Manager Roll Call in Houston MLB History

September 19, 2014

 

Houston's first manager, Harry Craft, learned from singer Roger Miller. Harry learned that "you can't go on to winning in a baseball pool."

Houston’s first manager, Harry Craft, learned from singer Roger Miller. Harry learned that “you can’t go on to winning from a baseball pool.”

 

Thanks to the wonderful work of Baseball Almanac.Com, below is a clear and concise chart on where the Houston Colt .45’s/Astros have traveled under all previous regimes.

Since the question “Who should be the next manager of the Astros club that already has been loaded with the expectations of a World Series championship by 2017,” perhaps, it may be helpful to go over the list and recall what has not worked – and what has sort of worked in the past?

Does the new manager need to be an experienced leader with a proven track record in MLB? Or do we want to place the club’s future in the hands of a popular and talented icon like Craig Biggio? How important is it that the club’s next manager thinks about baseball in a way that is compatible with the measurable facts mind philosophy of General Manager Jeff Luhnow? Should the next guy be someone who is able manage with whatever roster is supplied him? – Or does he need to be someone who has some input on roster moves to the big club?

Baseball people talk a lot about “chemistry” when it comes to winning. And what is that thing “chemistry,” anyway, beyond a condition that reveals itself fairly clearly when it’s present (see the 1979 Pirates for further reference) – and also very clearly when it is absent.

Here’s a clue to chemistry, as it applies to the general condition of working chemistry in any human effort:

Better ways to achieve success are seen more prolifically when people of different minds are able to come together as working partners who give each other the right to be different – and compromise and yielding in favor of what’s best for the greater organizational goal is more important than protecting  the individual aggrandizement of any one member among the active working partnership.

Indeed, it is simpler to say than do, but it is the hallmark of victory for those who get it and do it. It is the bird that flies higher, faster, with more agility, and with more deliberate purpose than any other bird in the skies of hope. Whenever “being on the same page” really means “thinking alike” for the sake of job security, there can be little hope for success for anything dynastic that goes out-of-bounds from a narrow point of view on winning and how to get there.

That being said, here are lists of former Colt .45 and Astros manager. Good luck with your own thinking on what kind of leadership the club now needs on the field:

Houston Colt .45s ManagersManagers & Finishes
Year Uniform # Manager Wins Losses WP Finish GB
1962 1

Harry Craft

64 96 .400 8th 36½
1963 1 55 95 .407 9th 33
1964 1 61 88 .409 9th 27
6

Lum Harris

5 8 .385
Houston Colt .45s Managers & Finishes
Houston Astros Managers
1965 – 2014Managers & Finishes
Year Uniform # Manager(s) Wins Losses WP Finish GB Roster
1965 26

Lum Harris

65 97 .401 9th 32

1965

1966 1

Grady Hatton

72 90 .444 8th 23

1966

1967 1

Grady Hatton

69 93 .426 9th 32½

1967

1968 1

Grady Hatton

23 38 .377 10th 25

1968

25

Harry Walker

49 52 .485
1969 25

Harry Walker

81 81 .500 5th 12

1969

1970 25

Harry Walker

79 83 .488 4th 23

1970

1971 25

Harry Walker

79 83 .488 4th 11

1971

1972 25

Harry Walker

67 54 .554 2nd 10½

1972

1

Salty Parker

1 0 1.000
2

Leo Durocher

16 15 .516
1973 2

Leo Durocher

82 80 .506 4th 17

1973

1974 18

Preston Gomez

81 81 .500 4th 21

1974

1975 18

Preston Gomez

47 80 .370 6th 43½

1975

7

Bill Virdon

17 17 .500
1976 7

Bill Virdon

80 82 .494 3rd 22

1976

1977 7

Bill Virdon

81 81 .500 3rd 17

1977

1978 7

Bill Virdon

74 88 .457 5th 21

1978

1979 7

Bill Virdon

89 73 .549 2nd

1979

1980 7

Bill Virdon

93 70 .571 1st +1

1980

1981 7

Bill Virdon

61 49 .555 3rd / 1st 6

1981

1982 7

Bill Virdon

49 62 .441 5th 12

1982

5

Bob Lillis

28 23 .549
1983 5

Bob Lillis

85 77 .525 3rd 6

1983

1984 5

Bob Lillis

80 82 .494 2nd 12

1984

1985 5

Bob Lillis

83 79 .512 3rd 12

1985

1986 22

Hal Lanier

96 66 .593 1st +10

1986

1987 22

Hal Lanier

76 86 .469 3rd 14

1987

1988 22

Hal Lanier

82 80 .506 5th 12½

1988

1989 18

Art Howe

86 76 .531 3rd 6

1989

1990 18

Art Howe

75 87 .463 4th 16

1990

1991 18

Art Howe

65 97 .401 6th 29

1991

1992 18

Art Howe

81 81 .500 4th 17

1992

1993 18

Art Howe

85 77 .525 3rd 19

1993

1994 2

Terry Collins

66 49 .574 2nd ½

1994

1995 2

Terry Collins

76 68 .528 2nd 9

1995

1996 2

Terry Collins

82 80 .506 2nd 6

1996

1997 49

Larry Dierker

84 78 .519 1st +5

1997

1998 49

Larry Dierker

102 60 .630 1st +12½

1998

1999 49

Larry Dierker

97 65 .599 1st +1½

1999

2000 49

Larry Dierker

72 90 .444 4th 23

2000

2001 49

Larry Dierker

93 69 .574 1st +5

2001

2002 22

Jimy Williams

84 78 .519 2nd 13

2002

2003 22

Jimy Williams

87 75 .537 2nd 1

2003

2004 22

Jimy Williams

44 44 .500 2nd 13

2004

uk

Phil Garner

48 26 .649
2005 3

Phil Garner

89 73 .549 2nd 11

2005

2006

3

Phil Garner

82

80

.506

2nd

2006

2007 3

Phil Garner

58 73 .443 4th 12 2007

15

Cecil Cooper

15 16 .484

2008

15

Cecil Cooper

86

75

.534

3rd

11

2008

2009 15 Cecil Cooper 70 79 .470 5th 17 2009
uk Dave Clark 4 9 .308
2010 2 Brad Mills 76 86 .469 4th 15 2010
2011 2 Brad Mills 56 106 .346 6th 40 2011
2012 2 Brad Mills 39 82 .322 6th 42 2012
uk Tony DeFrancesco 16 25 .390
2013 16 Bo Porter 51 111 .315 5th 45 2013
2014 16 Bo Porter 59 79 .428

2014

Tom Lawless (1)

Year Uniform # Manager(s) Wins Losses WP Finish GB Roster
Houston Astros Managers & Finishes | (1) = Interim Manager



______________________________________________________________________

THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB 2014 BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/18 9 626 213 .340
MARTINEZ TIGERS 9/17 10 531 177 .333

NOTES, 9/19 AM: Altuve went 0 for 6 in a Thursday night of 9/18’s 2-1 13-inning Astros loss to the Indians at MMP, dropping his BA from .344 to .340.  As a result, Martinez of the Tigers used his off-day to pull within .007 points of the AL & MLB batting championship lead. Tonight, Friday, 9/19, the Astros begin a home weekend series with Seattle as the Tigers move to Kansas City to battle the Royals for 1st place in the ALC. Altuve and Martinez are both expected to play.

The Eagle Eye on Jose Altuve’s pursuit of the 2014 American League and MLB batting average championships will continue daily through the balance of the season. For now, it’s a two-man race between Altuve and Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers. Should that change, so will our reporting format. – Bill McCurdy

Twenty-Seven Springs Ago

September 18, 2014
Craig Biggio Houston Astros 1988-2007

Craig Biggio
Houston Astros
1988-2007

How soon we forget. How important it is we do not.

There isn’t a great player anywhere n the history of baseball that didn’t have to start somewhere with a hint of potential for good things to come, even it was only beating out hundreds of other candidates for the only contract issued to all of the 300 young men who showed up for a tryout in some backwater  bird scout’s country field. Heck! – Grover Cleveland Alexander had been working as a telephone lineman near his home town of Elba, Nebraska when he signed with the 1909 Galesburg Boosters of the Class D Illinois-Missouri League after manager Ed Wagner discovered “Old Pete” at the age of 22 as a result of a barnstorming game his club lost to a pick-up nine of Elbans at their home field because of the pitching mastery of a future Hall of Famer. Alexander rewarded manager/scout Walker by going 15-8 with a 1.36 ERA for Galesburg in 1909.

That is, at least, the way the coming of Alexander was portrayed in the 1952 film, “The Winning Team,” starring Ronald Reagan as Grover Cleveland Alexander. The truth may vary somewhat, as it often does in these baseball biographic movies that Hollywood cranked out during the Post-World War II years, but even a superficial examination of the facts on Alexander’s first minor league season seems to match up pretty well to the movie version. Even if there is some variance from reality, the story still serves as a model for how much luck and circumstance played into the signing of talent back during the slow mobility and primitive electronic communications era that the early 20th century business of this world had at its disposal. Talent was of utmost importance, even then, but it still didn’t matter much unless a potential player could manage to put himself in the right place at the right time for discovery, as old Pete did, in some way, once upon a time.

Twenty-seven years ago, in a slightly improved 1987 world of television, satellite communication, and jet airplane travel, contact between supply and demand aspects of all business ventures, including sports, was way better, but it still was not what it continues to grow and become at warp speed under the booming digital explosion of Internet possibilities that have come upon us in great waves of change in how we live our lives and change in our views of the world since the dawn of the 21st century.

Organized baseball was no exception to the rule.

On June 2, 1987, with the 22nd pick in the 1st round of the 1987 amateur player draft, the Houston Astros selected Craig Biggio of Seton Hall as their first choice. The Astros had scouted the small-framed catcher and found it impossible to pass him by, based upon both his batting record and his hustling athletic style of play. His potential for playing other positions, especially on the infield, was also obvious, but it was his bat that could not be ignored.

In 55 games for Seton Hall during the 1987 spring college baseball season, Biggio batted .407 and scored an amazingly high total of 97 runs. He also bashed  14 home runs and drove in 58 RBI on the college season, while chalking up 30 stolen bases in 32 attempts.  As a catcher, Biggio threw out only 11 of 40 base runners, but the Astros recognized his quick mechanics – and they recognized that all stolen bases are not the fault of the catcher. Craig Biggio was their man – in an era which made his club’s awareness of all the possibilities that came with this pick.

In a season for celebrating the coming of age and era of Jose Altuve, our next great Houston second baseman, we also want to make sure that we also remember the greatest player to date in Astro history, Mr. Craig Biggio, our near future first great All Astros Hall of Fame Member.

Thank you, Craig, for all the ways you make us proud of what you’ve done for this community, both on and off the field. And thank you too, Houston Astros, for keeping Craig Biggio a career man in the organization, and one with a possible future role to play as manager.

______________________________________________________________________

THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/17 10 620 213 .344
MARTINEZ TIGERS 9/17 10 531 177 .333

The Eagle Eye on Jose Altuve’s pursuit of the 2014 American League and MLB batting average championships will continue daily through the balance of the season. For now, it’s a two-man race between Altuve and Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers. Should that change, so will our reporting format. – Bill McCurdy

 

He Did It!

September 17, 2014
Most Hits by an Astro in a Single Season: Jose Altuve, 211 and counting with 11 games to play in 2014 on the morning of 9/17/2014.

Most Hits by an Astro in a Single Season: Jose Altuve, 211 and counting with 11 games to play in 2014 on the morning of 9/17/2014.

Jose Altuve did it. He went 2 for 5 in the Tuesday night, 9/16/14 Astros loss to Cleveland to boost his MLB-leading batting average to .343 – and a clean .010 point lead over his nearest competitor, Victor Martinez of Detroit at .333, who also bagged another two hits last night. Along the way, those two hits by Altuve pushed his season hits total to 211 – one more than the old club record held by the great Crag Biggio since 1998. In a display of beautiful sportsmanship, Biggio was even on hand at Minute Maid Park in the company of Nolan Ryan for the Astros’ 4-2 fall to Cleveland to congratulate Altuve after he broke the record with his second hit of the evening, a single up the middle in the seventh. Great class, all the way around.

“JOSE, CAN YOU SEE?” Now, with eleven games left to play in 2o14, its just a matter of tacking on more hits to the new record – and to getting enough of them to win the American League and MLB both leagues batting championships. With all the Astros bias we can muster, we wish you complete success in all of these quests, Jose.

WOW! It also occurs to us too that the physical giant that is  J.J. Watt of the Houston Texans of the NFL and the almost Gaedelianly small Houston Astro, Jose Altuve of MLB, may someday soon share something else in common among local professional athletes. – I wonder what that may be? –  And let’s not always see the same hands.

The Eagle is flying on short time notice this morning, but we shall leave you tables of comparison between Craig Biggio’s complete record year of 1998 and Jose Altuve’s new record in progress during the 2014 season – with 11 games left to play.

Have a great hump day, everybody!

 

ALTUVE-BIGGIO: MOST SEASON HIT STATS – THROUGH 9/16/2014

YEAR ASTRO GAMES AT BATS HITS B.A.
1998 CRAIG BIGGIO 162 646 210 .325
2014 JOSE ALTUVE 147 616 211 .343

 

WITH 11 GAMES LEFT IN 2014, SEASON, OTHER STAT COMPARISONS

YEAR ASTRO GAMES RUNS RBI 2BH 3BH HR SB CS OBP SLG
1998 C BIGGIO 162 123 88 51 2 20 50 8 .403 .503
2014 J ALTUVE 147 81 54 43 3 7 52 8 .379 .456

 

FURTHER STAT COMPARISONS

YEAR ASTRO GAMES BB IBB SO HBP SH SF OPS GDP
                     
1998 CRAIG BIGGIO 162 64 6 113 23 1 4 .906 10
                     
2014 JOSE ALTUVE 147 34 6 51 5 1 5 .835 16

 

 

Altuve! – Calling Attention to the Obvious

September 16, 2014
September 16, 2014: Jose Altuve of the Astros leads MLB with a .342 BA. He needs only two more hits to break Craig Biggio's single year record of 210 - and he has 12 games left in which to get them.

September 16, 2014: Jose Altuve of the Astros leads MLB with a .342 BA. He needs only two more hits to break Craig Biggio’s single year record of 210 – and he has 12 games left in which to get them.

Jose’ Altuve! – The man’s now got 209 hits on the season through all games of September 15, 2014. – With his Astros club now standing at 67-83 for the 2014 season, Altuve has twelve games left in the 2014 season to tie and break the Astros club record of 210 set by Craig Biggio back in 1998. – He’s most probably going to do it. – “Doncha” think?

Altuve’s also now leading both major leagues with a batting average of .342 and, unless he totally collapses in his final two weeks of a season in which, as recently as last night’s three-hit game in Houston against the Indians, he has shown no indication of so doing,  he is well on his way to becoming the first Houston Astro to bag both an MLB and a league batting average championship in club history.  

Here’s a batting average chart on the Top Ten MLB Hitters for Average in all games played through last night:

POS.   PLAYER   TEAM   AT BATS   HITS   B.A.
1   Jose Altuve   Astros   611   209   .342
2   Victor Martinez   Tigers   525   174   .331
3   Jose Abreu   White Sox   517   167   .323
4   Adrian Beltre   Rangers   500   161   .322
5   Michael Brantley   Indians   566   182   .322
6   Robinson Cano   Mariners   548   176   .321
7   Josh Harrison   Pirates   463   147   .317
8   Justin Morneau   Rockies   467   147   .315
9   Miguel Cabrera   Tigers   563   176   .313
10   Buster Posey   Giants   512   159   .311

 Please note too  that there are only five other eligible .300 hitters for a total of 15 players on course today for places on the magic .300 “good hitters’ mark” for 2014 – and another fourteen (14) hitting between .290 and .299 through this date with enough time remaining to crossover into baseball’s sunshine with good to super batting finishes.  In the meanwhile, Jose Altuve is on course to finish with a batting average number that would have made even grumpy old Rogers Hornsby proud. – Altuve’s 52 stolen bases also leads the SA (Stand Around) American League this season, but Dee Gordon of the NL Dodgers paces both majors with 62.

Jose Altuve is the Astros’ point of light on the long trail back to respectability and competitive-for-it-all reality in the big leagues. Let’s keeping hoping that names like Springer and Singleton also sharpen into MLB superstars and that we begin to gel a pitching staff from all those great young arms that begins to remind all of those superman staffs that served the Atlanta Braves from the early 1990’s forward on their way to the little celebration that a couple of them enjoyed last summer up in Cooperstown. The second coming of a Bobby Cox, Tony LaRussa, or Joe Torre type, but this time to Houston, wouldn’t hurt either.

In the meanwhile, let’s just be grateful for the here and now presence in Houston of a genuine batting champion to be, the Pride of Venezuela, Senor Jose Altuve!

 

 

To Hades with the Idea of a Designated Runner

September 15, 2014
In 1974-75, Herb Washington of the Oakland Athletics played his entire big league career, He scored 51 runs and stole 31 bases without ever making a single plate appearance.

In 1974-75, Herb Washington of the Oakland Athletics played his entire big league career, He scored 33 runs and stole 31 bases without ever making a single plate appearance.

The current Atlantic Independent Baseball League experimentation with rules changes that could help pick up the pace of the game has great merit. We can’t wait to hear a report on their end-of-season finding, conclusions, and recommendations to all of baseball too, but there is one change they’ve made that we reject per se – or out of hand – or however else one might express total rejection for what it does to the long view of comparative statistical records in the game. And that change in the ATL experiment is the one that includes the installation of a designated pinch runner for the catcher to save time lost to catchers who have to change their defensive equipment at the end of innings in which they are stranded as base runners when the third out occurs.

Say what? How much time does that really save? In big league games, at least, any catcher who cannot get “dressed” again within the time of an inning change and commercial break probably is only some guy who can’t tie his own shoes, anyway. This change simply isn’t worth the additional distortion it brings to comparative record keeping over the change in eras. Some of us are still unhappy over the prospect that we could have some terrific power hitter someday use the “DH” opening to break the records of Ruth, Aaron, and then Bonds without ever so much as catching a “can of corn” pop fly as a member of a  defense that he has never played. The addition of a Designated Runner (“DR”) leaves the door open  for some other track star of the future to come along and multiply distort the career runs scored and stolen bases totals for another runner-only guy who is able to stick on a roster over time. We say “other” because Herb Washington of the Oakland A’s already has given us a glimpse of what a “DR” could do in the 105 games he “played” back in 1974-75.

Hired as a “DH” because there was no other position he matched, Washington never batted or played an inning in the field. The young respected sprinter, however, did establish himself as Oakland’s unofficial “DR” by entering games as a pinch runner specialist. He ended up scoring 33 runs on the heels of stealing 31 bases in 48 attempts without ever making a single plate appearance or playing any field position during a single pitch in any game.

Washington’s stats average out to 51 runs scored  and 48 stolen bases over the course of a 162-game full season schedule. Had Washington been playing full-time (162 games without injury) for 10 seasons as a legalized “DR”, he might have been good for a career total of 510 runs scored and 480 stolen bases,  at worst. Our guess is  -that Washington’s numbers would have been higher as an official “PR” addition to the roster because he would have been best used as the runner for good hitters who could barely walk, let alone run –  perhaps serving as the “DR” for his partner in baseball opportunity crime, the wobbly legged “DH”.

It wouldn’t matter to us if the catcher’s “DR” proves out in the ATL study to save ten  minutes a game (We don’t think it will. How often do most catchers get on base, anyway, in a single game?). We don’t need to see some running phenom who couldn’t take a single HBP without crying – or locate a watermelon as it floated through the strike zone – or survive a crash into the center fielder on a misplayed fly ball behind second base play long enough to become eligible for the Hall of Fame as the first player in history to score 2,000 runs without ever making a single plate appearance.

If you like visuals, check out the stats in Baseball Reference.Com for Herb Washington and let your heart, mind, and soul tell you how this kind of data settles into your craw over a 10-20 year career expanse. It’s a simple job of extrapolation that is ugly enough.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/w/washihe01.shtml

Of course, maybe some of us are just too old-fashioned to appreciate the fact that baseball may need to do anything it can to speed up the tempo of today’s game to hold on to the fading attention spans of today’s distracted fans.

———————————————————

UPON FURTHER REVIEW …

The following update from Tal Smith came to me at 10:18 AM this same Monday – exactly eleven minutes after today’s column was posted. Thanks, Tal. I am very happy to be corrected in my mistaken impression and glad to learn that the designated runner for the catcher trial was overruled and never  implemented as part of this worthwhile effort by the Atlantic League to experiment with legitimate ways to pick up the pace of the game this season. – Regards, Bill McCurdy

Here’s exactly the way it was explained to me:

“The substitute runner for the catcher rule was NOT implemented by the Atlantic League. It was proposed by two members of the committee who were former ML players and long time managers-coaches in the Atlantic League, BUT the rule was subsequently tabled for many of the reasons you suggest in your column. I doubt that it will be adopted.” – Tal Smith

Bill Gilbert: Is .300 Hitter a Vanishing Breed?

September 14, 2014
Baseball Writer Bill Gilbert wonders if the .300 hitter is on his way down the dinosaur trail.

Baseball Writer Bill Gilbert wonders if the .300 hitter is on his way down the dinosaur trail.

Is the .300 Hitter a Vanishing Breed?

By Bill Gilbert

In the year 2000, 26 players hit for both power and average to reach the Triple Crown milestones of 30 home runs, 100 RBIs and a batting average of .300. In 2013, only three players reached all three milestones and in mid-season in 2014, three were on target for all three and six more were close. With three weeks to go in the 2014 season, only two players are on target and no others are close.

At mid-season, I raised the question, “Where have all the hitters gone?” We have some answers now. One place they have gone is the disabled list. At mid-season, there were four National League hitters contending for top offensive honors, Troy Tulowitski, Paul Goldschmidt, Andrew McCutcheon and Giancarlo Stanton. Tulowitski and Goldschmidt suffered season-ending injuries before they had enough plate appearances to qualify for the batting title. McCutcheon also spent time on the disabled list but has come back and is playing hurt. Stanton was the last man standing until this week when he was struck in the face by a pitch which likely will end his season. Consequently, no National League hitters will reach the triple milestones of 30 home runs, 100 RBIs and a batting average of .300 this year.

In the American League, two players are headed for triple milestones, Victor Martinez and Jose Abreu. Six others have 30+ home runs but have batting averages south of .290. Even Mike Trout, considered by many to be the best player in the game, has been unable to keep his batting average above .300 after being at .313 at mid-season. Two National League players also have 30+ home runs with batting averages under .290.

A comparison of offensive figures over the last 15 years is revealing:

_________________________________________________________________________________

CHANGES IN AVERAGE MLB OFFENSIVE PRODUCTION: 2000-2014.

YEAR R/G BAVG BB/9 OBP S0/9 SLG
2000 5.14 .271 3.75 .345 6.95 .437
2005 4.59 .265 3.13 .330 6.30 .419
2010 4.38 .257 3.25 .325 7.05 .403
2013 4.17 .253 3.01 .318 7.25 .396
2014 4.09 .251 2.91 .314 7.69 .388

KEY TO CATEGORIES:

 R/G = RUNS PER GAME

BAVG = BATTING AVERAGE

BB/9 = WALKS PER NINE INNINGS

OBP = ON BASE PERCENTAGE

SO/9 = STRIKE OUTS PER NINE INNINGS

SLG = SLUGGING AVERAGE

_________________________________________________________________________________

All of the measures are trending in the direction of reducing offensive production. The rate stats (BAVG, OBP and SLG) are all down as are the runs per team per game and walks per nine innings while the strikeout rate is up sharply. The trend appears to be accelerating and if it continues next year, we will see batting average dropping below .250 and runs per game dropping below 4.00 in 2015.

A number of reasons can be advanced for the decline. Stronger prohibitions against performance enhancing drugs (PED”s) are likely a factor but not one that can be measured. The pitching is stronger with the advent of pitches like the cutter. Every team appears to have a stable of fire-balling relievers with 95+ mph fastballs. Hitters are generally swinging for the fences and disdaining a two-strike approach to make contact to avoid striking out. Pitchers appear to be more aware of the negative effect of issuing walks and have sharpened their control.

While batting average is not the best measure of offensive performance, it is the most recognizable since it is the most widely reported. With batting average dropping by 20 points since 2000, a batter must hit 49 points better than average rather than 29 points above average to be a .300 hitter. If the trend continues next year, Major League Baseball will likely search for changes in an effort to restore “balance” as was done in 1969 by lowering the pitching mound and in 1973 by introducing the designated hitter in the American League.

Bill Gilbert

bgilbert35@yahoo.com

9/13/14

 

1993: Houston Baseball Dinner

September 13, 2014
ALLEN RUSSELL 1993 DINNER CHAIRMAN HOUSTON BASEBALL DINNER

ALLEN RUSSELL
1993 DINNER CHAIRMAN
HOUSTON BASEBALL DINNER

Thanks again to Bill Gilbert for supplying this data from the printed program for that 1993 evening, we are able to bring you today the latest annual event summary for another Houston Baseball Awards Dinner. So far, we have been able to cover every year, but 1986, for the Houston MLB dinners that began far back in 1961, but after today, we do have some holes to fill in the years beyond 1993 for the balance of history that remains on this event through its most recent presentation in 2012. If you have any information on the program and awards for 1994, 1995, or 1996, please get in touch with us here at The Pecan Park Eagle by e-mail at

houston.buff37@gmail.com

MILO HAMILTON 1993 MASTER OF CEREMONIES HOUSTON BASEBALL DINNER

MILO HAMILTON
1993 MASTER OF CEREMONIES
HOUSTON BASEBALL DINNER

The 1993 Houston Baseball Dinner was held on February 10, 1993 at the Westin Galleria Hotel in Houston. Houston Astros radio broadcaster (1986-1997 and counting) Milo Hamilton again served as Master of Ceremonies and former Houston Buff President Allen Russell (1946-1952) served as the dinner chairman. The three sponsors of the function included the Houston Chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America, the Astros Orbiters Fan Booster Club, and the Houston Astros Baseball Club, Inc.

The following is a brief pictorial summary of the awards and recognitions addressed at this latest version of the annual Houston baseball event:

DOUG JONES 1992 CLUB MVP HOUSTON ASTROS

DOUG JONES
1992 CLUB MVP
HOUSTON ASTROS

ROGER CLEMENS BOSTON RED SOX HOUSTON AREA MLB PLAYER OF 1992

ROGER CLEMENS
BOSTON RED SOX
HOUSTON AREA MLB PLAYER OF 1992

BOB GREEN (LOWER LEFT) BUFFS/COLTS/ASTROS RADIO ENGINEER 1993 LONG & MERITORIOUS SERVICE AWARD

BOB GREEN (LOWER LEFT)
BUFFS/COLTS/ASTROS
RADIO ENGINEER
1993 LONG & MERITORIOUS SERVICE AWARD

MILO HAMILTON 1993 SPECIAL MERIT AWARD

MILO HAMILTON
1993 SPECIAL MERIT AWARD

CASEY CANDAELE HOUSTON ASTROS 1993 "MR. HUSTLE" AWARD

CASEY CANDAELE
HOUSTON ASTROS
1993 “MR. HUSTLE” AWARD

BOB WATSON 1993 ASTRO ORBITERS AWARD

BOB WATSON
1993 ASTRO ORBITERS AWARD

The 1993 Houston Baseball Dinner also again honored the 1993 HAC Houston High School Pre-Season All Stars.

The list of table sponsors at the banquet again included Bill Gilbert and Larry Miggins, but now also added SABR (The Society for American Baseball Research) to their record of table purchase supporters. Almost without saying, but too worthy to the subject of needed to go unmarked:  The inclusion of high school player honorees has included a nice bump in individual and table ticket sales among family and friends wanting to see their children honored as the future of baseball. Between the kids and the big time big league names that show up as both honorees and attendees, the future of the Houston Baseball Dinners was looking pretty good back in the early 1990s.

That’s it for now, but please remember our requests for help for data  help on 1986 and any  of the dinners beyond 1993. If you have a stack of old HBD .programs anywhere near you, please look them over and sed what ever yo find to our attention by email text or attachment. When we finish this long-view search, we are hoping to put them all together as a data bank source on who and what has been honored in Houston baseball history by local annuals in the years that have passed since Houston was granted an expansion franchise in the National League.

Have a nice somewhat cooler weekend, Houston!

Friday Lagniappe

September 12, 2014

“Lagniappe” is a word I learned during my graduate school and post-grad year of work on the clinical faculty at Tulane Medical School in New Orleans a half century ago. It is a French derivative and it roughly means “small gift” – to both the giver and the recipient. South Louisiana news writers mostly used their lagniappe as the gift of small news that was both educational and entertaining in a way that met their  own needs to fill column space on slow news days. This isn’t really a slow news day here at The Pecan Park Eagle for we don’t view ourselves anyway as the “EXTRA! EXTRA!” breaking news source for anyone. As a result, some readers prefer to see our subject material as trivial – and it more often than not – plainly is – trivia delivered in an answer-included form,

Indulge  or pass. – It’s always up to each of us to choose where we graze our eyes, minds, and appetites:

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ast End Park near Clinton Drive may been the site of 4-game weekend series in June 1930 between the Houston Black Buffs and the Galveston Black Sand Crabs.

ast End Park near Clinton Drive may been the site of 4-game weekend series in June 1930 between the Houston Black Buffs and the Galveston Black Sand Crabs.

June 4, 1930: Black Sandcrabs Play Black Pelicans Today.

The Galveston Black Sandcrabs will open a two-game series this afternoon with the New Orleans Black Sandcrabs at 3:30 o’clock at School Park. Special seats will be reserved for white customers. *

Saturday they will open a four-game series at Houston with the Black Buffs,

~ Galveston Daily News, June 4, 1930, Page 9.

* Makes one wonder if those “special seats” for whites were down the far right field line where blacks were often forced to sit during the more common example of minority group segregation. We doubt it.

For more information on Negro League baseball in the Greater Houston-Galveston area during the long era of segregation, check out “Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961” at Barnes & Noble, Brazos Bookstore in Houston, or Amazon.Com. If you have any interest in Texas baseball history at all, you will be most glad you did. Our SABR publication by the Houston Larry Dierker Chapter is also available through Chapter Chairman Bob Dorrill. To order from Bob Dorrill, call 281-361-7874 or e-mail him at bdorrill@aol.com

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UH COMES TO LIFE IN GAME 2 WITH GRAMBLING;; ALMOST CATCHES #25 BYU IN GAME 3.

UH COMES TO LIFE IN GAME 2 WITH GRAMBLING;; ALMOST CATCHES #25 BYU IN COMEBACK RUN THAT FALLS SHORT IN GAME 3.

UH COUGARS HAVE REASON TO HOPE – EVEN AT 1-2 EARLY SEASON START

An early sluggish offense, no running game, not much blocking, terrible kicking, poor tackling, and sorry special teams play were tough obstacles to overcome last night at BYU, but UH finally found their suspenders and stopped falling down on the job. The trouble was – the wake up call near the end of the first half didn’t come until UH found themselves at the bottom of a desert hole that was 23 runs deep. That’s when two takeaways and a “Hail Mary” delivered on the last play of the first half brought the UH Cougars back to a mere 23-15 deficit going back to the clubhouse.

Old Man Mo died on UH in the 3rd quarter and they took a goose egg with them to the 4th quarter as BYU used a field goal in the 3rd quarter to stretch their lead going into the last chapter to 26-15. When the Utah home boys then settled behind QB Taysom Hill and produced a clock-eating TD to boost the lead for BYU up to 33-15, all seemed lost, but it wasn’t. Here came UH again, taking the ball away and executing an O’Korn to Greenberry TD pass that narrowed the gap to 33-22. Houston again then took the ball away on an interception that looked more like a “purse snatch and grab at the mall” deep in BYU territory, but then choosing not to go for it on a 4th and short near the red zone, UH elected instead to kick the field goal that brought them back to 33-25 with the clock working against them. UH got the ball one more time, but deep in their own territory. They couldn’t do anything with it in another “three and out” and BYU seized the opportunity from the UH punt to gratefully run out the game clock.

It was a loss for UH, but they never gave up – and they gave #25 BYU all they could handle. The UH Cougars will get better from here. All signs point to it. We believe.

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MY TWO NEW SEASON SEAT LOCATIONS AT TDECU AR ON THE FRONT ROW WITH NO ONE IN FRONT OR BEHIND US.

MY TWO NEW SEASON SEAT LOCATIONS AT TDECU ARE ON THE FRONT ROW WITH NO ONE IN FRONT OF US OR BEHIND US.

UH TOOK CARE OF MY SEASON TICKET EXCHANGE

We forgot to report that UH took care of our sight-line complaints last week prior to the Grambling game. Our two seats are now located in the spacious front single line only section of the upper deck.  There is nothing to obstruct our view now. No one is in front of us. No one is behind us. We have one single bench seat and one folding chair spot next to it – and we are sitting adjacent to our friend, Sam Quintero, who decided to buy into the same hind of situation adjacent to our seats, The exchange cost m nothing as my UH acted swiftly to make sure that we were happy with our new arrangement. And I very much am.

Thank you UH for being a first class family.

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HOME IS WHERE THE HERT IS.

HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS.

Sunset at TDECU Stadium on the UH campus feels to us like the beginning of good things to come – and not the end of the day to a life already spent. We embrace this hunger for hope today as fully, if not more so, than we possibly could have done 68 years ago, when we first saw this same sky, staring back over the west side of the old stadium wall that pointed its end zones north and south. I was an eight-year old kid in 1946, the year of UH’S first football season, and I was only there a couple of times because our Pecan Park neighborhood was fairly close to UH and my late dad apparently saw going to see the Cougars play their first game as something we could do together on a rare weekend he wasn’t working.

Thanks, Dad! I didn’t appreciate it so much back then, but I sure do now.

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Have a nice weekend, everybody!

 

Fun with College Football Fables

September 11, 2014
The Irish are the most secure ethnic group in America. Change the name of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish to Fighting Whatevers - and watch what happens over night on Twitter.!

The Irish are the most secure ethnic group in America. Change the name of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish to Fighting Whatever Others – and watch what happens over night on Twitter!

Thank you, Pat Callahan (STHS 1956) for most of the contributions listed below. This was fun, even if we did have to add or change a few, including the addition of one that spoofs my own precious UH for the sake of balancing the ridicule-wheel. With things like the Ray Rice mess dominating the sports headlines this week and those crazy Isis idiots running wild in the Middle East, we could all use a heavy dose of humor for the fact that, as a wise old friend of mine used to express it, life is sometimes revealed to  us as a tragicomic cosmic joke. We just better hope that this apparent peculiarity doesn’t also turn out to be the bottom line!”

Better still – keep the faith in something bigger and better than this gray plain – in a world where our souls and spirits can soar out of the grainy black and white images of our early lives and far into the watercolor burst of the creative life that awaits each of us who dare to seek its vision – at any stage of the journey. Find a light laugh or loud guffaw along the way, wherever you can, whenever you are able. – Life’s too sweet to swing and miss – and then sit down – to never rise again.

Rise up. The beauty of life belongs to those who keep getting back up and reaching for it again.

Now let’s move on to some college football fun fables:

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Ohio State’s Urban Meyer speaks on one of his players: “He doesn’t know the meaning of the word fear. In fact, I just saw his grades and he doesn’t know the meaning of a lot of words.”

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Why do Tennessee fans wear orange? So they can dress that way for the game on Saturday, go hunting on Sunday, and pick up trash on Monday.

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What does the average Alabama player get on his SATs? …. Drool.

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How many Michigan freshmen football players does it take to change a light bulb? None …. That’s a sophomore course.

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How did the Iowa football player die from drinking milk? The cow fell on him.

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A University of Arizona football player was almost killed yesterday in a tragic horseback-riding accident. He fell from a horse and was nearly trampled to death. Luckily, the manager of the Wal-Mart came out and unplugged the horse.

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What do you say to a University of Miami Hurricane football player dressed in a three-piece suit?  – “Will the defendant please rise.”

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What is the most common excuse for academic failure among University of Houston football players? – “Every time I went to the library, all three of our books were checked out.”

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If three Florida State football players are in the same car, who is driving? – The police officer.

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How can you tell if an Auburn football player has a girlfriend? – There’s tobacco juice on both sides of the pickup truck.

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What do you get when you put 32 Arkansas cheerleaders in one room? – A full set of teeth.

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University of Michigan Coach Brady Hoke is only going to dress half of his players for the game this week. – The other half will have to dress themselves.

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How is the Kansas State football team like an opossum? They play dead at home and get killed on the road.

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How do you get a former Illinois football player off your porch? – Pay him for the pizza.

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What are the longest three years of a Oklahoma University football player’s life? …. Freshman I, Freshman II, and Freshman III.

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What is the first thing those 5 star recruits want to know when they arrive on the University of Texas campus as freshmen? – “Coach Strong, will the hot coed who brings my breakfast in bed each morning be the same girl that comes in the night to whisper in my ear that I’ve been selected as a Heisman finalist?”

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How many Texas Aggie linebackers does it take to eat an armadillo? Answer: Two: – one to eat the armadillo – and one to watch for cars.

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 What are the Rice Owl prospects for the 2014 football season? – Beyond those who reside at the tiny braniac college on South Main, who gives a hoot?

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Have a great Thursday, folks – and “GO COUGARS! BEAT BYU on national TV tonight! … Pretty please! *

 

* The UH Cougars are a long shot tonight, but my loyalty is what it is. I can still hope against probability – even when the odds are stacked way, way against my Alma Mater. The only sure thing is that the Cougars will win tonight – since “Cougars” is the nickname for both BYU and UH.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Eddie Gaedel Society, Spokane Chapter #1

September 9, 2014
This Eddie Gaedel statue was unveiled at the Society's 2013 Third Annual Meeting at O'Doul's Irish Grille & Pub in Spokane WA on August 19. 2013.

This Eddie Gaedel statue was unveiled at the Society’s 2013 Third Annual Meeting at O’Doul’s Irish Grille & Pub in Spokane WA on August 19. 2013.

The plaque on the above featured statue reads as follows:

EDDIE GAEDEL

ST. LOUIS BROWNS

AUGUST 19, 2013

SR. PAULA TURNBULL, S.N.J.M.

ARTIST

EDDIE GAEDEL SOCIETY SPOKANE CHAPTER #1

O’DOHERTY’S IRISH PUB

AUGUST 19, 2013

Like the little big man it honors, The Eddie Gaedel Society, Spokane Chapter #1 sprang up like an overnight not-too-high ascending mushroom in the larger world of baseball joy back in 2011. One imaginative good fellow named Tom Keefe of Spokane, Washington was its founding father and he remains to this day in the to-the-edges-of-significance in baseball history, the organization’s only president.

We first heard from Tom Keefe last month, August 25, 2014, after he surfed his way onto our blog column archives at The Pecan Park Eagle and discovered “The Ballad of Eddie Gaedel” that we wrote years ago and published here for the first time on April 24, 2010.

“I hope we can get the crowd to sing this at next year’s 5th annual meeting of the Eddie Gaedel Society, Spokane Chapter #1 at O’Doherty’s Irish Grille and Pub here in Spokane (on August 19,2015),” Keefe wrote. “Eddie (Gaedel) deserves to be in the Baseball Hall of Fame!” Well, even if you personally have some misgivings about any player going into the Hall of Fame whose only active history was one plate appearance and a four-ball walk, real blue-root baseball fans will hardly argue with O’Keefe’s passion for the idea of baseball honoring its smallest competitor of all time for his perfect record. Gaedel the batter never struck out, but how could he have done so? He never even saw a called or missed swinging strike. Our cultural angst among the purists, we humbly shall argue, is best summed up in these lines from our “The Ballad of Eddie Gaedel:”

Oh, how the purists hated,
Adding little Eddie’s name,
To the big book of records,
“Gaedel” bore a blush of shame!

Now when you look up records,
Look up Eddie’s O.B.P.!
It reads a cool One Thousand,
Safe for all eternity.

Today I find myself happily drafted as the first Texas delegate member of The Eddie Gaedel Society, Spokane Chapter #1. As such, I have accepted and since received a lot of written information on the club, plus my very own membership tee shirt and card, compliments of President Tom Keefe.  In return, I will do what I am able here in Houston to spread awareness to others about the benefits of belonging to The Eddie Gaedel Society, Spokane Chapter #1. As far as I’m concerned, there’s only one over-riding reason to belong to any baseball cause support group and that is this – Does belonging to the organization contribute to my joy in life in general and to my joyful memories of the sandlot days in particular? I don’t have time for anything that turns play into work – or joy into agony – but the Gaedel Movement sounds like nothing  shy of adventure.

And to me, Tom Keefe and his Gaedelians sound like fun. – Let the recess from all strife begin – and let it last forever, whether I can get to O’Doherty’s next August 19th – or not – and I hope I can make it. Whether I do, or not, please accept my hope and best wishes for a group singing of “The Ballad of Eddie Gaedel” by The Eddie Gaedel Society, Spokane Chapter #1 next August 19th – or at any other time the group convenes to lift a few and toast the man. Also, let me know if you need any coaching on matching the lyrics with the melody.

For more information on the Eddie Gaedel Society and get in touch with President Tom Keefe. You will find Keefe’s contact info at the website.

http://takeawalkeddie.com/

BOOK SIGNING TONIGHT! Have a nice Tuesday, everybody – and if you are in Houston tonight, drop by the Brazos Bookstore on Bissonett at 7:00 PM. Mike Vance, Bob Dorrill, and I will be there to discuss and sign sold copies of our new book, “Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961.”