Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Presidential First Pitches

February 21, 2015
# 1 William Hoard Taft USA President # 27 Republican Term:: 1909-1913

# 1 William Howard Taft
USA President # 27
Republican
Term:: 1909-1913

Presidents of the United States have been throwing out documented first pitches of the baseball season in Washington or elsewhere since the administration of William Howard Taft. If any chief executives before Taft ever did the same, it occurred in eras in which there either were no cameras to record it or it simply was an earlier time in which the art of photography was considered too complex and cumbersome to do outside a studio.

A few of these first pitch presidents shown here were pretty knowledegeable of baseball, with Nixon, Reagan, Eisenhower and the two Bushes probably ranking at the head of the class and most likely to have been members of SABR under different life circumstances. The rest ranged from avid home town fans to casual fans to indifferents who understood the potential loss of political support from baseball fans had they chosen on the basis of apathey not to throw out a first ball somewhere voting support was critical.

Ronald Reagan is the only former president to have been a former baseball radio play-by-play guy and later an actor who had portrayed the life of a Hall of Fame pitcher in the movies. Reagan played the lead role of Grover Cleveland Alexander in the 1952 film, “The Winning Team”. Coincidentally to his appearance in that role, Reagan also became the only United States President to have made a co-starring movie with actress Doris Day.

Incidental to this population of 18 presidents are these two basic facts: 10 were Republicans and 8 were Democrats. 14 were right handed and 4 were lefties.

Here is our pictorial on the 17 remaining “first pitch presidents”:

# 1 Woodrow Wilson USA President # 28 Democrat Term:: 1913-1921

# 2 Woodrow Wilson
USA President # 28
Democrat
Term:: 1913-1921

# 3 Warren G. Harding USA President # 29 Republican Term:: 1921-1923

# 3 Warren G. Harding
USA President # 29
Republican
Term:: 1921-1923

    # 1 Calvin Coolidge     USA President # 30     Republican     Term:: 1923-1929

# 4 Calvin Coolidge
USA President # 30
Republican
Term:: 1923-1929

    # 4 Calvin Coolidge     USA President # 31 Herbert Hoover     Republican     Term:: 1929-1933

# 5 Herbert Hoover
USA President # 31
Republican
Term:: 1929-1933

    # 6 Franklin Delano Roosevelt     USA President # 32     Democrat     Term:: 1933-1945

# 6 Franklin Delano Roosevelt
USA President # 32
Democrat
Term:: 1933-1945

    # 7 Harry S. TRUMAN     USA President # 33     Democrat     Term:: 1945-1953

# 7 Harry S. TRUMAN
USA President # 33
Democrat
Term:: 1945-1953

    # 8 Dwight David Eisenhower     USA President # 34     Republican     Term:: 1953-1961

# 8 Dwight David Eisenhower
USA President # 34
Republican
Term:: 1953-1961

    # 9 John Fitzgerald Kennedy     USA President # 35     Democrat     Term:: 1961-1963

# 9 John Fitzgerald Kennedy
USA President # 35
Democrat
Term:: 1961-1963

    # 10 Lyndon Baines Johnson     USA President # 36     Democrat     Term:: 1963-1969

# 10 Lyndon Baines Johnson
USA President # 36
Democrat
Term:: 1963-1969

    # 11Richard Milhous Nixon     USA President # 37     Republican     Term:: 1969-1974

# 11 Richard Nixon
USA President # 37
Republican
Term:: 1969-1974

    # 12 Gerald Ford     USA President # 38     Republican     Term:: 1974-1977

# 12 Gerald Ford
USA President # 38
Republican
Term:: 1974-1977

    # 13 Jimmy Carter     USA President # 39     Democrat      Term:: 1977-1981

# 13 Jimmy Carter
USA President # 39
Democrat
Term:: 1977-1981

    # 14 Ronald Reagan     USA President # 40     Republican     Term:: 1981-1989

# 14 Ronald Reagan
USA President # 40
Republican
Term:: 1981-1989

    # 15 George H.W. Bush     USA President # 41     Republican     Term:: 1989-19893

# 15 George H.W. Bush
USA President # 41
Republican
Term:: 1989-1993

    # 16 Bill Clinton     USA President # 42     Democrat     Term:: 1993-2001

# 16 Bill Clinton
USA President # 42
Democrat
Term:: 1993-2001

    # 17 George W. Bush     USA President # 43     Republican     Term:: 2001-2009

# 17 George W. Bush
USA President # 43
Republican
Term:: 2001-2009

    # 18 Barack Obama     USA President # 44     2009 to Presentt Time, 2015 Projecte  Term:: 2009-2017

# 18 Barack Obama
USA President # 44
Democrat
Projected Full Term:: 2009-2017

 

Have a nice weekend, everybody, and lick your chops, fellow game action starved baseball fans! – Spring training has begun and the first pitch of the regular 2015 season in professional baseball is only a little more than a month away. In the meanwhile  and beyond too, Houston fans, try to catch some of the  great amateur level ball that is already underway for the #3 ranked Houston Cougars and the always highly regarded Rice Owls. – Consider throwing some of that “love of the game” you possess toward the idea of also actively supporting college, high school, and youth baseball fully this season. These younger people aren’t (yet) playing for the big bucks and most never will, but their own love and drive to play the game at a high level will be rapidly apparent to you at the various ball fields around Houston – or at your own home town.

It’s our game, friends! Let’s do all we can to enjoy and support the game as actively as possible. And, Houston area folks, please don’t forget the independent Atlantic League’s Sugar Land Skeeters while your window shopping for baseball fun. That place is good baseball in a beautifully nostalgic ballpark and a lot of good clean fun for the whole family. Between the Skeeters and our resurrecting 2015 Houston Astros, this season could well see winning move through possible on its way to probable at Minute Maid Park – and with a possibility of UH and Rice both reaching Omaha for a NCAA college baseball crown.

It’s spring. Hope springs eternal.

Another Blair Witch Hunt Photo: Guess Who?

February 20, 2015
Who Are These Guys? And how many of our column guesses are right?

Who Are These Guys?
And how many of our column guesses are right?

 

The above photo is simply the latest of mysteries submitted by The Brothers Blair, Bob and Daryl. It actually works this way. – Daryl Blair finds these little items of historical inquisitiveness and sends them to his brother Bob Blair, who then forwards them on to The Pecan Park Eagle with few words and no solicitation either way. Here at the Eagle, we then have to make the decision each time on the merits of sending them on to our readership.

So far, the Blair Brothers are batting 1.000 with their ability to hit our dedication to sharing news and mysteries from baseball’s past, no matter how arcane the specific subject may be – and today’s submission is no exception. Bob Blair’s only guess on the identities of the men in this picture found expression in a single e-mail sentence: “Daryl sent this photo and for the life of me I can only pick out the Babe and the commissioner.”

Bob Blair was right about Babe Ruth, but he apparently mistook the always suited Connie Mack for “the commissioner”, and whomever specific he had in mind.

Here are our Pecan Park Eagle picks on all featured individuals in two columns, left to right. Our absolutely certain picks are embellished in bold type. Our considered guesses and possibly incorrect identifications are not. – Now all we need is for you readers, or someone like SABR photo expert and colleague Bill Hickman, to swoop in here and clear up any wrong guesses – and maybe even tell us what, where, and when this stadium gathering of greats even occurred. It appears to be an old-timers’ all star game.

Here are our conclusions ~

The Pecan Park Eagle Picks (Bold Type for Certainty), Left to Right:

Back Row: Jimmy Collins, Eddie Collins, Frank “Pancho” Snyder, Connie Mack, Al Barlick, George Kelly, and George Sisler.

Front Row: Honus Wagner, Travis Jackson, Babe Ruth, Walter Johnson, and Tris Speaker.

Come on, Bill Hickman, or somebody, step up to the plate and clear the bases of all ambiguity!

____________________________

Ongoing Box Score of Incorrect Photo ID Corrections to Certainty (Or as Close as We get):

Through 1st Corrections, near 1:00 PM, CST, Friday, February 20, 2015.)

Latest Reconstruction Published Below, Followed by Order of Contributor Submission per Correct Subject Identification ~

Back Row: (Duffy Lewis), Eddie Collins, (Roger Bresnahan), Connie Mack, (Bill Klem),  (Red Murray) and George Sisler.

Front Row: Honus Wagner, (Frankie Frisch), Babe Ruth, Walter Johnson, and Tris Speaker.

All bold type names above in this latest list were correct in the first place. All corrected identities names are also shown in bold type, but enclosed in parentheses in notation of the work our readership contributed to getting all identities right.

Here too is our List of Contributors on Solving the  Identities for All Five of the originals we were not sure about and guessed wrong in naming. All seven of our original certain picks proved just that. They were correct. But all five of our doubtful picks in the first place proved to be  wrong. The list includes the in photo order appearance the corrected identity figure in parentheses, followed by the Internet or personal identity of the person or persons who conatcted us by e-mail or comment post with the correct information:

(Duffy Lewis) by Shinerbock80

(Roger Bresnahan) by Shinerbock80

(Bill Klem) by (1) Larry Dierker; (2) Fred Soland; and (3) Shinerbock80

(Red Murray) by Shinerbock80

(Frankie Frisch) by Shinerbock80

If anyone wants to confirm or challenge our 12 picks as now all accurate, which we think they now are, with objective proof of support or contradiction, please feel free to so.

Thanks too to Shinerbock80  for offering that an unnamed Internet source relates that the photo was taken in 1943. We are still some chump change short of knowing what specifically brought these aging greats together in uniform to have their picture taken together in their old MLB uniforms.

Editor, The Pecan Park Eagle.

_____________________________________________________

Imprimatur. Near 2:00 PM, Friday, February, February 20, 2015:

Bill Hickman has checked in. Let’s pull his verbatim from the comment section as the cork on this little bottle of historical baseball identity search, leaving room, of course, for where and what this convocation of greatness was all about.

Bill Hickman Says:

“shinerbock80, you completed the work for me. I had already identified Klem instead of Barlick and had determined that the fellow in the back row, far left was not Jimmy Collins (ears stuck out too much). The player with the chest protector bore a substantial resemblance to Frank Snyder, but Snyder was 6’2″ tall, so he should have appeared taller than Connie Mack. Roger Bresnahan was 5’9”, which was the same height as Eddie Collins, so I’m satisfied that he was the right identification. I checked all the other names in shinerbock80’s posting and agree with them as well.

Because Rogers Hornsby’s coaching career with the Pirates spanned from 1933 to 1951, I was assuming that he was wearing a contemporary uniform, and that would date the photo in the 1940’s, so the 1943 year reported by shinerbock80 makes sense to me.”

_____________________________________________________

– Thanks, Bill Hickman,, shinerbock80, Larry Dierker, and Fred Soland for your participation and contributions here today. – The Pecan Park Eagle.

“Texas Chicken Game” in Houston Ship Channel

February 20, 2015
The object of "Texas Chicken" in the Houston Ship Channel apparently is to create a brief water wall between two large ingoing and outgoing ships that otherwise could not pass each other.

The object of “Texas Chicken” in the Houston Ship Channel apparently is to create a brief water wall between two large ingoing and outgoing ships that otherwise could not pass each other.

Holy, Moses! As one of those neighborhoods that teemed with longshoremen and merchant marines as residents, we never heard anything that comes to memory of this “Texas Chicken Game” back then. The Pecan Park Eagle has just learned that it is now going on in the Houston Ship Channel. We learned of it accidentally on a short drive to the dog groomer with our little male Shih Tzu “Morti” when I reached to the radio to punch in the 610 AM  sports talk show at the same time our car was hitting a pot hole. Because of the jar, I accidentally hit station 700 AM as some regular political host guy was talking about and explaining what the “Texas Chicken Game” on the Houston Ship Channel is really all about. I heard just enough to get a very insufficient education on the subject as we turned into the Tiffany Kennels grooming service.

Here’s the gist and the narrow, shallow depth of what we learned. – It seems that even with all the widening of the ship channel that has continuously taken place forever out there, that it is still a passing problem when a very large incoming ship encounters a very large outgoing ship in certain  parts of the narrow 50 mile strip of water that connects Houston to the Gulf of Mexico and every other large seaport in the world.

The problem often is that there simply isn’t enough flat-water width for the two ships to pass each other unless …. unless they each can do something to generate a temporary wall of water between themselves that creates an angular brief area of space that is sufficient to make passing each other possible. We don’t completely get all the physics and geometry involved here, but we do wonder how they know the details of their individual ship hull clearance needs to make it work. Surely all large ships are not of a universal size, but, as the two captains engaging in this little act of scientific resourcefulness, they would each need to be pretty sure it was going to work with their particular crafts before lunging “had on” into this particular solution.

Here is the essence of how it works, according to the guy on the radio:

Aware of their impending passage problem, the two oncoming ships take dead aim at each other from some unspecified distance away from contact and go full throttle, straight  at each other like James Dean and some other hot rod teen driver in a game of “Rebel Without a Cause” car chicken-  only this challenge is between two monster vessels of the sea. (Maybe they should have called this game “Chicken of the Sea”.)

At any rate, as the two ships near contact with each other, both captains simultaneously veer right, creating an enormous temporary wall of water that manages to expand the hull water space enough for each ship – just long enough to make safe passage possible.

That’s all we got from our brief exposure, but we have found a number of “Texas Chicken Game” links” on Google that look pretty informative, if anyone has the time and interest in learning more. The following link from Bloomberg Business pretty well supports the explanation we described here.

http://www.bloomberg.com/bw/articles/2014-02-27/houston-ship-channel-congested-by-u-dot-s-dot-oil-and-gas-boom

Maybe ship channels have something in common with our freeways. Maybe widening a ship channel would simply be a trillion dollar waste of money that solved nothing. After all, making our Houston freeways wider doesn’t resolve our auto congestion problems. Widening freeways just seems to create wider traffic jams.

But do we simply settle for “The Texas Chicken Game” as our ship channel limited width solution for the passage of two big ships in the night? What happens if one of these “Texas Chicken Game” captains goes over the line in an oceanic version of “road rage” and then fails to veer right when he is supposed to turn?

Maybe the rest of you already know about this rather high stakes risk solution they call the “Texas Chicken Game”, but we sure had not heard of it until a couple of days ago. It seems like a potential disaster just waiting to happen, especially if two freighters carrying highly combustible cargoes collided anywhere near a few of those large hydrogen tank storage facilities that exist at certain points along the way.

T.G.I.F, Everybody! – Even though, these days, every day is pretty much Friday for your humble publisher, editor, and staff writer of The Pecan Park Eagle. Otherwise, where would I find the time to write about a subject like this one? I do find it very interesting that we haven’t heard more about this practice from the mainline local TV stations and the Houston Chronicle, but maybe those folks don’t have car radios.

 

 

Eagles Soar, But They Fly Higher with Angels

February 19, 2015

 

Angel Norma

Once Upon a Time in Rockport, Texas …

Angel Norma 2

A gazillion years ago, when our only child Neal was still a little kid, we used to love our late August annual week stays at the Sandollar Motel on the beachfront of Copano Bay in Rockport, Texas. The Sandollar actually is in Fulton, Texas, but the state of mind there is all Rockport, with all the windswept growing oaks along the beach road into a little sleepy Texas coastal town that used to pretty much roll up its sea shell shop sidewalks at 5:00 PM, leaving the night to a few cozy and informal seafood restaurants, cafes, and bars and a sky bursting with a trillion stars to gently lead all visitors through the early part of the night.

The whispering warm winds, the calming of the mind, the chattering screech of the seagulls, the olfactory cachet of sea creatures in the air, and the promise of another beautiful dawn did the other tranquilizing special effects of service to the good night goals of all who came here with one universal desire – to be vacated from the cities – and the face of the world we briefly had left behind on those now departed freeways of congestion and the ugly daily face of the world that we had regularly watched over the media of that day, which was then a much milder version of the 24/7 soaking we may today choose to either endure or ignore on what we now call “social media”. We just called it “television” back in the 1980s. – Remember?

The two versions of this featured photo reappeared for me this morning while I was going through old image files in pursuit of greater digital archives order. This photo is so special to me that the challenge of imposing upon you with another two-column publication day won out over a more tempered option of waiting until summer and a more seasonal time for its message.

The message of this column knows no seasonal boundaries.

My wife Norma is the angel of my life. She isn’t much of a baseball or research and writing fan, but she really “gets” how important those things and the people I love – who are the heart of each area – are so important to me. As a result, this brilliant medical endoscopic nurse – the loving heart who gives of herself to God, family and friends in bonds of words and actions that defy my meager capacities for articulation, she – well, she always seems to be “paying it forward” to life as we live it – and she consistently has given me wide berth in our marriage to do my passion things also – with and without her – with no worry. Our loyalty, fidelity, and commitment to each other is mutually unshakeable.

So, years and years ago, with the serendipitous help of a little seagull that just happened to be flying by and turning toward the back of Norma as I took the image that produced these two copies, I received my early confirmation of the identity of this wonderful woman who had decided (perhaps, daily) to put up with me for the rest of her life.

With or without wings, Norma is the love of my life.

MA2DAY 01

Thanks, God! – And thanks too for our terrific son Neal – who almost got snuffed out of this last summer “selfie” photo by yours truly – and my ineptness at the latest vogue in social photography.

Of course, given a second chance at the "selfie", I was ablt to give up half of me and Norma's chin for more of Neal. - Just further proof that the angel wings shot was either a billion to one shot accident or a divine sign of everything that Norma was to mean to both Neal and me.

Of course, given a second chance at the “selfie”, I was able to give up half of me and Norma’s chin for more of Neal. – Just further proof that the angel wings image was either a billion to one shot accident – or else – a divine sign of everything that Norma was to mean to both Neal and me.

 

Have a nice Thursday, everybody! – I promise not to write any further columns that will be datelined to February 19, 2015.  Of course, at WordPress, the new publication date begins at 6:00 PM on the previous actual date. – Please keep that in mind.

 

 

Astros 2005: A View from Afar

February 19, 2015
Astros World Series A Celebration Poster by Steven V. Russell In Pennsylvania, 2006

Astros 2005 World Series Team
A Student Educational Poster
by Teacher Steven V. Russell
At Bellmar Middle School, 2006, 30 miles South of Pittsburgh

 

Based on our general experience, sometimes we Houston sports fans are locked into the idea that championships for us in any sport are decidedly improbable and infrequent, if ever, and likely to disappear from our joyous grasp as they anomalously and briefly come to visit, but never to take up dynastic residence in our fair city. Were it not for the 1994 and 1995 NBA champion Houston Rockets, a few minor league hockey titles, a couple of Little League baseball crowns, Wayne Graham and the Rice Baseball Owls, whatever it was the Houston Dynamo soccer team once won, and the quickly squashed flirtation of the Houston Astros with a World Series title in 2005, we may as well otherwise conclude that “it’s just never going to happen”. – But it has. – So we are forced to see it for what it is – a long shot at best, if ever. – We are stuck with the weak hopeless reach for the improbable and unlikely event of getting a local sports championship that is as rare as the valuable pearl that sometimes may turn up in an order of oysters – as some now long forgotten and distantly past coastal waters expert once predicted to our great-great grandparents.

The “pearl in the oyster” metaphor is especially discouraging. Most of us who have grown up near the gulf coast, at least, have known that story since we could first remember anything, but how many of us actually have heard of it happening in reality? – Not me.

Another local belief, one which probably every large city not named New York or Los Angeles can embrace, seems even stronger as a verity: If Houston ever wins a World Series or a Super Bowl, nobody outside of the city is going to give “a flying fish” that we’ve done so – and viewers elsewhere probably will hit the remotes at home to keep from watching the TV report on our victory parade.

Guess what? The Pecan Park Eagle has received a report this week from friends in Pennsylvania that not everyone living afar from our little corner of the universe is that inattentive to our record of near accomplishment. Steven V. Russell, the Executive Director of the Mid Mon (Monongahela) Valley All Sports Hall of Fame in Donora, PA, who in 2006 was also then close to winding up a 42-year career as a teacher,  had prepared the above featured school poster for his students on the 2005 NL Champion Houston Astros.

Thank you for sending this piece to us, Ron Paglia. Ron is an excellent veteran sports writer from the home country of Stan Musial and both Ken Griffeys – and a dedicated student of the game. And Steven Russell is no less of a voracious baseball man, we are told – and as we have concluded from his work, his contributions, his accomplishments, and his baseball genes. You may recall that we did a column on Steve’s father, Jim Russell, a player with the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Boston Braves back in the late 1940s.

Here’s a link to the Jim Russell column, if you haven’t seen it:

https://thepecanparkeagle.wordpress.com/2015/01/08/jim-russell-a-baseball-life/

We aren’t sure if Steve Russell has any deeper reasons for remembering the Astros as he did back in 2006, but it is nice to have evidence that someone from elsewhere gave one of our Houston clubs that much post-event attention. Perhaps, Steven Russell had some other driving motive to teach his students a year later about the NL champs from far away Houston, but we would prefer to think that Steve, as an NL guy whose father had played for the Pirates, was simply being fair and measured in his attention to the accomplishments of another NL club, even if it were the work of a team based in Texas.

Of course, if our guess is true, Steve Russell will never write about Houston again. – The Astros are an AL club now. – Ouch.

We will conclude with some of the displays identified only as “over the years” that Russell sent to us himself since the Paglia Astros poster contribution. There’s much we don’t know about these Russell displays, but one thing is for sure. – The students of Steven V. Russell were not likely to miss out on the fact that there is such a game as baseball.  Which means that any student from Bellmar – those who could not explain why Bill Mazeroski was important to Pirates history from 1960 forward – should never have been issued a diploma. 🙂

Thanks too for injecting a little show of outside support for something from Houston, Steve. Knowing we have outside support raises our championship hopes mode – just a tad.

The 1982 Beer City Series by Steven C, Russell (left) 1982

The 1982 Beer City Series
by Steven V, Russell (left)
1982

 

Has anybody in this class ever heard about the game of baseball?

Has anybody in this class ever heard about the game of baseball?

 

Coming Attractions by Steven V. Russell (lower left)

Coming Attractions
by Steven V. Russell
(lower left)

Early Happy 91st Birthday, Ed Mierkowicz!

February 18, 2015
Get Well, Ed Mierkowitz! And an Early Happy 91st Birthday on March 6th, too!

Get Well, Ed Mierkowicz!
And an Early Happy 91st Birthday on March 6th, too!

Earlier today, our Houston Babies buddy and baseball history explorer colleague, Bob Blair, sent me a  most heartwarming story about nearly 91-year old Ed Mierkowicz, a former almost career minor league outfielder and first baseman/outfielder. Ed’s not doing all that great on the health front these days, but his spirit and memories apparently have not been stilled for baseball, the game he loved and played for 13 seasons in the minors (1944-46, 1948-57) and 4 part-time service years in the majors with the Detroit Tigers (1945-48) and St. Louis Cardinals (1950).

Mierkowicz now bears the singular distinction of being the only surviving member of the 1945 World Series Detroit Tigers Championship Team. At age 21, Ed made his only brief appearance in ’45 Series as a bottom of the 9th left field substitute in Wrigley Field for the great Hank Greenberg. The Tigers held a 9-3 lead at the time. Manager Steve O’Neill had decided to give “the kid” of actual combat as the Michigan club prepared to wrap and celebrate their new crown.

“Mierkowicz! – Left field!” came the manager’s shout.

Mierkowicz responded in shock as though the call were routine. He grabbed his glove and trotted out to left field to walk and run in the big foot steps of the man he had just replaced.

“”What the hell am I doing here? My knees are shaking.” Ed Mierkowicz finally whispered quietly to himself amid the sight of distant figures moving around near home and the crowd buzzing with the sounds of disappointment in preparation.

Future Hall of Famer Hal Newhouser is on the mound, ready to bring home the bacon, but Roy Hughes of the Cubs lines a single to left, which Mierkowicz fields cleanly and throws back in. It turns out to be his only play of the day. Newhouser retires the next three Cubs in order: strike out, fly out, ground out. – Game. Set. Match. Tigers.

Mierkowicz joins his great senior mates in celebration and joy. He will always have the memory. Once upon a time, the kid from Wyandotte, Michigan got to live out for real the dream of every boy who grew up playing baseball in Michigan and the total sphere of fan commitment to the Detroit Tigers. – He got be an active part, regardless of how small it may have been, of helping the Tigers win the World Series.

Now Ed’s a very old man with a very young heart, living with the a small treasure trove of ancient, but realized major league dreams: He is the last living member of the 1945 World Series Championship team, as we previously mentioned. He only hit one big league homer, but it came off future great pitcher Ed Lopat, then of the White Sox. And he also vividly recalls the longest home run he ever hit as a minor leaguer.

“The longest home run I ever hit,” Mierkowicz said, “was for Milwaukee at Nashville in the minors. It went up, up, up. I never saw it come down.

“Sometimes I think it’s still going.”

(Funny you should put it that way, Ed.  All of the miraculous homers of my imagination have always been like the one in your actual, or embellished, memory. They are all out  there in orbit somewhere – still going – from here to infinity.)

A link to the wonderful story about Ed Mierkowitz by Tom Gage of the Detroit News that Bob Blair sent me is as follows. Read it. We think you will be glad you did:

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/sports/mlb/tigers/2015/02/15/tigers-world-series-one-play-one-ring/23480245/

 

“Now Here’s the Rest of the Story….”

Ed Mierkowitz, Age 28 Ht: 6'4"  -  Wt: 205 lbs. Batted Right; Threw Right OF/1st Base Houston Buffs, 1952

Ed Mierkowicz, Age 28
Ht: 6’4″ – Wt: 205 lbs.
Batted Right; Threw Right
OF/1st Base
Houston Buffs, 1952

Bob Blair most probably didn’t this  know this part when he sent me that link, but my memories of Ed Mierkowicz are a little more fan personal. In 1952, at age 28, Mierkowicz was assigned to the Houston Buffs by the parent club Cardinals as an outfielder/first baseman. Coming off a great 1951 season in which the Buffs were in the St. Louis rotating talent assignment wheel for a good year, the Buffs won the straightaway and playoff Texas League championship before falling to the Birmingham Barons in a six-game Dixie Series that they also “shoulda” won.

1952 was a deep six talent assignment year for the Buffs and – guess what? The same brilliant manager from 1951, Al Hollingsworth, couldn’t scrape together enough baseball savvy and people wisdom to coax the dismal Buffs up from their self-made grade as occupants of the 8th and last place position in the Texas League at season’s end.

In my 14-year old Knothole Gang member’s perspective and living memory, Ed Mierkowicz was one the bright stars in that mostly dark night year. As an outfielder and once in a while substitute at first base for my now deceased old hero and later life great friend, Jerry Witte, who was then playing his last year at age 36, Ed acquitted himself well at the plate and was no embarrassment in the field. He batted .271 in 538 times at bat as a ’52 Buff, collecting 28 doubles, 4 triples, and 11 home runs on the year – even though they most often were launched as shots fired in pursuit of an already lost cause.

As an all around player, “Mierk” was good in the AA Texas League in 1952. He had a great level swing and, as he recalls in the linked article from Detroit, he was a prototypical line drive hitter. When Ed did hit a homer for the Buffs, it most often left the playing field like a rife shot – leaving our company at an elevation point that was usually only inches to a few feet higher than the section of the outfield wall from which it was departing.

Thank you, Bob Blair, again – and this time for awakening this now fairly ancient Houston fan to the memory of a childhood Buff hero who played for Houston during one of the bleakest local seasons in ancient local baseball history.

Get well, Ed Mierkowicz! – We all need your great heart and presence in a world that hungers for good people to hang around longer. – You’ve got more fans out here who remember you fondly than you probably realize. – Happy Birthday! – And God Bless too!

And, as Paul Harvey also always used to conclude his radio essays, this seems like a good time for borrowing his parting salutation.  …

Good Day!

 

 

A Tony Cavender Baseball Movie Quiz

February 17, 2015
Tony Cavender, SABR Larry Dierker Chapter Houston Baseball Movie Quiz Writer

Tony Cavender, SABR
Larry Dierker Chapter
Houston
Baseball Movie Quiz Writer

The February 2015 monthly meeting of our Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR met last night, Monday February 16th, at the Spaghetti Western on Shepherd Drive. Our featured speaker, thanks to program planner Jim Kreuz, was Joe Brennan, a nationally known sports agent with the Legacy Agency who currently represents a number of current major leaguers, including C.C Sabathia, Carl Crawford, Adam Dunn, Vernon Wells and Scott Kazmir. It was nice, laid back presentation which touch on myriad subjects, including the history of sports agency representation in baseball, the ins and outs of the business, and the specific evaluative efforts that agents going through in scouting and signing the players they hope to represent all the way to success in the major leagues.

In addition, Tom White of our SABR chapter reported on the trip he made as an 11 year old kid with his father to the 1953 MLB All Star Game in Cincinnati, providing us also with copies of the gazillion player autographs collected, and mostly during the pre-game period in which he made a self-authorized appearance on the field to meet, greet, and collect the signatures of all he could reach. Tom says that he lasted a good half hour before he was detected and removed back to the stands by security. We think that Tom White may have established the unofficial record for the most all-star autographs collected by any individual at a single mid-summer classic game – and that it probably is a record that will never be challenged because of the much greater security that now surrounds fan contact with the players, even at regular season games.

Wow! I’m still blown away! The young Tom White 1953 auto-grab took place at the blankety-blank  All Star Game, for Selig-Sake! – Wow again!

Tom White also showed us two photographs of the NL club in their dugout that also inadvertently captured clear images of Tom and his dad standing on the rail behind the dugout as image hitchhikers into the visual galaxy of baseball history. – What a wonderful day that must have been for our very knowledgeable SABR member and his father.

Stan “The Man” Curtis of SABR also read us a speech on “How Long is a Minute” that he had written way back in 1958. Stan’s provocative early life discourse on the way we should all value and use our time in life led me to a personal, no-offense intended, conclusion about the probable answer to this question when it comes to public presentations:

“How long is a minute? – It depends on who’s speaking.” 🙂

Tony Cavender’s baseball movie trivia quiz was a blast of good fun – and it is presented below for your own enjoyment. The correct answers are contained as the first item in the comment section which follows this column. Please feel free to leave your own comment, score, or opinion about the test as a comment too.

Again, as we expressed here the first time we presented one of our quizzes, If you really love baseball, SABR may be the place for you too. Give some thought to joining SABR, (The  Society for American Baseball Research) by contacting our Larry Dierker Chapter President, Bob Dorrill @ bdorrill@aol.com

SABR isn’t very costly – and the baseball fellowship – the talks by players and people in baseball, – and the numerous  other publication benefits are the greatest.

Now, for your enjoyment, here’s The Tony Cavender February 2015 Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR Houston Baseball Trivia Quiz:

 

(1) Who played Babe Ruth in:

(a) The Babe Ruth Story? ___________________

(b) Pride of the Yankees? ___________________

(c) The Babe? ____________________

 

(2) Who played “The Whammer” in “The Natural”? ___________________

 

(3) Which ballplayer is said to have introduced Marilyn Monroe to Joe DiMaggio? ____________________

 

(4) Who served as their host during the DiMaggios’ honeymoon trip to Japan and Korea? ____________________

 

(5) Who player Grover Cleveland Alexander and his wife in “The Winning Team”? ____________________

 

(6) Who played Monty Stratton and his wife in “The Stratton Story”? ____________________

 

(7) Who played Dizzy Dean and his wife in “The Pride of St. Louis”? ____________________

 

(8) These Hollywood figures had ownership interests in major league ball clubs: Bing Crosby and Bob Hope. Name the clubs. ____________________

 

(9) The son of which Hollywood figure became a major league general manager? ____________________

 

(10) The leading roles in “Bang the Drum Slowly” were played by two young actors just beginning their careers. – Name them. ____________________

 

(11) A former minor league infielder starred in “Escape from New York” and “Tombstone”. Who is he? ____________________

 

(12) Which former Dodger farm hand starred in major Hollywood movies and a long-running action series on television? ____________________

 

(13) A well-known silent movie featured Mike Donlin, Irish Meusel and Tony Lazzeri, The movie is:

  • (a) Safe at Third?
  • (b) Slide Kelley Slide? or
  • (c) Three O’Clock Lightning?      (Circle correct answer)

 

(14) Which players share a dugout with Cary Grant and Doris Day in “That Touch of Pink”? Were they:

  • (a) Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris and Yogi Berra?
  • (b) Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider and Pee Wee Reese? or
  • (c) Willie Mays, Hank Thompson and Alvin Dark?

(Circle correct answer above)

 

(15) A blond Hollywood bombshell was engaged to a hard-throwing, hard-living pitcher for the Los Angels. Can you name both the bombshell and the ballplayer?

____________________ and ____________________

 

A total of 23 answers are requested in the above listed Cavender Baseball Movie Quiz. Give yourself one point for each request you get right. And please remember to check the first entry of Bill McCurdy in the comment section that follows this column for the correct answers and then overcome your own modesty or temerity and leave a comment with your own scores and experience from the quiz. Nobody gets everything right – and sometimes – we find ourselves getting very few things right. Nobody’s perfect. We are all in this boat ride of life together.

Hope the rest of your Tuesday is like a super cool cruise day!

Ground Rules of the Sandlot

February 16, 2015
Eagle Fiield Now Japonica Park Myrtle @ Japonica Sts. Pecan Park, Houston

Eagle Fiield
Now Japonica Park
Myrtle @ Japonica Sts.
Pecan Park, Houston

 

“Back in the Day” – and for this personal subject – we’re talking 1947 to 1953 for the original Pecan Park Eagles – we had rules too at “Eagle Park” – which the City of Houston over time has renamed. Those hallowed grounds for some of us oldsters are now officially called  “Japonica Park”. They even have an official sign at the place to let the world know their official identity. Sadly for some of us, the little sandlot now has been loaded with toddler playground equipment that would have made our kind of serious baseball play almost impossible, if not for the fact that we were, after all, The Pecan Park Eagles – a most resilient and creative bunch of kids from the Houston East End. We’d have found a way to either play around these obstacles, or else.

Or else? Of course! Things that got in the way in Pecan Park were sometimes known to disappear overnight. I don’t know how, but they just did. I guess it may have had something to do with the fact that anything inorganic that was put together in the first place with a screw – could be unscrewed. And allow me to make it clear here – just in case the word “inorganic” didn’t work as a clue – we are talking about things disappearing here – not people. People disappeared  too, but they vanished by a wholly different set of rules and realities governing that kind of sudden loss. And none of us had anything to do with that kind of much rarer disappearance.

Anyway, the “Eagle Park” sandlot rules always come to mind this time of the year – and usually right before the Astros are packing up from Houston to go start spring training in Florida. We didn’t have spring training in Pecan Park. – We just started playing, but to be honest – as always – our games were pretty much restricted to weekends until school was out for the summer at the end of May.

The only official rules that mattered were the rules of organized baseball – which we all just knew without any memory of who taught them to us. We think that some people are just born knowing the rules of baseball – and that The Pecan Park Eagles just came out of that batch.

Once summer started, there was only one unnecessary-to-speak, but universally understood rule about “Eagle Park” from the first church-free morning at the end of the school term through Labor Day: “When you wake up – show up!”

And everybody did, unless they were girls or sissies. – We even had one girl, named Eileen, who played ball like a “Flying Tiger”. She was as good as any boy on the field. She could run; she could throw; she could catch; and she could hit. About the only thing that kept her from being a five-star player was the fact that she was too small to hit for power. – Eileen was small, all right, but was she ever cute too! – As we all grew into adolescence, we came to appreciate that fact about Eileen. We were as protective of her as an army of big brothers.

The most common rule of baseball that we had to adjust was the “nine men in the field” side. We played games with everybody who showed up moved into the game right away. Sometimes we played with 15 men on each side; sometimes we played with 7 men in the field.

Whenever we could, we plugged in our “pig tail hind catcher” position rule – and that was a big time saver, since we almost always only had one ragged baseball in play for our games. The “pig tail” position always went to some little five year old who was too little to do anybody any good at bat or on the field, but fast enough to retrieve balls that got past the catcher and were rolling east on Japonica Street. With no backstop, these runaway balls were a real nuisance and time killer – and they also were the big reason that our balls got scuffed. That skipping concrete roll was tough on them. At any rate, there was always one little kid around who loved taking the job – just for the sake of being part of the action. And a lot of us started that way. We also made sure, most of the time, that the pig tail got at least one time at bat for his efforts.

We also banned base stealing. The shortage of gloves and players who really knew how to defend against the steal – and the balls that got away from the catcher so often – were the big reason. Players could only advance a base on a batted ball, but that was OK with us. The Eagles were a basher-minded club. Everybody wanted to hit home runs. If there had been any fences, we would have been swinging for them on every pitch, but, in the absence of an enclosed field, we all swung to lift fly balls that would carry to what then seemed like the far reaches of left center – and beyond – to the spot where Japonica forked into Myrtle Street on its way west to Bobby Lee Street, Griggs Road and the Gulf Freeway.

"Because you held a larger world within you, I found a larger world in me." ~The Pecan Park Eagle

“Because you held a larger world within you,
I found a larger world in me.”
~The Pecan Park Eagle

Our basher problems were houses and cars. Sometimes we broke a house window and had to pay for it. Sometimes we just banged a house and earned a “lecture timeout” from one of the angry moms on Myrtle Street. There were a lot of angry women on Myrtle, but we never could figure out why. Our rogue fly balls couldn’t have been the whole reason for that much unhappiness.

One time, I swung late and  lined a shot onto Myrtle Street that went through the open window on the drivers side and hit a bald-headed man in the dome as he was headed west. The Pecan Park Eagles scattered like so many cockroaches as they saw the man struggling to both curse and stop his car at the same time. I stood there at home plate like a stunned or frozen statue of a miniature Babe Ruth – not so much admiring the shot – but completely fearing the shot that was about to come. To make it worse, I still held onto the bat I had used as the older man came rushing toward me with blood in his eyes.

Of course, he was coming at me. Everybody else had found a crack in some neighborhood wall to slither away to. – I was the only one left to go after – and I looked guilty as hell with that bat in my hand. I really felt badly – and not just because I was in trouble – but because I never wanted to hurt anyone that way – not even accidentally.

By the time he reached me, the man had calmed down considerably. Maybe it had something to do with the fact that he could see the painful look on my face, and knew that I had not meant to hurt him, but maybe it was because I told him, “Mister, I’m sorry! I didn’t mean to hurt you!”

“I forgive you, young man,” the stranger said, “but not just because you have apologized, but because you didn’t run away. You stayed here to take responsibility for your actions.” – I didn’t tell him that my real reason for staying had been the fact that I was too scared to run, but somehow that other valuable life lesson had a change to grab even more leverage with me as a result of this situation – That is, the fact that we can never really run away from the consequences of harm we cause others, even if it is the result of an accident.

The man talked to me for a while – but whatever else he said has now zoned out of my conscious memory beyond the meaty part that I’ve reported here. I never saw him again, but I will never forget his face and what he looked like – and what he said to me.

At any rate, the incident caused us to insert a new ground rule. It didn’t last for long because it was out of whack with why we even played the game. The short-lived rule was this: Any ball that is hit out of Eagle Field into the street is an automatic out. It was a rule that led only to low scores and a lot of unhappiness – so we changed it. The second short-lived rule regarding same was Any fair ball that is hit out of Eagle Field into the street is a ground rule double; any foul fall that is hit out of Eagle Field into the street is still an automatic out.

We hated that one too. Homers were disappearing because you pretty much had to knock the snot out of the ball to get a legitimate home run. The little kids didn’t really care. If they got all the way home from a mishandled infield grounder they thought they had a home run. We older kids knew better. We took no joy from scoring a run that was the result of four errors on the same live ball. – We wanted that sweet-spot connection feeling – the feeling that only comes when bat meets ball and turns the latter rapidly into a soaring, departing pea in the summer morning sky.

We did the only thing we could do. We dropped the long ball ground rules and just spread the new word around: Try not to hit any cars.

"Pig Tail Run" Japonica Street was ur great "scuffer" of wild pitches, passed balls, and bad throws home.

“Pig Tail Run”
Japonica Street was ur great “scuffer” of wild pitches, passed balls, and bad throws home.

Those were the big ones from memory. I now choose here to not tax your attention span this Monday any further than I already have, but I do want add this closing thought.

We may not be able to return to our childhood sandlots, but we all still need something like it for life – some kind of time and space moveable sandlot involvement in life that brings us back into that state of pure joy we once knew. For many of us, it may be the giving of ourselves to others with whatever we have to give – or to some worthy cause that is lost on its own – or to a greater clarification and preservation of history or to the kinds of opportunities that open to us baseball-inclined people through a wonderful organization we know as SABR.

On the personal front, the Houston Babies vintage baseball team is the closest reenactment of the actual sandlot joy that some of us have ever known – even if we don’t play. Just being at a Babies game is big enough joy for me. On the general front, there are no big rules, as long as it is a civil pursuit that does not harm others or our world. Just find your horse and ride it. – Ride for the sheer joy of riding.

Have a nice day, Everybody!

 

 

 

 

 

The St. Paul Colored Gophers

February 15, 2015
The St. Paul Colored Gophers Founded in 1907 Image Contributed by Daryl & Robert Blair

The St. Paul Colored Gophers
Founded in 1907
Image Contributed by Daryl & Robert Blair

The following player identification material is excerpted from the post-publication comment contribution of SABR photo expert, Bill Hickman. Accordingly, the full set of names and playing positions is as follows:

Back row (L to R): Eugene “Gabbie” Milliner, OF; Julius London (not Londo), P; George “Chappie” Johnson, C; Phil “Daddy” Reid, Owner; Richard Felix Wallace, SS/2B; William Binga, 3B; Robert Wells “Bobby” Marshall, 1B

Front row (L to R): Sherman “Bucky” Barton,OF/3B; Art McDougal, SS; Archie Pate, OF/C; William Joseph McMurray, C; Robert Garrison, P

__________________________________________

The above featured photo has been presented to us here at The Pecan Park Eagle as an image of an early 20th century team known as the St. Paul Colored Gophers. Further verification is both pending and still open to additional input, but we most genuinely wish to thank Bill Hickman now for his early identification of the players in the picture.

We have located a sketchy kind of history on the club of that name:

The St. Paul Colored Gophers were a club of all black players based in the St. Paul side of the famous Minnesota “Twin Cities” area that now hosts the American League MLB club of “Twins” nickname distinction. Supposedly organized in 1907 as a traveling barnstorm team, the Colored Gophers also apparently served as a pre-Negro League earlier team voice of black protest against the discriminatory wall of racial segregation that kept members of the black race from playing ball with whites. The first Negro League organization of any merit did not come along until 1920. Until then, it was up to little community cell groups like the Colored Gophers to keep the interest of not only blacks, but the vast majority of our American people fired up about the game of baseball. Whether they are given “expert” credit or not by today’s historians, their “credit’, if you will, emanates from the extant fact that they existed and survived playing the game of baseball on the only grounds left to them over the time period of an extremely limited era of opportunity for blacks and other minorities in baseball and other fields of American business, professional, and sporting endeavor.

The featured photo here is only the latest in our growing collection of historic or “just plain old” early baseball photography. We are not in the search for “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” in our speculations and enjoyment of these presentations. We simply see it a column source and a way of bringing to light faces from baseball’s past for the honor and appreciation of all who come here in goodwill. We do not pretend to be any kind of authentication house, nor are we interested in serving as any kind of mineral assay office that exists for the gratification of baseball memorabilia gold prospectors.

By the way, Robert and Daryl Blair are again the contributors of this Colored Gophers photo. When they have provided me with the information I have requested about how they came into possession of the photo – and what they know of it, etc. – this column will be amended here to include that information.

In the meanwhile, here is one link with a bare amount of information on the St. Paul Colored Gophers that, at least, does include a rather extensive list of men who played for the club in various years:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Paul_Colored_Gophers

If you have any information on the Colored Gophers, we would be happy to receive it in the reader comment section that accompanies this article – or by text or link submission e-mail to editor Bill McCurdy of the The Pecan Park Eagle:

houston.buff37@gmail.com

Keep up the Valentine’s Day spirit, folks. – In this world, we  all need a lot more love than one can get from one day in the year for cards, candy, flowers, and a dinner out.

____________________

Important Addendum: As so often fortunately happens, especially in these matters of ancient photography, our SABR baseball image expert and colleague, Bill Hickman, has rushed to the fore to contribute by comment some very important details of substance to this presentation. Thank you, Bill, but this material is too important to be left that far away from the central presentation. We have taken the liberty of posting your player details and further links up here. ~ Editor, The Pecan Park Eagle:

A Bill Hickman Report on the Featured Photo of the St. Paul Colored Gophers:

There’s a colorized version of this photo, along with some of the player names, at the following URL:

http://www.uni-watch.com/2012/09/29/remember-the-don-almo/

The full set of names and playing positions is as follows:

Back row (L to R): Eugene “Gabbie” Milliner, OF; Julius London (not Londo), P; George “Chappie” Johnson, C; Phil “Daddy” Reid, Owner; Richard Felix Wallace, SS/2B; William Binga, 3B; Robert Wells “Bobby” Marshall, 1B

Front row (L to R): Sherman “Bucky” Barton,OF/3B; Art McDougal, SS; Archie Pate, OF/C; William Joseph McMurray, C; Robert Garrison, P

If you click on the colorized photo, it will bring up an enlarged version of the same.

____________________

The Pecan Park Eagle strongly suggests you check out the the larger version of the colorized version that is available through the link that Bill Hickman has provided. It is far more vivid and viewable than the one that is available to us in this column.

 

Happy Valentine’s Day 2015

February 14, 2015

valentine-baseball-swoosh

Roses are red,

Violets are blue,

Baseball’s big “losers”,

Our thoughts are of you!

 

Reciting the big time,

The Babe called his shot,

The writers flocked to him,

Charlie Root? They did not!

 

Receiver M. Owens,

Had the game in his grasp,

But the ball just slipped past him,

As the Dodgers did gasp!

 

Remember the shot too,

Fired far round the world?

Our hearts were with Branca,

As the legend unfurled!

 

Recalling another Ralph,

Whose last name was Terry,

How sadly he walked off,

As the Maz they did carry!

 

Reaching back to Bill Buckner,

Is the cruelest of all,

Through his legs, like a wicket,

Passed the meanest ground ball!

 

Reality blinks,

All these “losers” were great,

Each quite deserving,

Of our love on this date!

 

Remember all others,

Who had to be good,

Even to play,

Giving all that they could!

 

Nobody from the above list is really a loser! And nobody else who’s willing to risk giving life his or her best shot at whatever good goal is their passion path is either a loser.

 

We only lose by not trying.

valentine-baseball-too

Happy Valentine’s Day, Everybody!