A Blog about Baseball in the 1960's. From the trivial to the trades to the major moments which made major league baseball in the 1960's so fascinating. This weekly blog, is a must read for any boomer or just anyone who loves the game. Bob Brill is an expert and knows how to relay those tiny little details to make a good story.
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TRIVIA QUESTION: How many home runs did Mike McCormick hit in his major league career?
ANSWER TO TRIVIA QUESTION IN THE PREVIOUS COLUMN:The four pinch-hitters who we asked about in last week's column all had one thing in commong. Jerry Lynch, Manny Mota, Vic Davalillo and Smokey Burgess all played for the Pittsburgh Pirates. It could added each one of them was acquired from another team as well. Congratulations to reader Dan Taguchi for being the first one to come up with the correct answers; kudo's.
It's not rare for a player to start with one team, move to another and then come back and retire from his original squad. It is rare for a player to have three different stints with the team which originally signed him. Such is the case of Giants pitcher Mike McCormick. As it turns out after a good start, his second time with the Giants was his best.
After arriving with the New York Giants as a 17 year old $20,000 Bonus Baby in 1956 fresh out of high school, he moved into the 1960's having already won 26 games. He was on his way to becoming a legitimate big league starter. In 1960 he completed 15 of his 34 starts for the "then" San Francisco Giants and led the league with a 2.70 ERA, adding a 15-12 record. He followed that up in 1961 by facing the same number of batters, and still averaging 250 innings despite seeing his record drop to 13-16 and his ERA rise to 3.20. Still, all in all, very respectable numbers.
For those two seasons his consistency was remarkable. The only major difference was he allowed 15 homers in 1960 and a league leading 33 the following year! No wonder his numbers changed when it came to wins and ERA. 1962 was a disaster however. Starting 28 games he dropped to 5-5 and pitched only 98 innings wherein he gave up a whopping 18 homers. His ERA ballooned to 5.38.
He didn't fare much better. After two lackluster seasons he was sent to Washington in a minor league deal where he seemed to regain some of his old stuff. After the 1966 season with the Senators in need of outfield help and the Giants in need of a starting pitcher, San Francisco reacquired McCormick for Cap Petersen and Bob Priddy. This time the Giants trade paid big dividends.
McCormick responded with a career year. He notched 22 wins to lead the NL, against 10 losses, with a 2.85 ERA on his way to becoming the first Giant to ever win the NL Cy Young Award. He completed 14 of 35 starts, pitched five shutouts and beat every team in the league at least once. His control was pinpoint, his homers allowed was solid and in a throwback to his previous best seasons, he faced about the same number of batters. In those three top years he faced over 1000 batters, which he never accomplished outside of those seasons. He also had a great hits-to-innings ratio. He allowed only 220 hits in 262 innings.
One of the consistent keys to McCormick's success was his brilliant fielding. He was catlike off the mound and helped himself many times with the glove. In 1967 he was perfect in the field.
In the following two seasons his numbers fell off quite a bit but amazingly his numbers during those two seasons were again remarkably consistent right down to the games started and completed. Now the aging McCormick was sold to the Yankees, and eventually wound up with Kansas City before coming back to the Giants in 1972 where he never got the chance to pitch again. He retired in June of that year having been signed by the Giants three times.
He ended his career 134-128 and a 3.73 lifetime ERA. Perhaps just as important was his ability to field. Four times he led the league in fielding as a pitcher; 1961, 1966, 1967 and 1969. In those four years he did NOT commit an error.
It should be noted in 1959 he pitched a five inning, rain shortened no hitter against the Phillies but due to rule changes he's not credited with a no-no. He did allow a hit in the sixth but since the game was called due to rain, that inning was removed from the books.
The "Mr. 500" tag is because he was the player who hit the 500th home run by a pitcher in major league baseball history, and he gave up no. 500 to Henry Aaron. Now that is a feat of obscurity but I hope you were intrigued enough to stick around to read it.
Thank you to those of you who purchased my book after reading this column. It has been appreciated.
Please share this blog with your friends and colleagues and leave a comment at the bottom of the blog if you have one. Thank YOU VERY MUCH!! Please pick up a copy of my book "Tales of My Baseball Youth; A Child of the 60's" at www.bobbrillbooks.com, or on Amazon.
We wish to welcome our new sponsor;
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TRIVIA QUESTION: Of the four pinch-hitters named in paragraph two below (Lynch, Mota, Davalillo and Burgess) what did these four players have in common?
ANSWER TO TRIVIA QUESTION IN THE PREVIOUS COLUMN:In 1966 Don Mincher, Jimmy Hall and Pete Cimino were traded to the
Angels for a package of players which included star pitcher Dean Chance, a future 20-game winner.
Their names read like a who's who of non-position players. Indeed, they officially don't even have a position - at least not in the official annals of baseball, but they do exist. And, they are among the most important players in the game. They are the "pinch-hitters." The guys whose only role is to bat for someone the manager feels, at the moment, is the lesser option to do what the team tries to do; win.
The likes of slugger Jerry Lynch of Cincinnati, high average Manny Mota of the Pirates and Dodgers, Vic Davalillo, Smokey Burgess, Bubba Morton of the Angels, all made their mark in the 1960's. It was said Mota could get out of bed on a Sunday morning and get a hit for someone else. However, there was one guy who had a marvelous year. So much so, he became what may have been the first player to ever have the designation by position as "Pinch-hitter" on his Strat-O-Matic Baseball Card; Gates Brown.
Brown was an awesome player when it came to coming off the bench cold and cranking out a hit. He broke into the big leagues with Detroit and in an auspicious debut, his first appearance was as a pinch-hitter on June 19th at Boston's Fenway Park. He came up to bat for Don Mossi in the fifth inning of a game the Red Sox were winning 4-1. He promptly smashed a Bob Heffner pitch over the wall for a home run in his first at bat in the bigs.
The following year Brown got the chance to play regularly and while still being used in the pinch, he did find time to bat over 400 times on his way to hitting .272 with 15 homers.
He could always hit and was used in various ways throughout the years but in 1968 he became a valuable part of the Tigers run to the pennant. He hit .370 in 92 at bats, smashing seven doubles, a pair of triples and six homers while driving in 15 and drawing a dozen walks. Brown was extraordinary. More importantly as a pinch hitter he batted .450 on the season! He appeared only 18 times in the field in his 67 games.
In the 1968 post season he only batted once and did not get a hit, but in later years he continued to bat well. In his career, Brown collected 107 hits batting for someone else,
including 16 homers. The slugger holds the record for the most at bats in the AL by a pinch hitter with 414.
Brown died of a heart attack at the age of 74 and did some coaching before then with his beloved Tigers where he spent his entire career, finishing in 1975 with a .257 lifetime average. He will always be remembered for a great 1968 season when the Tigers took it all and Swingin' Gates Brown played a key role.
Thank you to those of you who purchased my book after reading this column. It has been appreciated.
Please share this blog with your friends and colleagues and leave a comment at the bottom of the blog if you have one. Thank YOU VERY MUCH!! Please pick up a copy of my book "Tales of My Baseball Youth; A Child of the 60's" at www.bobbrillbooks.com, or on Amazon.
We wish to welcome our new sponsor;
Huggins and Scott Auctions, one of the premier sports trading card and
memorabilia auctions house in the U-S.
TRIVIA QUESTION: IN 1966 Don Mincher, Jimmy Hall and Pete Cimino were traded to the Angels for a package of player which included which star pitcher?
ANSWER TO TRIVIA QUESTION IN THE PREVIOUS COLUMN:Mel Queen's amateur teammate who later became the pitcher's brother-in-law was Red Sox 22 game winner, Jim Lonborg.
It is unusual for an entire starting line up for a major league team to reach double figures in home run, but when you include every starting pitcher in the regular rotation ending up in double figure Wins, you have the 1962 Minnesota Twins.
In 1962 the Twins were a team really in transition. It was only the club's second year in Minnesota, having moved from Washington in 1961 when the new Washington Franchise became the expansion club. Confusing but the idea was to keep a team in the nation's capitol at least until it moved again; to Texas.
All that aside, in 1961 the Twins lost 90 games but the following year they moved up to finish in second place with 91 wins. A complete reversal from the previous season.
The Twins were loaded with aging players. Vic Power, Hal Naragon, Lenny Green, Bill Tuttle, Jim Lemon and five pitchers who were well over 30 years old. Rising stars were Zoilo Versalles, Don Mincher and Tony Oliva, along with Jim Kaat, and all were ready to bust out. In the middle of the mix was established slugger Harmon Killebrew, catcher Earl Battey and the powerful Bobby Allison. These players would form the heart of the team which in 1965 went on to win the AL pennant. Up and down the line-up the 1962 Twins had power. Killebrew smacked 48 dingers while Allison was a distant second with 29. Versalles had 17, while clocking in with 16 each were Power and Rich Rollins. Green, Battey and Bernie Allen also reached double figures. Mincher, a part-time player added nine more. The team finished with 185 homers for third best in the AL.
Of those eight players none of them played fewer than 144 games and no one outside the group batted more than 157 times (Mincher). Same Mele put the same eight guys out there day after day and it worked. On the mound Camilo Pascual won 20, Kaat had 18, Jack Kralick posted 12 as did Dick Stigman. The bullpen was truly a by-committee proposition. The following year it was more of the same with the addition of outfielder Jimmy Hall who cranked 33 homers in his rookie season. Allison belted another 35 and Killebrew added 45. The emergence of Oliva in 1964 batting .323 with 32 home runs, solidified the team for the run at the pennant in 1965. It was however, the 1962 season which put the Twins onto the road of change and a place in baseball history.
Killebrew would finish his career with 573 homers and easily made it into the Hall of Fame. Versalles would be named MVP in 1965 leading the league in seven offensive categories. Kaat won 283 games in his career and Allison eclipsed 20 home runs in a season eight times. Mincher and Hall would be traded to Los Angeles a few years later after helping Minnesota get to the Series in "65. Mincher found a new home in California where he starred for the Angels.
Thank you to those of you who purchased my book after reading this column. It has been appreciated.
Please share this blog with your friends and colleagues and leave a comment at the bottom of the blog if you have one. Thank YOU VERY MUCH!! Please pick up a copy of my book "Tales of My Baseball Youth; A Child of the 60's" at www.bobbrillbooks.com, or on Amazon.
We wish to welcome our new sponsor; Huggins and Scott Auctions, one of the premier sports trading card and memorabilia auctions house in the U-S.
TRIVIA QUESTION: Which major league pitcher was Mel Queen's high school teammate and later his brother-in-law?
ANSWER TO TRIVIA QUESTION IN THE PREVIOUS COLUMN:When Sandy Koufax tossed his fourth no-hitter, he broke the record set previously by Bob Feller. Nolan Ryan would eventually surpass Koufax.
Before Rick Ankiel and before Shohei Ohtani, pitching and hitting, there was Mel Queen. Not to be confused with his father, Mel Queen Sr., who played in the big leagues in the 1950's for a couple of clubs, the younger Queen made his own major league mark. Queen was signed by the Reds and played both third base and the outfield in the minor leagues. The Reds brought him up in 1964 and he made his debut as a pinch-hitter but lined out. A week later he got his first hit off Hall of Famer, Juan Marichal. In his rookie year he batted 99 times, and stroked a pair of home runs but only batted .200. He was sent back to the minors and at some point asked if he could try his hand at pitching.
Cincinnati had a bevy of good outfielders about to emerge including Tommy Harper and Art Shamsky along with the aging Vada Pinson. Perhaps Queen thought he had a better chance breaking into the majors as a pitcher. He was right. In 1967 he had a break out year, winning 14 of 22 decisions and clocking an ERA of 2.76, starting 24 games. It looked like he was on his way with teammate Gary Nolan who also emerged with 14 wins. Jim Maloney and Milt Pappas won 31 more between them. It looked as if the Reds were about to emerge once again. On April 16th Queen shut down the powerful Giants 6-0, tossing a six-hitter and walking two while striking out 8 in out-dueling Mike McCormick. A week later he pitched five hitless innings in relief of Maloney to pick up his second win in two decisions. A few days later he got his second start against San Francisco and out did Gaylord Perry. He went seven strong innings giving up two runs, one earned and just three hits. He was 3-0! Then when Sammy Ellis couldn't get past the fourth inning, Queen came in and took over. He got the win to run his record to 4-0 (two as a starter and two in relief) as the Reds pounded the Braves 14-7. Four games later he finally lost. In relief of Nolan, Queen gave up a homer to Tommy Davis of the Mets in the 11th to fall to 4-1.
Nine days later he started again and went the distance in beating Pittsburgh 6-3 with a six-hitter. He didn't walk a batter and struck out nine Pirates on his way to 5-1. He didn't get his next decision until June third when he picked up for Billy McCool and ran his record to 6-1. Win no. 7 came seven days later and number 8 on June 16th against the Dodgers, 3-2 over Bill Singer. It was a 4-hitter and again it was a complete game. Queen lost his next three decisions before picking up win number 9 with a distance going six-hitter to run his mark to 9-4. His final win came on September 18th when he failed to yield a run against the Braves but was relieved by Ted Abernathy. He finished the season 14-8.
It looked like Mel Queen had found his niche but he developed arm trouble the following year and things began to falter. The next two seasons he pitched in only seven more games and when the decade of the 1970's came he was traded to the Angels where he found new life as a reliever for three more years, where he went 5-8 with 13 Saves before hanging up his glove.
While he came to The Show as a hitter it wasn't going to be enough to make him hang around after his pitching days were through. His career totals, including much of it as a pinch-hitter, left him at .179 and a pair of home runs which he blasted in his first year. He would later say of his pitching career "I just went to the mound and threw as hard as I could." Queen would eventually move into coaching and then the front office where he had good success not only as a pitching coach but in player development. He passed away due to cancer in Morro Bay, California at age 69 in 2011.
Thank you to those of you who purchased my book after reading this column. It has been appreciated.
Please share this blog with your friends and colleagues and leave a comment at the bottom of the blog if you have one. Thank YOU VERY MUCH!! Please pick up a copy of my book "Tales of My Baseball Youth; A Child of the 60's" at www.bobbrillbooks.com, or on Amazon.
TRIVIA QUESTION: When Sandy Koufax tossed his fourth no-hitter, whose record did he break for the most no-hitters thrown by a major league pitcher?
ANSWER TO TRIVIA QUESTION IN THE PREVIOUS COLUMN:Tony Conigliaro was beaned by the Angels Jack Hamilton in an incident which basically ruined a career about to happen. Tony C. would eventually get traded to the Angels where he had one more really good season.
The fact Sandy Koufax pitched one of the most perfect of Perfect Games on September 9, 1965 overshadowed another brilliant pitching performance the very same night. The opposing pitcher; Bob Hendley. The game itself was voted the greatest game ever pitched by SABR in 1995.
The Dodgers were on their way to the National League Pennant and a World Series win over the Minnesota Twins. The Cubs were on their way to an eighth place finish, 25 games back of Los Angeles. Koufax was putting the finishing touches on his best year to date. Hendley, a journeyman was two years away from being out of baseball.
Hendley ended up 4-4 with a 4.35 ERA in 1965. Koufax finished 26-8, 2.04 with a record 382 strikeouts. He too would be out of baseball soon, calling it a career after perhaps his greatest season, 1966 due to arm trouble.
The Cubs were loaded with good and up and coming players mixed with aging stars. The infield of Ernie Banks, Glenn Beckert, Don Kessinger and Ron Santo would be among the finest of the era. Add Billy Williams and it was a line-up to be reckoned with. The pitching wasn't bad with rookie Ken Holtzman and some aging stalwarts in Dick Ellsworth, Larry Jackson and Ted Abernathy. All of them had something left in the tank.
The Dodgers had pitching, speed, defense and absolutely no hitting. Lou Johnson led the team with 12 homers along with rookie Jimmy Lefebvre. Maury Wills and Jim Gilliam were the only hitters at .280 or better and Ron Fairly led the team with 70 RBI. Wills had 94 steals. Koufax and Don Drysdale won 49 games between them.
The Dodger plan that season; a walk, a steal, a sacrifice and a sacrifice fly equals one run and the pitching made it stand up. A run without an official at bat was their moniker.
This night however belonged to Koufax, Hendley and L-A's Sweet Lou Johnson who was a Cubs rookie back in 1960. He would be a hero in the World Series later in the year with a pair of homers. This night he proved how valuable he was to the Dodgers.
Koufax didn't allow a baserunner and struck out 14 Cubbies including the side in the ninth. The game holds the record for fewest base runners in a perfect game (both teams), with two. It is the only
complete 9 inning game in Major League Baseball history where the
winning team sent fewer than 27 batters to the plate, since the Dodgers did not bat in the ninth playing at Dodger Stadium.
Both pitchers were throwing no-hitters until the 7th inning when Johnson doubled with two out. He was left stranded there but by then the damage had already been done. The Dodgers scored in the fifth without the aid of a hit and the run was UNearned. The Dodgers led 1-0 in this amazing game.
In the fifth, Johnson (there is that man again) drew a lead off walk. Fairly, batting fifth in the line-up laid down a sacrifice bunt to move Sweet Lou to second. Johnson then tried to steal third and he did, but catcher Chris Krug's throw went wild and Johnson came home to score the only run of the game.
Hendley and Koufax continued their mastery through the rest of the game with Hendley allowing just the one hit, and the one walk (both to Johnson) and there was only one error in the game (Krug's).
With their last gasp the Cubs sent Krug, Joey Amalfitano and Harvey Kuenn to the plate in the ninth. Koufax got all three swinging. In fact he struck out the last six men he faced including Santo, Banks and Byron Browne (the last five swinging). In all just over 29,000 fans saw the game of their lives and even though Los Angeles fans were known to leave early, few left before the final out. Ironically the two pitchers would face each other five days later with Hendley winning 2-1.
Krug, born on Christmas Day and a Los Angeles native, only played in 19 more big league games after the 1965 season. Hendley went 9-8 in the balance of his career closing it out in 1967, Koufax premature end to a career came after the '66 season in which he went 27-9 with a 1.73 ERA. Lou Johnson continued to play until 1969 finishing with the Cubs, Indians and Angels with 48 career homers and a .258 average. Thank you to those of you who purchased my book after reading this column. It has been appreciated.
Please share this blog with your friends and colleagues and leave a comment at the bottom of the blog if you have one. Thank YOU VERY MUCH!! Please pick up a copy of my book "Tales of My Baseball Youth; A Child of the 60's" at www.bobbrillbooks.com, or on Amazon.