Baseball Daily Miscellany

Diminutive snippets and quirks from baseball history

Month: April, 2012

The Great Players (1)

Johnny Bench

Johnny Lee Bench was born in Oklahoma City on 7 December 1947. After his father had identified that his son’s best route to achieving their ambition of him becoming a major-league ballplayer was as a catcher, he was selected by the Cincinnati Reds in the 1965 amateur draft and made his major-league debut on 28 August 1967 against the Philadelphia Phillies. The following season, Bench succeeded Tom Seaver as the 1968 National Rookie of the Year, having completed the season with a .275 batting average, 15 home runs and 82 Runs Batted In. But it was as a catcher that Bench truly excelled. He is considered to be one of the best catchers the game has seen and was the pioneer of one-handed catching now prevalent in the modern game. Not one to mix his words, he once boasted “I can throw out any runner alive”. His career total of 10 Gold Gloves (won consecutively from 1968-77) certainly goes some way to evidencing such modesty. In 1997, he was voted by onto the Major League Baseball All-Time Team as Catcher over and above illustrious names such as Yogi Berra, Roy Campanella and Carlton Fisk. He was selected for the All-Century Team in 1999 and played in 14 All-Star games.

His best season statistically was 1970 when he won his first National League MVP (his second followed in 1972), leading the league with 45 home runs. He was also a key member of the Red’s 1975 & 1976 World Series Championship teams, which were fondly nicknamed “The Big Red Machine”, boasting a powerhouse line-up including Pete Rose, Tony Perez and Joe Morgan as well as Bench himself. Catchers are notoriously subject to enormous physical strain with knee injuries being particularly prevalent due to the awkward crouching position they assume behind the plate. Thus, in 1978 Bench began to play more and more regularly at first or third base to ease his knee problems. He retired in 1983, becoming a broadcaster and after-dinner speaker. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1989 in his first year of eligibility, fulfilling the prediction of Ted Williams who had signed an autograph for Bench in 1969 which read “To Johnny Bench, a sure Hall of Famer”.

Most All-Star Games

Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, Stan Musial

Brothers in Arms

The Niekro brothers, Phil and Joe have the most combined wins for brothers pitching in the Major Leagues with 539. They are closely followed by the Perry brothers, Gaylord and Jim with 529 wins between them.

These siblings are also the only pitching brothers to achieve the accolade of each brother having won 20 games in the same season; the Perry’s having accomplished the feat in 1970 which was matched by the Niekro’s in 1979. Gaylord Perry and Phil Niekro were both later inducted into the Hall of Fame.

In the Hall (1)

Baseball Hall of Fame members who were inducted wearing an Oakland Athletics cap:

Player Primary Position Nickname Year of induction
Dennis Eckersley Pitcher Eck 2004
Roland Fingers Pitcher Rollie 1992
Rickey Henderson Left Fielder The Man of Steal 2009
Richard Williams Manager Dick 2008

The Athletics relocated to Oakland, California for the 1968 season after a relatively unsuccessful 13 year stint in Kansas City. Success soon followed as the A’s won three consecutive World Series Titles from 1972 to 1974.

Wife Swap

In March 1973, New York Yankees’ pitchers Mike Ketich and Fritz Petersen announced to a stunned spring training press conference audience that they had swapped wives. Included in this unique family exchange were two children apiece as well the family dogs. The trade faired better for Petersen who later married Ketich’s wife, Suzanne whilst Ketich’s affair with Marilyn Petersen soon fizzled out.

Top Career Home Run Hitters

Player Teams Home Runs
Barry Bonds Pittsburgh Pirates, San Francisco Giants, 1986-2007 762
Hank Aaron Milwaukee Braves, Atlanta Braves, Milwaukee Brewers, 1954-1976 755
Babe Ruth Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees, Boston Braves, 1914-1935 714
Willie Mays New York Giants, San Francisco Giants, New York Mets, 1951-1973 660
Ken Griffey, Jr Seattle Mariners, Cincinnati Reds, Chicago White Sox, Seattle Mariners 1989-2010 630
Alex Rodriguez* Seattle Mariners, Texas Rangers, New York Yankees, 1994-present 629
Sammy Sosa Texas Rangers, Chicago White Sox, Chicago Cubs, Baltimore Orioles, Texas Rangers, 1985-2007 609
Jim Thome* Cleveland Indians, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago White Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers, Minnesota Twins, Cleveland Indians, Philadelphia Phillies 1991-present 604
Frank Robinson Cincinnati Reds , Baltimore Orioles, Los Angeles Dodgers, California Angels, Cleveland Indians, 1956-1976 586
Mark McGwire Oakland Athletics, St. Louis Cardinals, 1986-2001 583
Harmon Killebrew Washington Senators/Minnesota Twins, Kansas City Royals 1954-1975 573
Rafael Palmeiro Chicago Cubs, Texas Rangers, Baltimore Orioles, Texas Rangers, Baltimore Orioles, 1986-2005 569
Reggie Jackson Kansas City Athletics, Oakland Athletics, New York Yankees, California Angels, 1967-1986 563
Manny Ramirez* Cleveland Indians, Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers, Chicago White Sox, Tampa Bay Rays, Oakland Athletics 1993-present 555
Mike Schmitt Philadelphia Phillies, 1972-1989 548
Mickey Mantle New York Yankees, 1951-1968 536
Jimmie Foxx Philadelphia Athletics,
Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies, 1925-1945
534
Ted Williams Boston Red Sox 1939-1960 521
Willie McCovey

 

San Francisco Giants, San Diego Padres, Oakland Athletics, San Francisco Giants, 1959-1980 521

 

Frank Thomas Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics, Toronto Blue Jays, Oakland Athletics 1990-2008 521
Active players*    

 “When I hit a home run I usually didn’t care where it went. So long as it was a home run was all that mattered”

Mickey Mantle, New York Yankees 1951-1968

 

1984

In 1984, perennial underachievers the Chicago Cubs made their first post season appearance since 1945. They took the first two games against the San Diego Padres at Wrigley Field in the best of five National League Championship Series and only had to win one game of the next three to move into the World Series. They promptly lost all three games at the Jack Murphy stadium.

The ensuing World Series was a match up between Managers Sparky Anderson of the Detroit Tigers and Dick Williams of the Padres. The winning manager would be the first ever to have won a World Series title with both an American League and National League team. Anderson prevailed as the Tigers took the series 4-1.

Midget Gem

After purchasing the fledging St Louis Browns in 1951, eccentric owner Bill Veeck tried some outrageous publicity stunts in an effort to lure the crowds back to Sportsman’s Park. His most notorious stunt was to allow a 3 foot, 7 inch midget by the name of Eddie Gaedel to bat in second game of a double header against the Detroit Tigers in August 1951. Gaedel was promptly walked by amused pitcher Bob Cain and did not come to the plate again. His contract was declared void by the American League and his appearance struck from the record books the next day. Although Gaedel never played again, his record was officially reinstated a year later and his official statistics show an on-base percentage of 1.000. He earned $100 for his only major league appearance.

Short plate appearance