Saturday, February 27, 2010

Satchel Paige Signed in Indian Relief Role

Saturday, February 27, 2010 5:53 PM
By TommyT

Sounds like the latest political story, but it isn’t.  This article is about the fabulous Satchel Paige, the legendary Negro League pitcher who was signed by the equally legendary baseball owner, Bill Veeck, to help the Cleveland Indians win the 1948 American League pennant and World Series.

Here’s the article taken from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette dated July 8, 1948.

Satchel Paige Signed In Indian Relief Role

Have Been Around Too Long to Worry about Big League Batters, He Says

CLEVELAND, July 7 (AP) – The pennant-chasing Cleveland Indians Wednesday signed that old veteran Satchel Paige as a relief pitcher.

The tall, lean hurler who has had a fabulous career in the Negro Leagues and the exhibition circuit put on a major league uniform for the first time Wednesday.  But he isn’t scared.  He summed it all up:

“I’m starting my Major League career with one thing in my favor anyway.  I won’t be afraid of anybody I see in the batter’s box.  I’ve been around too long for that.”

That was Leroy (Satchel) Paige speaking, the famous Satchel of Negro baseball fame, who has fogged his “hurry up” ball and bat dodger past major leaguers in many an exhibition game for years.

Just how long he has “been around,” or how many games he has won isn’t very clear.

Age Not Definite

“Born in Mobile,” he said.  “September 18, 1908.  His age has been estimated variously in the 40s and even 50s, but he says he was eligible for the draft all through the Second World War.”

But whatever age he admits to, Bill Veeck signed him up in the hope his right-hand relief pitching could bolster the Tribe’s drive for a pennant.  Veeck bought Paige’s contract from the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro American League.  How much Satchel will be paid wasn’t told.  But his recent earnings have been estimated at upwards of $30,000 annually.

In the past two decades the Satchel has made most of the Major Leaguers admit he is one of the all-time great hurlers.  Babe Ruth and Ted Williams are about the only sluggers who haven’t faced him on the exhibition circuit.

DiMaggio His Toughest

And how does he size them up?  Of the present crop, Joe DiMaggio is the toughest.

“Before DiMaggio, Charley Gehringer of the Detroit Tigers gave me more trouble than anyone else.  He must have had the finest pair of eyes in baseball,” he said.  “He’d stand up there and take a pitch a quarter-inch off the plate as calmly as if it had been two feet wide.”

Ken Keltner of the Indians also gave him some trouble in 1946, when Bob Feller’s touring All-Stars were playing a series with a Negro All-Star team, “but when I started pitching him overhand and high, he didn’t do me any damage to speak of.”

Last fall Paige faced Feller’s all-star assortment in Los Angeles to win an 8 to 0 decision in which he struck out 16.

Back in 1934 he faced Dizzy Dean at his peak, and took a 1 to 0 win in 13 innings, a game which Veeck calls “the best I’ve ever seen.”

1934 His Big Year

That was a big year for Satchel.  He was pitching for Bismarck, N.D., a team which won 104 of the 105 games it played.

“And I pitched in every game, I guess.  I know there was one month when I started 29 games,” he went on.

Satchel always has had a penchant for new automobiles and food.  Sometimes the automobiles were fire engine red.  He once said the secret of his success was compounded of two very hot baths every day and plenty of fried chicken and pork chops.  There are stories that he once ate a dozen hot dogs during a game, then dined on half a turkey and a whole watermelon.

The Monarchs bought him an airplane in 1946, for keeping engagements.  That was his best recent season.  He helped the Monarchs win the league pennant, allowing only two runs in 93 innings and running a string of scoreless innings to 64.

Proved His Ability

Most of the time he threw only a few innings, but he pitched a full game to clinch the pennant.  “Just wanted ‘em to know old Satch still had it.”

His strikeout record for a single game is the same as Feller’s – 18.  That was back in 1932 for the Monarchs and against the Baltimore Black Sox, in Yankee Stadium.

He has pitched a “hatful” of no-hitters, but some of them were against feeble opposition and he says those don’t count.  He doesn’t recall how many games he has won, nor his strikeout total.  He got into baseball in 1925 with the Chattanooga Lookouts and in 1928 joined the Birmingham Barons.  He has been with the Baltimore Black Sox, Chicago American Giants, the Pittsburgh Crawfords and the House of David.

Has Secret Tryout

Veeck and Manager Lou Boudreau had him down at the stadium Tuesday for a “secret tryout.”  It was the first time Boudreau had seen him in action.  He threw 50 pitches, “an only three or four of them were wide of the plate,’ said Veeck.  Boudreau managed a few line drives, but said, “Now I can believe some of the tall stories they tell me about his pitching.”

Three Negroes are now in the major leagues – Larry Doby of the Indians and Jackie Robinson and Roy Campanella of the Brooklyn Dodgers.  Paige was brought to Cleveland by Promoter Abe Saperstein, the Tribe’s chief scout of Negro players.  Veeck said he signed Satchel because “We are convinced he is the best available player who has a chance to help us win the pennant.”

The newest Indian stands six feet three and one-half inches and weighs 180.  He is unmarried.

Satchel Paige became the oldest rookie in major league history and in his inaugural season he went 6-1 in 21 games (7 starts) with a 2.48 ERA.  Bill Veeck was mocked for signing him and was told that if Satchel Paige was white no-one would have signed him in 1948 at the ripe old age of…well, let’s just say old.  To which Veeck responded, “If Satchel had been white, he would have been in the majors 20 years ago.”

All-star games and exhibition are just that, but let’s assume that Satchel Paige in an exhibition game pitching against Dizzy Dean proved that he was just as good as Ol’ Diz.  It’s a broad stroke assumption and I hope to be roundly criticized for it.  In 1934 Dizzy Dean posted a 30-7 record, pitched in 50 games, had an ERA of 2.66.  Could Paige have matched that record?  My guess is that he could have.

We will never know.

I will also make another huge assumption.  Because of his longevity if he made the majors in 1928 instead of the Negro League, he would have had 20 years in the majors, and his control, I would guess that he could have won well over 350 games with an ERA in the range of 2.50-3.00, with well over 3,000 strikeouts.  Would those stats put him in the discussion of the best pitchers of all time?  The top five?  Top ten?

We will never know.

With Cleveland in 1948, he helped the Tribe to their last World Series title. If he landed with the New York Yankees of the late 20s through the late 40s, how many World Series would he have won?

We will never know.

Some things we do know now and it came way too late.  Too late for those great ballplayers who were denied even a chance to play.

And that’s the shame.




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Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Hammerin’ Hank Forgives Big Mac

Tuesday, February 23, 2010 12:37 AM
By TommyT

The World Wide Leader in Sports ESPN is reporting through the AP that home run king and all-time great, Henry Aaron, has forgiven Mark McGwire, due to his recent apology for using steroids.

KISSIMMEE, Fla. — Former career home run king Hank Aaron says Mark McGwire should have a clear conscience after his recent admission he used performance-enhancing drugs as a player.

HankAaronHallofFamePlaque Aaron said other players still harboring similar secrets also should come clean.

“I think baseball is cleaning up its act a little bit, I really do,” Aaron said Monday during a visit to Atlanta Braves camp. “I’ve said this and I’ll say it again, over and over again, this is the most forgiving country in the world. If you come through and tell the truth, then you’re going to be forgiven.

“The kid with the Yankees, [Andy] Pettitte, came out and it was a week of news and after that it was over. We all make mistakes. If they ever did enhancing drugs, whatever they did, they should come clean and be able to sleep at night.”

Aaron said McGwire’s admission and apology this year was overdue but still welcome.

“I would have loved to have seen him do it a long time ago, but since he did it, I think that he himself will tell you right now he’s able to sleep at night and he’s able to look at his teammates,” Aaron said. “He’s done everything that he can do.”

McGwire, who hit a then-single-season record 70 homers in 1998, admitted this year he used steroids and human growth hormone as a player. He is beginning his first season as the Cardinals’ hitting coach.

“It’s nice to have him back,” Aaron said.

I’ve said this all along.  Big Mac was guilty of using steroids.  And if his teammate and fellow user, Jose Canseco, is to be believed (and he’s not been wrong about this subject so far) then the majority of players who played in the Steroid Era were users, too.  To Frank_Baker_Baseball_Cardme, it doesn’t make much of a difference if a player used or not.  We have to assume everyone used and then compare the stats of players of the same era in order to include or exclude them from the Hall of Fame.

Here’s my point.  Frank Baker is in the Hall of Fame.  And his plaque calls him Home Run Baker.  While with the Philadelphia Athletics, he led the league in homers four years in a row.  His totals? Eleven in 1911, ten in 1912, a whopping career-high twelve in 1913 and nine in 1914.  Should we take away his moniker just because he played in the pre-Babe Ruth dead ball era?  Should his home run totals be compared to those who came after him?  No, I don’t think so, either.

So, now that the best baseball player still alive, noted baseball executive and elder statesman of the game can forgive Big Mac, shouldn’t we all?

Can the Mike Lupicas (who made money off Big Mac and Sammy Sosa through his book), the ever arrogant and non-voting Jay Marriottis, and the others of their ilk please jump off their soap boxes and do the right thing?  And do what Hammerin’ Hank did?  Forgive Big Mac and vote for his inclusion into the Hall?

As Henry Aaron so simply stated about one of the men who saved baseball after the strike of 1994, “it’s nice to have him back.”

It sure is.




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Friday, February 19, 2010

Pitchers and Catchers Report

Friday, February 19, 2010 11:07 PM
By TommyT

oriolesx-largeWith the players descending on Florida and Arizona over the next few days/weeks, Spring has sprung, kids, and it slud into second base like an Ol’ Diz Dean expression.  The Baltimore Orioles minor league training camp is about a mile from my house.  No real activity yet, after all the O’s will be doing the most of their work at Edward Smith Stadium here in Sarasota.

Some thoughts on the O’s:

  • I am not a Peter Angelos baseball’s answer to Napoleon fan.  I believe that what he has done to the Orioles since he bought the team is the worst thing to happen to Baltimore since Edgar Allan Poe died there.
  • What Angelos Napoleon did to the Washington Nationals all in the name of the almighty dollar was a sham and a shame.
  • Baltimore used to be the class of the league, so much so that there was an Oriole way to doing things.  That meant excelling at fundamentals.  Now the Oriole way is to sign aging free agents to mult-year deals, while letting the stars of your team get away.
  • The O’s stadium, Camden Yards, opened in 1992.  That gem of a ballpark is 18 years old.  If you haven’t seen it yet, you should make a pilgrimage.
  • Cal Ripken, Jr. on Brooks Robinson from the Sporting News:
    • SN:Do you remember the first time you got to meet Brooks?
      CR: I do. When my dad first came to the big leagues. I was about 14 or 15 years old, and I had the chance to go down and say hello to Brooksie. He didn’t disappoint; he was as nice of a person as I thought he was. Took all the time in the world for me. I still have yet to find a person in the world who says a negative thing about Brooksie. He was my man.
  • You can still wear a Number 5 or Number 8 O’s jersey and wear it proud.
  • My favorite foul ball story is about the time my friend, The Umpire, and I attended a game at Memorial Stadium on 33rd Street.  Willie Wilson hit it off of Ben McDonald.
  • Can you attend a Spring Training game and cheer for neither team?  That’s what I’ll be doing in March when I take The Coach to see his beloved Yankees play the O’s.

It’s a little bit late for this, doncha think?  The Orioles’ 30 year lease to use Ed Smith stadium is dependent on a major renovation project being approved by the local government.  A citizens group in Sarasota is suing over making those renovations to on the heels of the players reporting to said stadium.  I’m a firm believer in doing what we can to boost the economy and in responsible government.

What could be more responsible than renovating an aging stadium to boost the local economy?




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