Monday, June 8, 2015

Oriole Bonus Baby, Frank "Noodles" Zupo

Frank Zupo signed as a bonus baby with the Orioles in 1957.  I was looking through some of my Topps 1958 cards and I came across his card and saw that his birthday was August 29, 1939, so he would have played as a teenager during the 1957 season.

Topps 1958 Frank Zupo Card #229
 
Frank Zupo signed with the Baltimore Orioles on June 13, 1957, for a bonus reported at $30,000, but was actually $50,000.  Zupo had just graduated from Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory in San Francisco.  Prior to signing the contract with the Orioles, Zupo had been scouted by all 16 Major league teams and received offers from 13 teams.  He also had scholarship offers from Stanford and  University of California, to play baseball, but he choose to sign with the Orioles because he wanted to play baseball and didn't want to go to school.
 
Since Zupo was signed as a bonus baby, he immediately reported to the Orioles and was added to their Major league roster.  Upon has arrival, his teammates gave him the nickname "Noodles". 
 
Zupo made his Major league debut on July 1, 1957, as a 17 year-old, against the Yankees.  With the scored tied at 2, Zupo entered the game as a defensive replacement in the top of the 10th inning.  In that game, together with Oriole pitcher, George Zuverink, Zupo formed the first "Z" battery in Major league history.  In the top of that inning, batting with one out for the Yankees, Mickey Mantle homered to give the Yankees a 3 - 2 lead, the final score in the game.      
 
Zupo first Major league at bat came on July 6.  In the 7th inning, he pinch hit, against the Red Sox, batting for Orioles reliever Billy O'Dell.  He grounded to first base off Red Sox starter, Frank Sullivan, in the Orioles 11 - 2 loss.  Then on August 11, when making an appearance in his fourth game, Zupo got his first major league hit, in the Orioles 7 - 2 loss to the Yankees.  After entering the game in the seventh inning, as a defensive replacement for Orioles starting catcher, Gus Triandos, Zupo singled to lead off the bottom of the ninth inning, getting the hit off Yankees reliever, Bob Grim.  This was Zupo only hit during the 1957 season.
 
As the season was winding down, on September 18, Zupo got his first start of the year.  In the Orioles' 7 - 5 loss to the White Sox, Zupo caught all nine innings of the game.  He had three plate appearances during the game, and got no hits on two official at bats.  Zupo did walk with one out in the 7th inning and came around and scored the Orioles' third run on pinch hitter Bob Boyd's single. 
 
This was the last game Zupo played in during the 1957 season.  For the year, Zupo played in ten games,  batting .083, with one hit in 12 at bats, and he scored two runs with no home runs and no RBI.  He spent 26 innings catching and the Orioles won two and loss eight in the games that he played. 
 
During the 1958 season, Zupo played in the minor leagues for different Oriole affiliates, to get more seasoning.  He started the season with Knoxville Smokies of the South Atlantic League.  He also played parts of his season with Louisville Colonels of the American Association and the Wilson Tobs of the Carolina League.
 
Here is Zupo's minor league batting record from the 1958 season. 

Team
Games
At Bats
Runs
Hits
Home Runs
RBI
Batting Ave.
Knoxville 
35 
106 
10 
 29
 2
 16
 .274 
Louisville 
55 
145 
15 
32 
 0
 5
 .221 
Wilson 
18 
31 
 6
 2 
5
.290
 Season Totals  
108 
282 
31 
70 
 26
.248 
 
In September of the 1958 season, Zupo was back with the Orioles.  On September 13, in a game against the Tigers, he replaced Gus Triandos as a defensive replacement in the bottom of the 5th inning.  During that game, in two at bats, facing Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Bunning both times, Zupo flied out to centerfield in the 7th inning and struck out in the 9th inning.  The Tigers won the game 13 - 2.  This was the only Major league game that Zupo appeared during the 1958 season.
 
Zupo 1959 season was spent in the minor leagues when he played with four different teams, all Oriole affiliates.  The teams he played for included: Stockton Ports of the California League, the Yakima Braves and Salem Senators of the Northwest League, and the Ashville Tourists of the South Atlantic League.
 
Here is Zupo's batting record from the 1959 season.  

Team
Games
At Bats
Runs
Hits
Home Runs
RBI
Batting Ave.
Stockton 
 43
 103
 22
 20
 2
10 
.194 
Yakima & Salem 
 25
 69
 11
 15 
 2 
.217
Ashville 
 7
16
 -
.188
Season Totals  
 75
188 
 -
38 
 -
.202 

Zupo's 1960 season was spent in Stockton, the Orioles' Class C affiliate, and a member of the California League.  This is his batting record from that year. 
 
Team
Games
At Bats
Runs
Hits
Home Runs
RBI
Batting Ave.
Stockton 
106 
 364
52 
116 
 7
69 
.313 
 

Then in 1961, Zupo was on the Orioles' roster as the season begin.  He played in the first game of the Orioles season, on April 11, as they opened against the expansion Angels, in their franchise's first game.  In the bottom of the 9th inning, with two outs, Zupo entered the game as a pinch hitter for Orioles relief pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm.  He was walked by Angel starter Eli Grba, who retired the Orioles next batter, Jackie Brandt, as Grba finished his complete game, an Angels 7 - 2 win.  First baseman Ted Kluszewski lead the Angels to victory with two home runs and five RBI.

The next game that Zupo appeared in was on April 16, when he entered the first game of a doubleheader against the Twins.  As a defensive replacement for Orioles starting catcher, Gus Triandos, he entered the lineup in the top of the 7th inning.  During the game, he had two at bats.  With two outs in the bottom of the 7th inning, Zupo doubled to left field off Twins starting pitcher, Pedro Ramos.  Orioles' next batter, shortstop Ronnie Hanson, doubled to left field, plating Zupo with the Orioles' 4th run of the game, and Zupo first run of the season.  Then in the 9th inning, in Zupo's second at bat of the game, facing Twins' reliever Ray Moore, he popped out to shortstop, as the Twins defeated the Orioles 10 - 5.

Zupo as played in the second game of the doubleheader that day.  He come into the game to catch in the top of the tenth inning.  In the top of the 11th inning, Twins' shortstop Zoilo Versalles hit a two-run home run as the Twins swept the doubleheader with a 6 - 4 victory.  Zupo struck out leading off the bottom of the 11th inning as Twins reliever Charlie Stubbs retired the Orioles in order to earn his first save of the season.

On April 24, in a game against the Indians, Zupo entered the lineup in the top of the 8th inning as a defensive replacement for catcher, Gus Triandos.   In the bottom of the 8th inning, off Indians' starting pitcher Jim Perry, Zupo singled to left field, lifting his batting average for the season to .500.  The Indians won the game 5 - 1 aided by Bubba Phillips' 6th inning grand slam home run.

On May 9, Zupo caught the 9th inning of the Orioles' 13 - 5 victory over the Twins.  At age 21, Zupo's had appeared in his last Major league game.  In the 1961 season for the Orioles, Zupo played in five games, batting .500 (2 hits in 4 at bats) with a double and scoring one run. 

For the remainder of the 1961 season, Zupo played with the two minor league Oriole affiliates, the Rochester Red Wings of the International League and Victoria/Ardmore Rosebuds of the of the Texas League.     

Here is Zupo's minor league record from 1961.

Team
Games
At Bats
Runs
Hits
Home Runs
RBI
Batting Ave.
Rochester 
 40
107 
12 
22 
.206 
Victoria/Ardmore 
 29
67 
22 
1
.328 
Season Totals   
 69
174 
19 
44 
17 
.253 

In 1962, Zupo played for the Austin Senators of the Texas League, a Braves' AA affiliate and he also returned to Knoxville and played for the Smokies, now a single A affiliate of the Tigers.

Here is his batting record from the 1962 season.

Team
Games
At Bats
Runs
Hits
Home Runs
RBI
Batting Ave.
Austin
 26
75
6
19
.253 
Knoxville
 9
18 
0
.111 
Season Totals   
35
93 
21 
.225 

Zupo spend the 1963 and 1964 seasons in the minor leagues.  In 1963, he played for the York White Roses of the Eastern League, the Tigers' AA affiliate, and in 1964 he played for the Dallas Rangers of the Pacific Coast League, the Athletics' AAA affiliate.

Here is his batting record from those two seasons.

Team
Games
At Bats
Runs
Hits
Home Runs
RBI
Batting Ave.
 1963
York 
89 
284 
27 
77 
41 
 .271
 1964
Dallas 
106 
297 
27 
76 
30 
.256 

At the end of the 1964 season, at age 24, Zupo had played his last professional baseball game.  After his baseball career, Zupo held many different jobs including a fishing guide, business owner, and wholesale leather proprietor.

During his Major league career, Zupo appeared in 16 games with a batting average of .167 (three hits in 18 at bats) scoring three runs, with a double and no home runs or RBI.  Zupo caught a total of 38 innings in 13 games.  When asked if he had any regrets, Zupo response was "Not really.  I wish I have had a better chance to play."     
    
Other bloggers have published articles about Frank Zupo's Topps 1958 card. 
 
I found a 2011 blog from The Shlabotnik Report commenting about the card. 
 
 
 
Also the Really Bad Baseball Cards blog mentioned the card in this Unibrow (50s Version) post from April 2014.
 



Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Cardinals Bonus Baby, Von McDaniel "Mr. Vonderful"

I was looking through some of my Topps 1958 cards and came across a card for Von McDaniel.  McDaniel, a right handed pitcher, intrigued me as I noted that his birthday was April 18, 1939.  So when he pitched during the 1957 season, he would have been only 18 years old. 

Topps 1958, Von McDaniel Card #65
 
 
I found that McDaniel was a Cardinal bonus baby, who was signed on May 23, 1957, receiving a $50,000 signing bonus, which would be worth about $420,000 in today's dollars.

 
 
Just two weeks after graduating from Arnett High School in Hollis, Oklahoma, McDaniel joined the Cardinal pitching staff that already included his 21 year-old brother, Lindy.  Soon thereafter, the Cardinals must have thought that it was money well spent.  In his Major league debut, on June 13, 1957, McDaniel pitched four shutout innings in relief of Cardinal starter Vinegar Bend Mizell in a 8 - 1 loss to the Phillies.   Von took the mound and struck out the first Phillies batter he faced. After a ground out and a single to center field, he proceeded to retire the next ten batters in order.  McDaniel ended the game giving up one hit, striking out four (besetting each of the Phillies' battery mates, pitcher, Jack Stanford and, catcher, Stan Lopata, twice).
 
Three days later, on June 16, McDaniel returned to the mound, again pitching four shutout innings in relief, this time for starter Murry Dickson.  McDaniel recorded his first Major league win in the Cardinals 7 - 6 victory over the Dodgers.  He allowed one hit and struck out five while walking no batters.  During the game, he struck out future Hall of Famers Duke Snider and Pee Wee Reese.  McDaniel entered the game in the bottom of the sixth inning with the score tied at six.  Ken Boyer, the Cardinal third baseman,  seventh home run of the season, leading off the top of the seventh inning, gave the Cardinals the lead and ended up being the game winning run.   
 
On June 21, McDaniel got another chance to pitch against the Dodgers, this time making his first Major league start.  The Dodgers' first hit of the game was in the sixth inning, with the scored tied at zero, Jim Gilliam lead off the inning with single.  The next batter, Pee Wee Reese reached base on Hall of Fame first baseman Stan Musial's error.  Duke Snider followed with a bunt single.  With the bases loaded, and no outs, Dodgers' right fielder Elmer Valo ground back to McDaniel, starting a pitcher to catcher to first base double play.  The inning ended when Dodger's left fielder Gino Cimoli grounded back to McDaniel.  The Cardinals scored a run in the bottom of the sixth inning and a second run in the eighth inning as the Cardinals beat the Dodgers 2 - 0.   McDaniel had pitched a two-hit shutout in his first major league start and improved his record to 2 - 0.     
 
Then on June 27, McDaniel got his second start, this time against the Phillies.  In the bottom of the first inning, the Cardinals jump to a 3 - 0 lead, aided by a two-run home run by Stan Musial.   The Cardinals added another run in the second inning, when Don Blasingame was plated on Musial's triple, to extend the Cardinals' lead to 4 - 0.  In the top of the fourth inning, the Phillies scored a run when Ed Bouchee's double scored Granny Hamner, touching McDaniel for his first Major league run.   McDaniel pitched into the eighth inning, giving up five hits and four runs, in the Cardinals 6 - 4 victory.  McDaniel improved his record to 3 - 0, and opened his Major league career pitching 19 consecutive scoreless innings.
 
On July 2, McDaniel got his third start of the season, facing off against the Braves and their Hall of Fame pitcher, Warren Spahn.  McDaniel retired the first 18 Brave batters and the Cardinals had built a 3 - 0 lead.  Braves' center fielder Bill Bruton opened the seventh inning with a single ending McDaniel quest for a perfect game after six inning.  Red Schoendienst then double to right field with Bruton going to third base.  Next batter, Hall of Fame third baseman Ed Mathews' sacrifice fly plated Bruton and Hall of Famer Hank Aaron's single scored Schoendienst.  Aaron reached third base on left fielder Wes Covington's single, before McDaniel worked out of the inning retiring Frank Torre and Felix Mantilla and the Cardinals ended the top of the sixth inning with a 3 - 2 lead.   In the eight inning, after giving up a lead off single to Del Crandall and retiring pinch hitter Carl Sawatski, McDaniel was relieved by Hall of Famer Hoyt Wilhelm.  The Cardinals won the game 4 - 2, as McDaniel opened his rookie with four victories.
 
Soon fans begun to flow through the turnstiles each time McDaniel took the mound and earned him the nickname "Mr. Vonderful". In series both home and away, major-league owners witnessed a 20 percent increase in attendance in games that McDaniel started.  
 
In his next three starts, McDaniel had a no decision against the Reds and losses to the Pirates and Phillies. 
 
On July 28, in a start against the Pirates, McDaniel gave up a two-out second inning double to third baseman, Gene Baker, and then he went on to retire the last 19 Pirates' batters in the Cardinals 4 - 0 victory.  After pitching his second shutout of the season, McDaniel improved his record to 5 - 2.
 
The Cardinals seemed to be energized by the June arrival of McDaniel. From his first victory on June 16, the Cardinals went on a 33-17 run, during which time they held at least a share of first place for 28 days. 
 
In August, McDaniel opened the month on the 3rd, pitching five innings in the Cardinals 3 - 1 victory over the Phillies as he improved as record to 6 - 2.    After a loss and a no decision to the Braves, McDaniel took the mound on August 20 and pitched another complete game, his third of the year, an eight hitter, in a 3 - 2 victory over the Giants. This was his last Major league victory.  His record for the season stood at seven victories and three losses.  He ended the month of August on the 27th, when he pitched his fourth complete game, a 2 - 1 loss to the Pirates.  The game was tied at one in the bottom of the eight inning when Hall of Fame second baseman Bill Mazeroski's single scored Bob Skinner with the game winning run.  McDaniel record for the season was now 7 wins and four losses. 
 
At the beginning of September, McDaniel started two games against the Reds.  On September 2, he failed to get out of the second inning of a game that the Reds defeated the Cardinals 10 -5, and McDaniel took his fifth loss of the season.  On September 7, in his second start against the Reds, he again pitched only into the second inning, and left with the bases loaded and one out and was relieved by his brother, Lindy.  The Cardinals won the game 7 - 4, as Lindy McDaniel got the victory and improved his season record to 13 wins and eight losses.
 
McDaniel's final appearance of the year came on September 17 against the Dodgers.  He pitched in relief of Cardinal starter Larry Jackson, entering in relief at the start of the 8th inning.  He record one out and walk one and gave up a hit and was replaced by Billy Muffett.
 
Here is McDaniel's pitching record from the 1957 season:
 Wins
 Losses
Complete Games
 Shutouts
 Innings Pitched
Strikeouts
 
 Walks
Earned Run Average
 7
 5
 4
 2
 86.2
45
 
 34
 3.22
 
When the 1958 season began, McDaniel became inexplicably wild. For the season, he appeared in only two games for the Cardinals.  His first appearance was on his birthday, April 18, when he pitched in relief, entering the game in the bottom of the fifth inning, during the Cardinals 11 - 6 loss to the Cubs.  McDaniel failed to record an out as he gave up hits to each of the five batters he faced and gave up three earned runs.  On May 11, McDaniel was the Cardinals' starting pitcher against the Cubs.   In the first inning after issuing a lead off walk to Tony Taylor, he retired the next three batters.  Then in the second inning he walked the base loaded, before he got out of the inning without giving up any runs.  In the third inning, after issuing a lead off walk to Cubs' right fielder, Lee Walls, he was replaced on the mound by Morrie Martin.  The Cardinals won the game 8 - 7.  McDaniel pitched two innings and gave up no runs or hits but issued five walks. At age 19, he had made his final Major league appearance.
 
McDaniel was then sent to the minor leagues and during the 1958 season he pitched for the Winston-Salem Red Birds of the Carolina League and the Houston Buffaloes of the Texas League.  For the year he appeared in 12 games, winning one with two losses and a 9.35 ERA.  He pitched 12 innings and gave up 14 hits with 17 walks and 13 earned runs.  Although McDaniel rebounded somewhat in 1959, while pitching for the Dayton Beach Islanders in the Florida State League, when he finished the season with a 13 - 5 record, he never overcame his control problems.
 
During the 1960 season, with the Winnipeg Goldeyes of the Northern League, while pitching in 12 games that year, McDaniel decided to became a third baseman to take advantage of his batting prowess.  Although he never got a base hit in 26 Major league at bats, he tried to return to the big leagues as an infielder. In 1962, with the expansion Houston Colt 45s' Triple A affiliate Oklahoma City 89ers, then a part of the American Association, he slugged 14 home runs and batted in 79 runs.  McDaniel continue to play as an infielder in the minor leagues, and pitched in seven more games (six appearance in 1963 with the Oklahoma City 89ers, then a part of the Pacific Coast League, and one final appearance with the San Antonio Bullets of the Texas League).  His professional baseball career ended after the 1966 season after playing two season with the Dallas Forth Worth Spurs of Texas League, Double AA affiliate of the Cubs.
 
On August 20, 1995, McDaniel died at age 56 in Lawton, Oklahoma, after suffering a heart attack and a stroke.
 

Saturday, May 30, 2015

White Sox Bonus Baby, Jim Derrington

Recently, I've been looking at some of my cards from the Topps 1958 set. I came across this card for White Sox hurler, Jim Derrington.  I had never heard of him and noted that his birthday was on November 29, 1939, which would have made him an eighteen year-old during the 1958 season.  The card showed that Derrington had appeared in 21 games.

Topps 1958 Jim Derrington Card #129
 
 
 
I did research on Derrington and found that on September 12, 1956 he was signed as a 16 year-old bonus baby from South Gate, California.  His contract with the White Sox included a bonus of $65,000 (a contract today that would be worth over $550,000). 
 
The Bonus Baby
 
The term “bonus baby” was used to describe a player who received a large signing bonus upon signing a professional baseball contract. They were called “babies” because of their youth, as many were signed as teenagers, directly out of high school or early college.
 
The bonus baby era began in 1947, and ended in 1965. The bonus rule was conceived in reaction to bidding wars between major league teams over highly touted young prospects in the late 1930s and early 1940s. Prior to the adaption of the rule, the competition for top amateur talent created large signing bonus. The rule forestalled the ability for teams, primarily the Yankees, Dodgers, Red Sox, and Cardinals, to sign the best young talent and keep it in their farm systems.
 
At the time that the White Sox signed Derrington, the rule stipulated that when a Major league team signed a player to a contract in excess of $4,000, that team was required to keep the player on their 25-man Major league roster for two full seasons. If the team failed to comply with this rule they could lose that player's rights as the player was then to be exposed to the waiver wire.
 
Bonus babies were signed as a result of their potential, and many of these players did not succeed.   However, four of the 1947–1965 bonus babies had Hall of Fame careers.  Al Kaline, signed with the Tigers in 1953, Harmon Killebrew signed with the Senators in 1954, Sandy Koufax was a Dodger signee in 1954, and Jim "Catfish" Hunter signed with the A's in 1964.  In June of 1965, the amateur free agent draft was introduced, which limited drafted prospects to negotiate with a single team.  The purpose of the draft was to reduce signing bonus amounts, and the bonus rule was eliminated.
 
Jim Derrington
 
 
 
When Jim Derrington signed in September 1956, he was immediately added to the White Sox roster.  The 6' 3" left hander pitched in one game that season, against the A's.  He was the starting pitcher in the White Sox's final game of the year.  The 16 year-old took the loss in the A's 7 - 6 victory.  He pitched six innings, giving up nine hits and six runs, five which were earned, while issuing six walks, with a balk, and striking out three.  Derrington still holds the record as the youngest pitcher to start a Major league game.  In addition, he singled in the fourth inning, making him the youngest player in American League history to get a base hit.  
 
The following season, Derrington appeared in 20 games, with five starts and 15 relief appearances.  He pitched 37 innings, with no wins and one defeat and a 4.86 earned run average. Derrington struck out 14 batters and walked 29.  On August 10 of that year, Derrington was the starting pitcher against the Tigers. For seven innings, the Tigers were shutout and they didn't get a base hit until Bill Tuttle's one-out sixth inning double.  In the eighth inning, Reno Bertoia, another bonus baby, hit a two-run homer off Derrington.  After that home run, the White Sox summoned Billy Pierce from the bullpen. Pierce yielded four runs to the Tigers, and the White Sox lost 6-4. That was as close as Derrington ever got to winning a Major league game.  He made his final his big league appearance on September 29 against the Indians, at age 17 and 10 months.
 
Following spring training in 1958, Derrington was sent to the White Sox's triple-A team, the Indianapolis Indians of the American Association.  After pitching a couple of seasons in minors and as spring training of 1960 was ending, Derrington was scheduled to make the White Sox's Major league roster.  In an exhibition against the Pacific Coast League's Sacramento Solons, he threw a couple of fastballs that bounced off the plate. The next morning, he was unable to straighten his left arm. So as spring training ended, instead of going to Chicago, Derrington was sent to San Diego to see the team doctor, who gave him two cortisone injections in his left elbow.
 
Derrington was told that he had ripped all the ligaments and tendons in his left elbow, and that he would never be able to throw again like he did.  So he opened the 1960 season with the Pacific Coast League San Diego Padres, as their starting right fielder.  At the conclusion of the following season, after he had spent four years in the minors, Derrington's playing career ended.  He was only 22.
 
Upon his retirement, Derrington returned to southern California, and his hometown of South Gate, and went to work in his father's TV and appliance store.  In 1968, he took over the business and later expanded it to five stores.  Derrington sold the business in 1979, and then a friend got him a job managing a produce company in Anaheim, where he worked until 1989.

At that time, Derrington wanted to get back into baseball, as a coach.  Beginning in 1991, he spent his free time working as an unpaid assistant coach at Fullerton High School.  Then from 1995 through 1998, he coached and managed an independent league team, the Mission Viejo Vigilantes.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Kodak 2000 Alex Rodriguez Players Collection Motion Card

Recently my son-in-law gave me a Kodak 2000 Alex Rodriguez Players Collection Motion Card.

 
I've never seen this card (if you want to call it a card) before, as it show a young A-Rod, in motion, while with the Mariners.  It is little quirky, but it's now in my collection.
 
Last Thursday, Alex Rodriguez passed Willie Mays, to move into fourth place on baseball's all-time home run list. Rodriguez hit career homer No. 661 at Yankee Stadium in the Yankees 4 to 3 victory over the Orioles.  Batting in the third inning, A-Rod homered off Orioles' starting pitcher, Chris Tillman. 
 
The home run seemed to not be that big of deal.  There were some articles about Rodriguez' pursuit of Mays prior to the historic homer, and he received a curtain call from Yankee fans after the home run, and ESPN made it their Top Play of the Day.
 
Now the story most written about is that the Yankees are not going to pay Rodriguez a $6 million bonus for passing Mays. The bonus was included in Rodriguez' contract with the thinking that the Yankees could make millions of dollars for the accomplishment.  The team has seemed to ignored the whole thing other than a reminder on the scoreboard.  I didn't think you will find any Rodriguez 661 home run t-shirts.
 
At this time, the Yankees are in first place in the American League Eastern Division. Rodriguez has been their regular designated hitter, while spending time playing third and first base.  He is currently batting .247 (24 hits in 97 at bats) with 7 home runs and 19 RBI.  He is second on the team in home runs and RBI to Mark Teixeira.
 
Rodriguez needs 53 homers to catch Yankee All-Time great Babe Ruth.   After Ruth, Rodriguez still needs to pass Hank Aaron (755) and Barry Bonds (762) to become the all-time home run leader.  A-Rod will be 40 in July, and needs more than 100 home runs to move beyond Bonds.  If he wants to pass Bonds, at a minimum, he will probably need to play another three seasons.  If he does get to 763 home runs, his legacy will likely be similar to how Bonds is currently received by a majority in the baseball community.  However, with the passing of Mays, and with his 661 home runs, Rodriguez moves into some very rarefied air.   
 
Thank you for reading my blog.

Monday, May 4, 2015

Baseball Fathers and Sons: Seattle Pilots

The Seattle Pilots were an American League Expansion team in 1969.  They played only one season in Seattle and moved to Milwaukee prior to the beginning of the 1970 season.  The Pilots finished with a record of 64 - 98 and in sixth place in the Western Division.  The Pilots had three players who are fathers of major leaguers, one player whose father played in the major leagues, and their manager was a son of a major leaguer.

Topps 1970 Seattle Pilots Team Card #713 
 
The Seattle Pilots started their season on April 8, 1969 at Anaheim Stadium against the Angels.  In the top of the first inning, facing Angels' opening day starter, Jim McGlothlin, Tommy Harper lead off the game with a double.  Mike Hegan, son of Jim Hegan, followed with a homer to give the Pilots a 2 - 0 lead.  Later in the inning, Pilots catcher Jerry McNertney's single plated Tommy Davis and Don Mincher.  The Pilots lineup batted around that inning as Tommy Harper's ground out ended the inning and the Pilots lead 4 - 0. 
 
In the bottom of the sixth inning, the Angels had closed the score to 4 - 2, when the Pilots relieved starting pitcher Marty Pattin, with Diego Segui, father of David Segui.  Diego Segui ended up piching into the 9th inning.  His totals for the game were three inning pitched, giving up two hits and one earned run.   The Pilots won the game 4 - 3, and opened their only season with a victory.
 
After a second game loss to the Angels, the Pilots won their home opener against the White Sox and then won the second game of that series to improve their record to 3 wins and 1 loss.  This was the only time during the season that the Pilots' record stood two games over .500.
 
The Skipper
 
1983 Galasso 1969 Pilots Joe Schultz  #2
 
Joe Schultz was the manager of the 1969 Seattle Pilots.  Schultz's only other managerial experience was serving as interim manager for the 1973 Tigers, when he replaced Billy Martin on August 31, and he finished the year managing 28 games, winning 14 and losing 14.  He was a Cardinal coach beginning in 1963 through 1968 and worked with three National League pennant winners (1964, 1967 and 1968), and two world championship clubs (1964, 1967).  The success of the Cardinals led to Schultz's 1969 opportunity with the Pilots.  

1968 Topps 1967 World Series The Cardinals Celebrate with Tim McCarver, Orlando Cepeda, and Joe Schultz #158
 
Schultz and Pilots' general manager Marvin Milkes thought the Pilots could finish third in the newly formed American League Western Division.   However, the Pilots had many off-the-field problems. They played in a minor league park, Sick's Stadium, that was inadequate even as a temporary facility and the season was plagued by unstable ownership as they were nearly broke by the end of the season.  Schultz had kept the team within striking distance of .500 for most of the early part of the season. However, after a 9–20 July, any chance for a respectful finish ended.
 
Schultz was the son of a major league outfielder.  His father, Joe (Germany) Schultz, played in the National League between 1912–1916 and  1919–25.  Schultz Sr. later became a minor league manager for the Cardinals.  In 1932,  the elder Schultz managed the Houston Buffaloes as Joe Jr. was the team's batboy.  That season, at age 13, Joe Jr. appeared in his first professional game, as a pinch hitter for the Buffaloes. 
 
Then in 1936, Joe Jr. signed his first professional contract with the Cardinals.  In 1939, he was drafted by the Pirates, where his father now worked as minor league director. After appearing in 22 games for Pittsburgh between 1939–41, Schultz returned to St. Louis.  This time, he played with the American League Browns, where he spent six seasons (1943–48) as a backup catcher. In 328 major-league at bats, during his  nine major league seasons, Schultz batted .259 with one home run.

1993 Conlon Collection Joe Schultz #790
 

Joe Schultz Sr. was an outfielder who played for seven National League team.  Schultz played 11 seasons including six years with the Cardinals.  The only National League team he didn't played for was the New York Giants as the National League had only eight teams from 1900 through 1962.  For his career, Schultz batted .285 (558 hits in 1959 at bats) with 15 home runs and 248 RBI in 1,959 games. In his finest season, with the 1922 Cardinals, he appeared in 112 games, batted .314 (108 hits in 344 at bats) with two home runs and 64 RBI. 
 
Starting Right Fielder
 
Mike Hegan was the starting right fielder in the Pilots first game.  For the season, Hegan played in 95 games, with 78 hits in 267 at bats and hitting 8 home runs with 37 RBI.  His .292 batting average was a team high.   He was the son of longtime major league catcher, Jim Hegan.
 
Topps 1969 Mike Hegan #577
 
Mike Hegan began his major league career breaking in as a 21 year-old with the Yankees in 1964.  He also played for the Pilots, Brewers (two different times) and A's, mainly as a first baseman and outfielder.  He returned to play again with the Yankees during parts of the 1973 and 1974 seasons.  While playing with the A's, he was a member of their 1972 World Championship team, serving as a pinch hitter and defensive replacement at first base.  During his career, Hegan set an American League record for most consecutive error-less games as a first baseman (178).
 
1973 Topps 1972 World Series Game No. 2 A's Make it Two Straight #204
 
Here is a card from the Topps 1973 set for the 1972 World Series, showing Hegan at first base, in the bottom of the 6th inning, receiving a throw from A's second baseman, Dick Green, after Johnny Bench was retired with Tony Perez safe at first base.
 
Hegan played in 965 games during his 12 major league seasons.  His career batting average was .242 (504 hits in 2,080 at bats) with 53 home runs in 229 RBI.  His best season was in 1970 while with the Brewers, he played in 148 games, batting .244 (116 hits in 476 at bats) with 11 home runs in 52 RBI.  Hegan was named to the 1969 All-Star, although he didn't play in the game.
 
In addition to playing with the A's in the 1972 World Series, Hegan appeared in the 1964 World Series with the Yankees.  He had one World Series hit (for the A's) in six at bats.  He scored a run in Game One of the 1964 Series as a pinch runner when he crossed home plate on a Bobby Richardson single.  His run made the score Cardinals 6, Yankees 5, in a game that the Cardinals ended up winning 9 - 5.  Hegan also appeared in the 1971 and 1972 American League Championship series with the A's.
 
Topps 1957 Jim Hegan #136
  
Jim Hegan played 17 seasons in the major leagues, including 14 seasons with the Indians.  He was named to five American All-Star teams, and played in the 1950 and 1951 All-Star games.  He spent  the last three years of his career (1958 - 1960) with the Tigers, Phillies, Giants, and Cubs.  He played in the 1948 and 1954 World Series for the Indians, and was a World Champion when the Indians defeated the Boston Braves in the 1948 World Series, 4 games to 2.  Hegan hit a three run home run during the 1948 series in the Indians Game Five 11 - 5 victory.  For his career, Hegan played in 1,666 games, batting .228 (1,087 hits in 4,772 at bats) with 92 home runs and 525 RBI.
 
 
Bullpen Stalwarts  
 
Diego Sequi and John O'Donoghue were the righty - lefty combination for the Pilots bullpen.  Sequi, the righty, lead the team in appearances (66 games) and saves (12) and he also started eight times, completing, two games and finished the season with 12 wins and 6 losses.  His 12 wins was the second highest victory total for the Pilots, to Gene Brabender's 13 wins.  O'Donoghue was the team's top lefty fireman as he appeared in 55 games with six saves and his 2.96 ERA was the club's second best, trailing only Bob Locker's 2.18.  O'Donoghue season record was two wins and two losses while pitching 70 innings with 48 strikeouts.  Note:  Jim Bouton, who wrote the book Ball Four about his 1969 season with the Pilots and Astros, finish second in appearances for the Pilots, pitching in 57 games for Seattle.  
 
1970 Topps Diego Sequi #2
 
Diego Segui was born in Holguin, Cuba on August 17, 1937.  His son, David Segui, a first basemen and outfielder, played 15 seasons in the major leagues.  Diego Segui pitched for the Kansas City A's (two different times), Senators, Oakland A's (two different times), Pilots, Cardinals, Red Sox, and Mariners in parts of 15 seasons between 1962–1977. 
 
Diego Segui was the 14th selection of the 1968 American League Expansion Draft, picked from the A's roster.  His 12 victories during the 1969 season were his career high.  In 1970, with the A's, when he won 10 games, Segui lead the American League with a 2.56 ERA.  For his career, Segui appeared in 639 games, winning 92 and losing 111 with 1298 strikeouts. 
 
His last season in the major leagues was in 1977, when he returned to Seattle, during the inaugural season of the Mariners.  He started the Mariners' first game on April 6.   He failed to get a win during the season and finished the season with a 0–7 record and a 5.69 ERA.  Segui was released at the end of the season.  He holds the distinction of having pitched for both of Seattle's major league baseball teams, and in the first game ever played by each franchise.
 
After completing his major league career, Segui continued pitching for another 10 years in the Mexican League, where he had a pitching record of 96–61 with a 2.91 ERA and 1,025 strikeouts in 193 appearances.
 
Segui's lone World Series appearance was pitching in the 8th inning of Game Five of the 1975 World Series for the Red Sox.  The Red Sox loss the game to the Reds 6 to 2, as the Reds won the World Series 4 games to 3.
 
1993 Leaf David Segui #262
 
David Segui played with the Orioles, Mets, Expos, Mariners, Blue Jays, Rangers, and Indians during his 15 major league seasons.  He made his debut on May 8, 1990, at age 23, with the Orioles and he played his final game, also with the Orioles, on September 8, 2004.  For his career, Segui batted .291 (1,412 hits in 4,847 at bats) with 139 home runs and 684 RBI in 1,456 major league games.
 
Topps 1970 John O'Donoghue #441
 
John O'Donoghue pitched for the Kansas City A's (1963–1965), Indians (1966–1967), Orioles (1968), Pilots (1969), Brewers (1970), and Expos (1970–1971). During a 9-year baseball career, O'Donoghue appeared in 257 games with 39 wins and 55 losses, with 377 strikeouts, and a 4.07 ERA.   His son, John O'Donoghue, pitched for the Orioles in 1993.
 
John O'Donoghue, the father, was primarily a starting pitcher during the first half of his major league career, and used as a reliever during the second half of his career. From 1963-1967, while pitching for the A's and Indians, O'Donoghue started in 93 of his 139 games, with 13 complete games and four shutouts.  From 1968-1971, he relieved in 115 of his 118 games with ten saves.
 
On April 30, 1969, O'Donoghue was traded to the Pilots from the Orioles.  At the time, he was pitching with the Rochester Red Wings of the Intentional League, the Orioles AAA affiliate, who were managed by Cal Ripken, Sr.
 
O'Donoghue first win with the Pilots come on June 8 in Baltimore. He entered the game with two outs in the bottom of the 6th inning and he retired all 13 batters he faced in the Pilots 7 - 5 victory.
 
In 1965, O'Donoghue was selected to the American League All-Star team, although he did not appear in the game.  During that season, while pitching with the A's, he appeared in 34 games, starting 30 of those games.  His record was nine wins and eighteen losses with a 3.95 ERA.  His loss total tied for a league high with Red Sox hurler Dave Morehead and Tigers ace Bill Monbouquette. 
 
1993 Bowman John O'Donoghue #197
 
John O'Donoghue, the son, made his major league debut on June 27, 1993 as the Orioles starting pitcher against the Yankees.  He gave up 6 earned run in 6.2 innings, and was the losing pitcher, as Baltimore lost 9-5. His next 10 appearances were in relief, where he gave up 4 earned runs in 13 innings.
 
In the 1994 season, O'Donoghue pitched for the Rochester Red Wings.  He was traded to the Dodgers in December 1994 and never again pitched in the major leagues.  O'Donoghue's 1993 season and career totals were 11 games pitched, with a 0-1 record, with 16 strikeouts in 19.2 innings pitched, and an ERA of 4.58. 

Catcher, Larry Haney
 
Larry Haney was the 32nd selection of the 1968 American League Expansion Draft, plucked from the Orioles roster.  Larry Haney's Topps 1969 card was a uncorrected error reverse negative of the same photo that Topps used for his 1968 card.   On the 1969 card, he appears to be a left-handed throwing catcher.
 
Topps 1969 Larry Haney #209
 
Topps 1968 Larry Haney #42
 
Larry Haney played catcher for 12 seasons in the major leagues, from 1966 to 1978 with the Orioles, Pilots, A's (three different times), Cardinals, and Brewers.  During his career, he batted .215 (198 hits in 919 at bats), with 12 home runs and 73 RBI.  His son, Chris Haney, pitched in the major leagues for 11 seasons. 
 
On July 27, 1966, against the Indians, Larry Haney hit a home run in his first major league game (in his second at bat), off his future Pilot teammate, John O'Donoghue.  Haney begun the 1969 season with the Pilots and spent two months with the team.  During his stay with the Pilots, he played in 22 games, batting .254 (15 hits in 59 at bats) with two home runs and 7 RBI. 
 
On April 29, the Angels and Pilots played in Seattle, in a rematch of opening day opponents.  The game feature opening day starting pitchers, the Pilots Marty Pattin, and Jim McGlothlin for the Angels.  With 1,954 in attendance, Haney's solo home run, leading off the bottom of the 8th inning, was the only run of the game in the Pilots 1 - 0 victory.  On June 14, Haney was traded to the A's for second baseman, John Donaldson.
 
Haney's best season was with the 1967 Orioles when he played in 58 games, batting .268 (44 hits in 164 at bats) with 3 home runs and 20 RBI.  He was on the 1974 World Champion A's, when he played in 76 games, batting .165 (20 hits in 121 at bats) with 2 home runs and 3 RBI.  During the 1974 World Series, he appeared as a catcher in two games against the Dodgers, a Series the A's won 4 games to 1, giving them their three consecutive World Championship.
  
1992 Fleer Chris Haney #483
 
Chris Haney pitched in the Major Leagues from 1991–2000 and in 2002 for the Expos, Royals, Cubs, Indians, and Red Sox.   In 2001, he played in Japan for the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks.  Haney appeared in 196 Major League games and finished with a record of 38 wins and 52 losses and a 5.07 ERA.  He started 125 games, and with eight complete games and two shutouts and one career save.  His most successful seasons were when he pitched for the Royals from 1992 through 1998.   His best season was in 1996, when he served as a full-time starter, with 35 starts, and finished the year with a 10-14 record and a 4.70 ERA.  During the season, he pitched 228 innings with 115 strikeouts and gave up a league high 267 base hits. 
 
The 1970 Milwaukee Brewers
 
1971 Topps Milwaukee Brewers Team Card #698
 
After the 1969 season ended, some members of the Pilots' ownership group made contact with car salesman and former Milwaukee Braves minority owner Bud Selig, who was leading the effort to bring major league baseball back to Milwaukee. After the end of the season, they met in secret and then during the World Series, it was agreed that Selig would purchase the Pilots for $10.8 million and move the team to Milwaukee.

However, some members of the Pilots' ownership group turned down the sale to Selig.  In the face of political pressure from Washington State senators, Warren Magnuson and Henry "Scoop" Jackson, two other offers were made to keep the Pilots in Seattle.  However one effort was unable to secure the necessary financing and a second effort was rejected by Major League team owners.
 
After a winter and spring of court actions, the Pilots reported for spring training with a new manager, Dave Bristol, and were unsure of where they might play. The team owners had received tentative approval of the sale to the Milwaukee group, but the state of Washington got an injunction on March 16 to stop the deal.  The Pilots then filed for bankruptcy in a move intended to delay the state's legal action.   Later in March, at a bankruptcy hearing, Pilots' General Manager Milkes testified there was not enough money to pay coaches, players, and office staff.  If payment to the players would have been more than 10 days late, they would have become free agents and left Seattle without a team.  On April 1, the Pilots were declared bankrupt and six days before Opening Day, they moved to Milwaukee.