Posts Tagged ‘Billy Buscha’

Three Names from the 1921 Houston Buffs

May 21, 2012

Opening Day 1921, West End Park, Houston.
– Courtesy of the Billy Buscha Family.

Saturday’s May Meeting at Minute Maid Park in Houston was a blast, indeed, and one of the highlights was the introduction of the panorama photo of the Houston Buffs and the visiting Galveston Sand Crabs as they prepared to square off at West End Park on Opening Day of the 1921 Texas League baseball season. The presentation was mad by Billy Behler of LaGrange, Texas, whose great-grandfather, Billy Buscha, was a pitcher for the ’21 Buffs. His family owns the negative to this previously unpublicized excellent picture of West End Park and Behler is now busy producing a limited edition print of the work for the sake of raising money for a memorial to his great-grandfather.

Another claim is made for the photo, but that claim must go unaddressed here until The Pecan Park Eagle receives the further documentation we have requested that could either verify, or come closer to banishing reasonable doubt. It’s nothing personal here in this request for evidence that goes beyond testimonial or pictorial reference alone.. It’s simply a statement of our SABR commitment to establishing hard proof for all historical claims.

Regardless of how the pending point turns out, the photo is valuable in itself. It also raised questions Saturday as to what players may have come from that 1921 Buffs team who either came to, or went on from, that club to bigger names in baseball. With great assistance from SABR’s Mark Wernick on our first entry, here are three names from the 1921 Houston Buffs that stretched a little broader than the boundaries of that single Texas League season:

George Whiteman, LF

 George Whiteman was 38 years old by the time he stood in that line as an outfielder for the 1921 Buffs. He would play a full season for the Buffs in 1921 and then return in 1922 to repeat his performance as an everyday player for the entire run. Whiteman, in fact, would go on to play in the minor leagues for other clubs for several years hence, finally retiring at the end of the 1929 season at the age of 46.

Prior to Opening Day 1921, Whiteman appeared in 86 games for the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox over the three spread out seasons of 1907, 1913, and 1918. He batted a respectable .271 for his big league time and, as Mark Wernick  pointed out on his note to my column yesterday, Whiteman also started every game of the 1918 World Series for the Boston Red Sox.

George Whiteman apparently made Houston his home in retirement too. He died here in 1947 at the age of 64.

Ray Blades, CF

Ray Blades was only 24 and a season away from his 10-year big league career (1922-28, 1930-32) with the parent club St. Louis Cardinals on Opening Day 1921. Blades would go on to play for the first Cardinals World Series championship club of 1926 and again on their 1931 championship club. He would also player for two World Series losing Cardinal clubs in 1928 and 1930, but, my gosh, there really isn’t any losing to a ten season big league career that includes four World Series stops in the baseball world spotlight.

Ray Blades batted .301 for his major league career.

Jim Bottomley, 1B

  Jim Bottomley was best known for his sunny personality and the jaunty way he wore his baseball cap and smiled at everyone. At the age of 21 for the ’21 Buffs, “Sunny Jim” was also only a season away from his long career with the St. Louis Cardinals and some shorter finishing time with the Cincinnati Reds and St. Louis Browns (1922-1937).

Bottomley also would play for the Cardinals’ first two World Series champions of 1926 and 1931 and also be there for two World Series losing years of 1928 and 1930.

After hitting .310 lifetime in the big leagues, Bottomley was selected for the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee in 1974. And that’s some pretty tall cotton for the spikes of a young man who was only 21 when he took the field at West End Park for the Houston Buffs back in 1921.

Congratulations again to yo too, Billy Buscha. – You played with some pretty solid baseball guys back in 1921. These guys, and others among you, were not bad at all.

SABR At The Ballpark Scripts Perfect Day

May 20, 2012

After the meeting in the board room at the ballpark’s Union Station, our view of the game from behind the Astros bullpen in right center field at Minute Maid Park. was good enough. I just had the misfortune of being the only aisle seat out for a line of fans who all suffered from the dual afflictions of unquenchable thirsts and unrelenting bladders.

When it gets down to the really important stuff, who could have asked for anything more?  We of the Larry Dierker SABR chapter pretty much had it all our way yesterday at the May 2012 meeting: a day at the ballpark with family and friends; a meeting that placed us directly in touch with the vision of Jeff Luhnow, the new Astros General Manager; some walk-off out-of-the-park status of change comments by Astros radio broadcaster Dave Raymond; and a beautiful from-the-heart and generationally connected presentation of an incredible West End Park photo from 1921 as shown by Billy Behler of LaGrange, Texas, the great-grandson of Bill Buscha, a pitcher for the 1921 Houston Buffs; and an exciting game in  which the scraping young Astros played exactly as Dave Raymond described them, coming back for an 0-4 deficit to homer they way past the big goats on the hill, the Texas angers, by a final score of 6-5.. All of that joy and the quiet satisfaction of walking outside after the game to be duly reminded by our cityscape, Thank God,  that we live in Houston, not Dallas – regardless of what all those “Hamilton & Co.” blue and re jerseys we saw on the inside suggested. The double play ending of the game was worth the price of admission in self, with Astros closer Meyers running down Ranger shortstop Andrus at second to end the monkey business at Astros 6 – Rangers 5.

There must have been more than 50 members in attendance. Thanks again to chapter leader Bob Dorrill the program was strong, attractive, and nothing but easy fun. Each member also went home with a new Nolan Ryan Bobble Head figurine. And most competed for prizes in the monthly trivia contest.

This photo of Dave Raymond is from an earlier MMP event, but the SABR radio air king was at the top of his game again yesterday, calling all the right shots on how and why the 2012 Astros are playing so much better than the 2011 club. The team then went out and did just about everything Raymond claimed were their capabilities. When it comes to the ripple of future personnel settlements, put me squarely on the “KEEP RAYMOND – AND MAKE HIM THE MAIN RADIO AIR GUY” side.

That’s me (L) with Billy Behler and the beautiful 1921 panorama of Opening Day at West End Park in Houston between the Houston Buffaloes and the Galveston Sand Crabs.

Someone asked yesterday for the names of notable Buffs from the 1921 team picture. – To that request, I say, please go to Baseball Reference.Com immediately and check that question, and any others like it, for yourself. The 1921 club that included Behler’s great-grandfather, pitcher Bill Buscha, also included a 21-year-old first baseman named Sunny Jim Bottomley and a 24-year-old outfielder named Ray Blades. Both men went on to outstanding careers with the St. Louis Cardinals.

Bill “The Bulldog” Buscha (far right) in photo with army buddies during WWi.

Bill Buscha’s young career was pretty much over, even at the time the 1921 glorious West End Park panorama photo was taken. A short time earlier, as verified by former Buffs General Manager Fred Ankenman in a Chronicle story written years later around the time of Buscha’s death from accidental drowning, the 1921 Buffs were playing an exhibition spring training game against the St. Louis Cardinals.

With Buscha pitching, Jack Fournier of the Cardinals had reached third base with one out and Johnny Levan was batting. Levan then lashed a wicked liner through the box that bounced off Buscha’s head, directly back to the catcher for an out. The Buffs catcher then threw the ball quickly to third, doubling off Fournier before he could return to the bag after the catch,

Papers at the time kidded that it should really have been recorded as a triple play since pitcher Buscha was also rendered “out” on the play, but the long-term results were not really funny. Buscha suffered visual, balance, and performance problems after the injury and was soon out of baseball.

No matter what. Bill Buscha was still there in baseball long enough to make a great-grandson proud of him nearly a century later, proving once again, that the wake of baseball rumbles forever down the ages. And yesterday, we were all a part of this particular shake. Who among those at West End that day in 1921 could have known that the day would be seen and celebrated again – just a few downtown blocks away – on May 19, 2012?

Thank you, Billy Behler, for bringing Bill Buscha of the Buffs back into the light of day!

Jeff Luhnow, General Manger, Houston Astros

Jeff Luhnow was our principal speaker and – what an infectiously focused man he turns out to be. Bright and intellectually ranging, but down to earth, connected, and pragmatic, the man has travelled through several careers before he found himself in baseball, and he has drawn upon each  experience  to help him improve at what seems to be his overriding ambition: to get the best results possible from the best decisions available to the organization. Luhnow is not the “Money-ball” stats-only guy that some have unjustly labeled him. He’s more of an “everything can teach us something” fellow, even if we do prioritize the importance of certain information sources over others. We learn from our successes and we learn from our failures. The trick is to grow from these in ways that force us to learn and take responsibility for the lessons of each policy, plan, contract, hire, or goal we put in motion.

I don’t know if the man plays chess, but, if he does, he’s got to be a force. It’s going to be as much fun to watch how the club makes decisions now as it will be to see the results on the field. All I can say for certain after Saturday is – it’s not going to be dull.

At the game, we had to share space with all of those famous Rangers fans who had descended upon us from the Dallas area. At least, I hope they were from Dallas. I would be most embarrassed to consider that Houston’s bandwagon faction would stoop so low as to adopt the Rangers now – and just because the Astros are going through a rebuilding phase.

Like it or not, you could already see from the first two games this weekend that the Astros-Rangers rivalry is going to heat up after this season. Playing against each other for best upside position in the same division is going to mean a lot more to fans than a dad gum meaningless silver boot prize ever could or will. That’s my take, at any rate.

“ROOT. ROOT. ROOT.” … but for whom? – Even the Mike McCroskey section was stacked with Rangers fans.

Closer Meyers gets pinch hitter Gentry on a fly ball to retire a Rangers threat in the 8th. In the 9th, Meyers would run down and tag Andrus to end the game.

Houston, Our Houston, Our Most Beloved Houston.
May 19, 2012.

At the end of the day, still pumped by the spirited way in which the Astros came fighting back to take a 6-5 victory in Game Two of the Rangers Series, it was just nice to hit the streets outside and see that beautiful home-is-here face of the old Gulf Building staring back at me from the base of all his now much taller modern brothers. That’s the same way he looked after Buff games sixty years or so ago. The Gulf just didn’t have quite so much company in his area back then.Nevertheless, the Gulf and Esperson buildings will always be the heart of this city for some of us.

Thanks, Houston, for a beautiful baseball day and night. As always, we press forward with the dream: Our big day will come. We simply must remain steadfast and patient as always.