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TRIVIA WINNER: Congrats to Tim Nathan of Berkley, Michigan who correctly identified John Wyatt and Tommie Reynolds as the two non-Latino African Americans who played for the Kansas City A's and took the field in Satchel Paige's last game. The Prize: Starbucks Gift Card.
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TRIVIA QUESTION: When Don Mincher was traded to the Angels from Minnesota for Dean Chance the Halo's got two other players; pitcher Pete Cimino and another slugger. Who was the third player in the trade?
ANSWER TO TRIVIA QUESTION IN THE PREVIOUS COLUMN: Appearing in Satchel Paige's last game were two other Kansas City A's who were African-American, non-Latino players. Tommie Reynolds played the outfield and John Wyatt came on in relief.
In
the mid-1960's the Los Angeles Angels were desperately searching for
their first baseman of the future. In 1965 they were sort of content to
hang on through the season with a pair of 37 year old aging veterans
while the search continued. Joe Adcock and Vic Power
were at the end of their careers. Both had long track records and good
ones, but the Angels were a team hoping to make a move and with
developing youngsters and a solid pitching staff the club wanted to
improve and develop. All three players came with impeccable credentials. All three would fail miserably with time out for a hot streak or two.
Costen Shockley,
one of the cooler names in MLB, was a school boy wonderkid who at 6'2",
200 pounds came to the Angels via a trade with the Phillies. The deal
sent playboy Bo Belinksy (a player who had more fun, than wins at the
major league level) to Philadelphia for the left handed slugging
Shockley.
In the minors Shockley batted .360, .335 and in 1964 smashed 36 minor league home runs. The Phils thought he was ready. He started seven games but hit only .207 with one home run and was shipped back to the minors. At the end of the season he was sent to the AL.
In 1965 he started 30 of the 40 games he played but again failed to hit, batting only .187. He came to the plate 107 times registering 20 hits. The Angels wanted the youngster to go back to the minors for more seasoning and were sticking with Adcock and Power. Shockley refused and instead retired from the game. He went back home to Delaware, worked in construction, coached youth baseball and raised his family.
His 28 MLB hits included two doubles, three homers and 19 RBI. It wasn't enough to get him to stick in the bigs, but it was enough to get him inducted into the Delaware Sports Museum and Hall of Fame in 1998.
Before Shockley the Angels tried a player who was seven years older; Charles Henry Dees. Dees came out of Alabama and was also a left-handed thrower and batter like Shockley. At 6'1" he was much lighter at 173 pounds. He came out of the Negro Leagues were he played in 1957 before signing with San Francisco.
Another stalwart in the minors, he had three .300 plus seasons and led the Texas League in 1962, batting .348 with 23 homers and 115 RBI. A TL All-star he was sold to the Angels. The Giants already had Willie McCovey and Orlando Cepeda competing for time at first base and there was no room for Dees.
The Big Club called him up early in the 1963 season and on May 26th in his first at bat he smacked a double off the A's Orlando Pena, picking up an RBI when Billy Moran came around to score. Over the next 20 games it looked like the Angels found their first sacker. He hit .382 and became the starter at first. It didn't last long. He fell into a long slump and by the end of July was back in the minor leagues. He was hitting .281 when they sent him back down.
He was back up again in September and again went on a hot streak. He had six games with at least two hits and four times had three-hit games. He would finish his rookie campaign .307 in just over 200 at bats.
The 1964 season however was a complete turnaround. Starting less than a handful of games and used as a pinch-hitter the first couple of months he had only a pair of hits, batting .077. He was sent on loan to the Houston organization. He ended up back in the Angels system where he had his biggest success and took off again. He hit .377 at El Paso of the TL, and got another chance to return to the big leagues. After 12 games and a .156 BA he was sent back down where his career ended in 1966.
From the time Moose Stubing signed as an 18 year old first baseman back in the mid 1950's, it was clear he could hit. By the time the Angels called him up in 1967, he had slugged 192 minor league homers with a lifetime BA of .283. In 1964 in the friendly confines of the ballpark in El Paso, he slugged 35 homers, drove in 120 and batted .316. The Angels were salivating over the prospects of the 26 year old. By 1967 he was ready, or so it seemed.
The 1967 season was a big one for the Halo's who were in contention
right down to the wire. However, by now they had found their slugging
first baseman; Don Mincher. Mincher would hit 25
homers during the season but they hoped Stubing would provide some
insurance down the stretch.
The Moose came to bat five times and struck out four, failing to
register a hit. His major league career was over at age 29. At least as a
player. Years later he was offered a chance to manage in the Angels
system and was named Pacific Coast League Manager of the Year in 1982
and won the championship in 1984. In 1988 he got the chance to manage the big club when Cookie Rojas was fired. He managed the final eight games of the season, losing all eight. Stubing became a scout for the Angels and later the Nationals. He died
January 19, 2018.
TRIVIA CONTEST; After reading this column you can enter the weekly trivia contest for a chance to win a Starbucks Gift Card. Enter via the following email. Send 1) your answer to the trivia question at the top of the column, 2) your name, address and email so where we know where to send the card if you win 3) any comment you have on the column.
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answers with the odds being based on the number of correct entries.
Please cut and paste or enter the following email into your email
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