tagged out on a double play possibility that most probably has never occurred in reality. “Electric Baseball” was the only game I ever threw away personally – and it didn’t take long for me to make the discard.

When the computer version of APBA Baseball came out some twenty-five years ago, some lifetime players remained bonded to the cumbersome nostalgia of the cards and dice original version of “the game”. Not me. I took to the computer version immediately. I didn’t need all the additional audio/visuals that came with the new version, but, I must admit, listening to the game in the play-by-play voice of the great Ernie Harwell, plus appropriate crowd noises in the background was a nice supportive touch. However, when I started playing my early dawn games as the rest of the family slept, I found that I could turn off the sound and just follow the printed play-by play script on the screen as each play occurred ad enjoy the action as I have always enjoyed baseball on radio. – Just tell what is happening in real time – as APBA computer baseball does – and I can create the pictures of this action in my own mind with no additional help.

The APBA computer baseball game also allows the player to organize season schedules for practically any year in baseball history, to create teams and players of your own design and then play out a full season schedule manually for months – or within five minutes by a 162 game season replay, if results are your thing. If you create your own teams and players, you are even free to place yourself in the starting lineup of the 1927 Yankees, if private self-aggrandizement is your major bag. Meanwhile, APBA will compile copious statistics on the results of you organizations play.

APBA technology is great. When I am in a multitasking mood, which happens fairly often, I can enjoy playing APBA baseball at the same time I’m researching something else – or writing a column. Over time, I’ve come to respect those APBA players who prefer the old dice and cards version of the game with the same regard I hold for those of my generation who still prefer land-line telephones, the typewriter, and snail mail to the 21st century options available to them through the computer and its ever-expanding wunderkind child  – the Internet.

To each, his or her own.

To me, APBA Computer Baseball is simply pure joy.

Here are the standings of a league season I’m now playing with created teams and a combination of real and created players:

The Houston Area Vintage Ball Fantasy Sandlot League

TEAMS W L PCT. GB M#
Pecan Park Eagles 87 36 .707 21
Katy Combine 77 47 .621 10.5
Houston Babies 75 49 .605 12.5
Boerne White Sox 69 55 .556 18.5
Conroe Saw Dogs 59 64 .480 28.0
George Ranch Longhorns 44 80 .355 43.5
Tusculum Freethinkers 43 81 .347 44.5
Richmond Giants 41 83 .331 46.5

There will be a two-round, best of 7 Shaughnessy Playoff Series schedule following the completion of the 154 game schedule, pitting the #4 team versus the # 1 team and the # 3 team versus the # 2 team in Round One – and the winners of these two series then meeting in a best of 7 series for the league championship. As per usual, the higher seed always gets the home field advantage in each series.

Have a nice, simple, uncomplicated, peaceful and delicious Thursday, Everybody!

Rest In Peace, Al Rosen

March 18, 2015
Al Rosen, 3B Cleveland Indians 1947-1956 192 HR, BA .285

Al Rosen, 3B
Cleveland Indians
1947-1956
192 HR, BA .285

When former Cleveland Indian slugger Al Rosen passed away at age 91 last Friday, the 13th of March, baseball surrendered one its hardest hitting third basemen of record to a much deserved paean-ride into the hall’s of the game’s rich history. Rosen had a very good brief career in the big leagues, but one that was shortened by injury. The Sunday, March 15, 2015 New York Times featured the kind of obituary that befits the deceased of Al Rosen’s level of fame and achievement:

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/15/sports/baseball/al-rosen-who-missed-triple-crown-by-a-hit-dies-at-91.html?_r=0

As a ten year member of the Cleveland Indians (1947-1956), Al Rosen batted .285 with 192 career home runs and 717 runs batted in. He led the American twice in home runs, hitting 37 in 1950 and 43 in 1953, when he also led league with 115 runs scored and 145 runs batted in. In that stellar 1953 best year, he also batted .336, falling only .o0161 points behind Mickey Vernon of Washington for the batting championship and a “Triple Crown accomplishment that, as most of you know only goes to the rare player who registers the highest HR and RBI numbers, plus the highest batting average in the same year.

How Rosen lost the 1953 Triple Crown came down to his last time at bat in the season. Richard Goldstein’s article in the March 14, 2015  NY Times article covers it well:

____________________

Going into the final game of the 1953 season, Rosen was battling Mickey Vernon, the Washington Senators’ first baseman, for the batting title. In Rosen’s last at-bat, against the Detroit Tigers at Municipal Stadium in Cleveland, he hit a slow ground ball to third base and seemed to have beaten the throw on a close play.

“Everybody on the bench thought I was safe,” Rosen told Baseball Digest in 2002. But the umpire, Hank Soar, called Rosen out, and he agreed.

“I tried to leap to first base,” Rosen recalled. “But I did a quick step and missed the bag.”

Had Rosen been safe, he would have won the battling title and the triple crown. But Vernon edged him for the batting title, finishing with a .337 average.

~ Richard Goldstein, New York Times, Saturday, March 14, 2015

____________________

Because he missed the bag at first and clearly was out, Al Rosen finished the 1953 season with a .336 BA, falling to Mickey Vernon at .337 for the battle title. If Rosen had made it to first with a bum luck, angel-guided infield single on that same last time at bat, he would have won the batting title and Triple Crown for 1953 by a fly speck margin. Here are a couple of tables that best show the almost infinitely small margin of difference between the two AL batting title contenders, as they actually finished in 1953:

As Rosen and Vernon actually finished in 1953:

PLAYER AT BATS HITS B.A.
Mickey Vernon 608 205 .33717105263
Al Rosen 599 201 .33555926544
Differentials-> 009 004 .00161178719

As Rosen and Vernon would have finished, had Rosen been safe on that last close play at 1st base:

PLAYER AT BATS HITS B.A.
Al Rosen 599 202 .33722871452
Mickey Vernon 608 205 .33717105263
Differentials-> 009 003 .00005766189

Had Rosen beat out that last infield hit, he would have won the AL batting title and Triple Crown for 1953, alright, but his margin of victory over Vernon would have been even smaller than the margin that Mickey Vernon achieved over Al Rosen in reality. All that proves, as it does so often in every day life, is that most of the time, a near miss really is as big as a mile. All the more reason to hope too that our modern investment in always improving instant replay technology may spare us from near misses in baseball that are due to subjective errors of the human mind and eye.

Thanks for leading us into this renewed awareness, Al Rosen, and rest in peace. For those of you newer Houstonians who may not know, Al Rosen also had an important local connection during his years as a baseball executive. He was President and General Manager of the Houston Astros from 1980 through September 1985, when he left for San Francisco to administratively lead the Giants out of the skids through 1992.

Al Rosen also batted .349 with 25 HR in 146 games for the 1947 Oklahoma City Indians of the Texas League. What a great minor league year Al had on his way to the majors that same season. Too bad too that injuries shortened his career. He may have found his way to Cooperstown had he played longer.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day 2015

March 17, 2015

irish-shamrocks1

 

Happy St. Patrick’s Day 2015, Everybody!

Charlie Pallilo Sports Talk Show Host 790 AM Radio SABR"s March 16th Speaker Was Big Hit

Charlie Pallilo
Sports Talk Show Host
790 AM Radio
SABR”s March 16th Speaker Was Big Hit

Unless you attended last night’s meeting of SABR’s Larry Dierker Chapter at the Spaghetti Western Ristorante on Shepherd, you missed out on a great baseball talk by Charlie Pallilo of 790 AM sports talk radio. The young man who came to Houston from Syracuse NY and Syracuse University has grown up with us since moving his career here in 1989, wrapping his expansive intellect around all sports in a manner that few other media types ever attain as aspiring experts. He is known for his logically constructed ideas on all subjects he feels equipped to speak, but never hesitates to halt if he feels he does not have enough information to offer s worthwhile opinion on a given subject. He is known for building opinions on carefully constructed pillars of factual logic – and for never attacking his callers when he disagrees with an unfounded or poorly constructed opinion that a fan may offer – or simply shouts – over the air. He innately understands that you cannot really resolve anything in an emotional word fight – and I’ve never heard him attempt to do so. Instead, Charlie simply “lets the whirling dervishes whirl” – and he only argues with the constructs of another’s argument when he disagrees with another’s rationally offered opinion. Thanks for a great evening, Charlie Pallilo! The members of SABR enjoyed their time with you last night.

Folks, if you weren’t at the SABR meeting last night, you also missed out a on a fun-to-take, Irish-flavored and Lesser-Hall-of-Fame bloated St. Patrick’s Day Quiz. But no fear, here it follows for all of you who were not, or could not, be with us Monday evening.

The Quiz follows – and the answers will be found as the first entry in the comment section. Don’t go there until you’ve given your chance to answer the questions without the help of the answer sheet, Google, or any other source beyond the material already contained between you ears.

And please post your “honest” total scores as comments when you are done. Tal Smith of the Sugar Land Skeeters won the live version of the quiz. Let’s see if there is anyone out there who can beat Tal – and there may be. Tal got 20 of the 28 possible points that are out there, so, who knows? Maybe you can do it. – If you do, just do it honestly.

Here we go – and remember – don’t scroll down past the shamrocks falling from the leprechaun’s hat until you’ve given the quiz your honest best shot.:

A St. Patrick’s Day Baseball, Etc. Quiz

 

1) Who was the 19th century MLB pitcher from Ireland who finished his career in 1894 with a record of 284 wins and 220 losses, who was known also by either of his two nicknames – “The Count” or “The Apollo of The Box”?                                              

 

2) Who was the Irish-American catcher who went on to the Hall of Fame after an outstanding American League career at Philadelphia and Detroit?

 

3) Name the hard-playing, hard-drinking 19th century Hall of Fame Irishman whose name became the middle part of the famous “Slide, _______, Slide” exhortation?

 

4) Who was the Irish-American third baseman who played against Jackie Robinson in the latter’s first organized baseball game for Montreal in 1946?

 

5) Who was the Irish-American catcher who also made it to the Hall of Fame, but who is less often remembered as the player who popularized the early use of protective gear for receivers behind the plate? He also developed the first batting helmet.

 

Name this Irish-blooded Edison of early catchers: _________________        

 

6) Name the city in Ireland that is also the name of an ingredient that has been used legally and illegally in two essential pieces of baseball equipment:

 

7) What famous major leaguer’s physical stature would have allowed him to fit in most easily with the leprechauns on St. Patrick’s Day?

 

8) From the poem, “Casey at the Bat”, name the two Irishman who were on base when Casey struck out to kill the hopes for joy in Mudville? (One point for each correct name answer.)

 

______________________ and _______________________

 

9) Place the correct names on the correct bases where these players each resided when Casey took his swing into the historical realm of failure. (One point for each correct match. – (Each correct match is worth 2 points each)

 

_____________ was on ______ and ______________ was on ______

 

10) In the old movie, “Take Me Out to the Ball Game”, the “Wolves” had a 6-4-3 double play combination to rival Tinker to Evers to Chance, and two of their surnames were as Irish as they come. Name all three, for a point on each correct answer:

 

________________ to ________________ to ___________________

 

11) What former major leaguer could have been the author and screenplay writer for the book and movie, “Cheaper By the Dozen”?        

 

Name him: ____________________        

 

12) What was the legal first name of the early 20th century ball player known best as “Irish” Meusel?

 

Name him: ____________________

 

13) Ten Lesser Known Halls of “Fame” and the Groups They Each Serve: All of the answers are easy. Match the lettered group from Table Two to the numbered Hall in Table One:

 

Each correct answer is worth a single point addition to your test score on the St. Patrick’s Day Quiz:

 

No. Our Ten Halls Letter Answer, A-J
1 Hall of Flames  
2 Hall of Dames  
3 Hall of Maims  
4 Hall of Shames  
5 Hall of Blames  
6 Hall of Sames  
7 Hall of Seines  
8 Hall of Janes  
9 Hall of Brains  
10 Hall of Claims  

 

 

Choice Group Description
A Most Identical Twins
B Most Embarrassing Moments
C Einstein, Hawking, DaVinci, Etc.
D Hottest Girls of the 1950s
E Famous Insurance Files
F Biggest Historical Fires
G Russell, Powell, Curtin, Etc.
H Greatest Fishing Nets
I Most One-Sided Fights Ever
J U.S. Congress

 

Scoring: 28 points are available for correctly answering all questions in the entire quiz.

 

irish-shamrocks2

Three Texas Clubs Open AAA Play in 1959

March 16, 2015
April 12, 1959: Chuck Tanner, then of the Minneapolis Millers, helped crush Houston debut in the American Association with a HR and two other hits in his club's 13 hit assault upon Buffs pitching.

April 12, 1959: Chuck Tanner, then of the Minneapolis Millers, helped crush Houston’s debut in the American Association with a HR and two other hits in his club’s 13 hit assault upon Buffs pitching.

The Dallas Rangers, the Fort Worth Cats and the Houston Buffaloes all moved up from their decades old membership in the AA Texas League in 1959 to become members together in the five-club “West Division” of the AAA American Association, For Houston, it would be a short run of three seasons (1959-62) before the Buffs faded into baseball history (but not from reverent memory) and Houston the City moved up the big time as the expansion club  “Colt .45s”, and new membership in the National League.

Details of the first Opening Day results on Sunday, April 12, 1959 are sketchy here at The Pecan Park Eagle, unfortunately,  because our New Archives resource subscription does not include digital copies of the old Houston newspapers. We do, however, enough sketchy information from this sparse Association Press article that appeared in the Monday, April 13, 1959 edition of the San Antonio Light to shed a few rays of daylight on how each of the new AAA league members from Texas fared at home in their three first Opening Day games as members of the American Association:

Dallas Rangers 3 – Denver Bears 2 (10 innings), Attendance: 4,704. The fans were described by AP as “chilled” on a night that undoubtedly smacked more of a lingering winter than the onset of  Texas spring baseball time. Dallas was the only one of the three Texas home teams to celebrate a victory on its first rattle out of the AAA Opening Day chute for the first time. “A Dallas native, Kal Segrist, was the hero of the Rangers’ victory over Denver.” With the bases loaded, Segrist “lined a 2-run double with two outs in the (bottom of) the tenth inning” to warm the hearts of over four thousand Dallas fan bodies. “A hit batsman, a walk, and Carl Powis‘ single had loaded the bases and set the stage for Segrist’s second hit of the game. Big John Juciuk and John Schaive had five of Denver’s nine safeties.”

St. Paul Saints 8 – Fort Worth Cats 6, Attendance: 3,377. “Right-hander Larry Sherry (St. Paul) fanned 11 batters, but needed relief in the 9th at Fort Worth. where St. Paul broke a 4-4 tie in the eighth. Jim Gentile‘s 2-run homer touched off a 4-run inning for the Saints.”

Minneapolis Millers 9 – Houston Buffaloes 5, Attendance: 7,453. Bad weather may have held own the Sunday crowd at Houston. The Buffs and Millers were originally scheduled to open the season on Saturday night, ahead of everyone else, but heavy rains wiped out the game and that plan. “Thirteen hits were good for 23 total bases in the Miller’s romp at Houston (Sunday). Chuck Tanner and Art Schult each had a homer and two other safeties for the Millers, who needed three hurlers to quell the Buffs.” Once more, no clear mention of winning and losing pitchers was mentioned in the report, nor were box scores made available. From what was reported, we may imagine that any surviving Buff pitchers would be grateful if nothing more specific could be found in the downtown Houston Public Library or Harris County Archive files. On the other hand, after the passage of close to 66 years, most of the participants in this long ago Opening Days have either checked out – or long ago put their egos out to pasture.

~ Quotes excerpted from Associated Press Story, The San Antonio Light, Monday, 4/13/1959, Page 16.

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One Common Interesting Note.  All six of the cities involved here are now represented directly by MLB market teams, but it only took four franchises to absorb all six metro areas listed in this report. Next time we go on another cadaverous historical file search, we shall try to make it on a day in which we have more time to a pursue a subject with more readily available meat on the bones.

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Addendum: Post Original Publication: Once again, friend and Maryland SABR colleague, Bill Hickman, has come to the rescue with additional flesh for the bones of this carrion-quality news source about an event in Houston and Texas baseball history that deserves a little more attention. After all, it was April 12, 1959, the day that three of the state’s largest cities made the transition together to the highest rung on the minor league baseball ladder en route to the Major Leagues in 1962 (Houston Colt .45s) and 1972 (Texas Rangers, in behalf of Dallas and Fort Worth, but physically located between the two hearts of the Metroplex in the smaller community of Arlington, Texas.)

Bill posted his information in the comment section, but it’s too primary to the central subject to be left there alone:

“The box score of that opening game between the Millers and the Buffs in 1959 was published on page 26 of the April 22, 1959 issue of The Sporting News, which may be viewed on-line in Paper of Record, for those who have access to it. The winning pitcher was Nelson Chittum and the losing pitcher was Lloyd Merritt.”

~ Bill Hickman, SABR, 3/16/2015.

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Thanks, Bill Hickman! ~ The Pecan Park Eagle.

 

 

 

A “New” Jersey Mystery: Was it the ’59 Buffs?

March 15, 2015
Is this item a 1959 Houston Buffs jersey? Or is it some other team - or even a later made retro jersey in honor of some team from 1959?

Is this item a 1959 Houston Buffs jersey? Or is it some other team – or even a later made retro jersey in honor of some team from 1959?

Our “New Jersey Mystery” here at The Pecan Park Eagle lacks the romance and intrigue that remains to this day around the question – “Whatever happened to the body of Jimmy Hoffa?” – but it also holds the promise of an accomplishable certain answer – one that is far less likely anytime soon, if ever, in the older, far more famous case.

In fact, as plotted in our headline, but misdirected in our first paragraph here for the sake of pun-level comparison to the Hoffa case, ours is a “new” jersey mystery – and not a “New Jersey” mystery. Even more truly stated, we could say that what we have here is – not “failure to communicate” on the level of “Col Hand Luke”, – but a “new mystery” about another “old jersey” that has come to our Houston baseball community’s attention in need of accurate identification.

The Eagle got involved exactly one month ago as one of the recipients of this e-mail appeal from friend and fellow SABR colleague, Bob Dorrill, who also happens to be our Larry Dierker Chapter leader and a man who cares deeply about the way we treat real artifacts of the game’s history. In reference to the jersey featured at the top of today’s article, Bob had written the following in his general e-mail of 2/15/15:

A local friend of mine who sells baseball jerseys came upon the flannel in the photo below which was issued by Rawlings in i959 and has an old English letter “H” on the front and number 9 on the back.  My friend thinks it is a Buffs jersey.
 
If I recall properly Hall of Fame flannels were only issued to Hall of Famers and only after they had been elected to the Hall.. Perhaps the jersey was worn at an old timers game here. Do you have any idea of who might have worn this jersey, what team he played and in what year?  
 
The Buffs did wear a uniform with the Old English “H” in the early 1940’s (a photo of Danny Murtaugh in “Houston Baseball The Early Years” shows the letter) but the uniform does not have pin stripes. He also was not in the HOF in 1959. 
Any thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated.
Thanks, Bob Dorrill       bdorrill@aol.com
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What’s Happened Since 2/15/15?
Not much and quite a bit:
(1) Rule out Danny Murtaugh’s appearance in such a jersey for all of the reasons that Bob Dorrill suggested in his appeal for help. The old “H” uniforms of Murtaugh’s early Buffs career did not have pinstripes – and Murtaugh never played or managed the 1959 Buffs – nor did he ever find himself inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1959, or any other year since, and then had such a jersey created in his memory.
(2) The following two detailed photos have suggested to my own memory that the 1959 Houston Buffs may have worn this jersey (dark pin stripes and the Olde English “H” on the left breast jersey pate. It was the Buffs’ first season in AAA ball, and more importantly, their first year of independence in decades from the red-dominant color theme of their St. Louis Cardinal overseers. I still recall walking into Buff Stadium in 1959 and being immediately taken aback by the absence of red and the presence of pinstripes and – I’m almost certain, but have no photos to prove it, the imprint of that Old English “H” on the left side of the jersey chest.
The use of "Hall of Fame" by Rawlings makes this items seem more like a "long-after-1959" commercial retro jersey. We would probably find all we need to know from the company.

The use of “Hall of Fame” by Rawlings makes this item seem more like a “long-after-1959” commercial retail store retro jersey. We would probably find all we need to know from the company.

This tag on the jersey is what leads me to believe that it could be either a 1959 Houston Buffs jersey or some kind of retro jersey made to commemorate some "H" team from that year.

This tag on the jersey is what leads me to believe that it could be either a 1959 Houston Buffs jersey or some kind of retro jersey made to commemorate some “H” team from that year.

My memory is pretty good about this sort of thing, but it’s not proof and I don’t trust it for another reason in 1959, By this time, I was in my junior to senior years at Uh taking 15 hours per semester, 12 semester hours in the summer, and also working 40 hours a week, first in clothing sales downtown and then in water and parking meter sales for Rockwell Manufacturing. I saw fewer games and had less time to watch baseball or play baseball in 1959-60 than at any other time in my life. We need to find a photo of the 1959 Houston Buffs that is accurately cataloged. Perhaps, Joel Draut, the photo archivist for the Julia Ideson Library Collection downtown can be of help.
When I say “accurately cataloged”, I especially mean “watch out for what you pull up on Google. Today I found the following image on Goggle identified as the “1928 Houston Buffs”. For a lot of reasons that should jump right out at anyone who has followed the Buffs or been in Houston long enough to know the difference between our weather in January and our weather in August, this picture clearly wasn’t taken in 1928, For one thing, Houston was still playing in the stone age of segregated baseball back in 1928, but there are other give away features of error that show up that mistake pretty quickly upon inspection.
This photo is misidentified on Google as the 1928 Houston Buffs. - It could be either the 1960 or 1961 Houston Buffs. I'm not sure.

This photo is misidentified on Google as the 1928 Houston Buffs. – It could be either the 1960 or 1961 Houston Buffs. I’m not sure.

We’ve since met the collector who owns this jersey and whose passion for this sort of thing has launched this search. Since I don’t know if he wants to go public here, I will leave it up to him to either drop me an e-mail or post his own comment on this article. In the meanwhile, if any of you have any ideas, we would appreciate receiving them as public comments here on this article too at The Pecan Park Eagle website.
Thank You, Bill McCurdy, Publisher and Editor, The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Buffs Take Millers, 4-1. in Early 1959 Game

March 14, 2015

Buffs 1959 m

Millers Stopped, 4-1, By Houston Rookie

By Associated Press

Houston tossed rookie Alvin Spearman at Minneapolis and the Buffs won their American Assn. match 4-1 on a five-hitter Wednesday.

St. Paul continued unbeaten taking Fort Worth 4-3, Omaha outslugged Charleston 10-9, Dallas turned back Denver 6-4 and Indianapolis defeated Louisville 8-12 (12-8?) in 10 innings.

BUFFS 59

Thursday Denver is at Houston, St. Paul plays at Dallas, Minneapolis (is at) Fort Worth and Omaha (is) at Louisville.

~ Kerrville (TX) Daily Times, Thursday, April 16, 1959, Page 6.

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“Rookie” right hander Alvin Spearman was 27 years old and in the last year of his six-season minor league career that began in 1952. He also pitched a year in Japan during the 1955 season, but never did anything to make for daybreak in the major leagues. Spearman was 3-9 with a 3.64 ERA for the 1959 Houston Buffs in their debut season at the AAA American Association level.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/player.cgi?id=spearm001alv

This particular “Alvin Spearman” is not to be confused with an older player from the Negro Leagues who shared the same name.

Have a nice and hopefully dry weekend in Houston, local readers. Things are a little soggy for us out here on our side of the creek.

1928: UT Solves Student Alcohol Abuse Problem

March 13, 2015
HE: "Are you going back to Corpus after you graduate from UT?" SHE: Don't know. Daddy's oil-richer than Midas. I may just go live in Paris for a while."

HE: “Are you going back to Corpus after you graduate from UT?”
SHE: “Daddy’s oil-richer than Midas. I may just go live in Paris.”

Liquor Cause for Removal From Dances

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“Any person under the influence of intoxicating liquor to any degree will be put off the dance floor and his name will be turned in to the Dean of Student Life,” was the decision of the (UT) Students’ Assembly yesterday in regard to German Club Dances. This decision also applies to first offenses, according to Potty McCullough, dance manager.

(The ruling also stated) That anyone who is not a student in good standing in the University will be removed from the floor was also decided by the Assembly.

~ Austin Daily Texan, March 10, 1928, Page 1.

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The UT Students’ Assembly may have thought they had solved the alcohol abuse problem on campus – and, at least, they may have turned down the “Roaring” part of  the “Roaring Twenties” buzz at German Club dances, but their failure to do so may have been helped along by their Zeitgeist view of alcohol abuse and public drunkenness as an exclusively male problem. Our clue to that possible conclusion is even telegraphed for us readers from the future by the Daily Texan’s choice of wording in the first sentence of the above report: “Any person under the influence of intoxicating liquor to any degree will be put off the dance floor and his name will be turned in to the Dean of Student Life.”

Unless my own memory of those glorious youthful times is now blurred, I seem to remember the early life collegiate drinking I may have enjoyed as having everything to do with either the female company I pursued – or the female company I found. Fortunately for me, I was also exposed to the learning opportunity in my own early life experiences with wine, women, and song that alcohol was not the adhesive one needs to build or maintain a relationship that is worth keeping over time. To put it mildly, I got to learn that the heart of everything – real love and the passionate pursuit of life’s sweet spot for creative engagement with the stuff that matters – has nothing to do with alcohol.

Congratulations, anyway, to the 1928 UT Student Assembly for reminding us that alcohol consumption at public social functions probably was the real “Apple of Eden”  – as far as our earliest consumable temptations are concerned. The 1928 UT Student Assembly simply “forgot” that women like alcohol too.