Monday, October 30, 2017

10/30: Gunner Axed; Colts Corralled; Sauer Prez; HBD Ian, Bobby, Lee, Mosquito, Pete & Lefty

  • 1866 - RHP Pete Conway was born in Burmont, Pennsylvania. For Pete, it was a matter of too much, too soon. He broke into the majors at age 18 in 1885, and by his 1888 campaign made 46 starts, with 43 complete games and 391 IP on the way to a 30-14, 2.26 year for the Detroit Wolverines. Motown disbanded, Conway signed with the Alleghenys for two years at $3500 per year and then worked three games as his arm was shot (the Boston Daily Globe reported that he had “snapped a cord in his arm”; later researchers believed he had a rotator cuff injury) and Pittsburgh suspended him - without pay, of course - for not being in baseball condition. He became a cause celebre with the Players Brotherhood as they tried to get his contract enforced (Pete even reported to the team daily) but to no avail; the injury was deemed to have a “natural cause.” He tried to pitch for a couple of more years, then went to Michigan to get a law degree. He coached the Maize & Blue nine for two years, but never had much time for his practice, passing away at age 36 of a heart ailment. His older brother Jim was also a big league pitcher; his career ended because of a bum arm, too.
The 1885 Pittsburgh Colts..er, Alleghenys
  • 1884 - Financially troubled despite finishing second to New York in the American Association‚ the Columbus Colts sold its players to the Pittsburgh Alleghenys for $8‚000 and disbanded. The Alleghenys needed all the help they could get; they finished the 1884 season 30-78 and 45-1/2 games behind the AA champion NY Metropolitans. 10 of Columbus’ players stuck on the Alleghenys 1885 roster, and five became core players for years - C Fred Carroll, OF Tom Brown, 2B Pop Smith, 3B Bill Kuehne and P Ed Morris. 
  • 1914 - LHP Aldon “Lefty” Wilkie was born in Zealandia, Saskatchewan. Lefty worked three years in the majors, all for Pittsburgh (1941-42, 1946), posting a line of 8-11-3, 4.59. He lost 1943-45 to the war as he was sent to Europe by the Army and never regained a pitching spot in the show after his return. Lefty worked in the minors through 1951, then retired to Oregon and became a poultry farmer. 
  • 1917 - Manager Bobby Bragan was born in Birmingham, Alabama. The former big league infielder managed the Bucs in 1956-57, just before they turned the corner, slating a record of 102-155 (.397) before Danny Murtaugh took the reins. Bobby moved on to Cleveland and after a break managed the Braves from 1963-66.
Bobby Bragan 1952 (photo Pgh Post Gazette)
  • 1918 - SS Tony “Mosquito” Ordenana was born in Guanabacoa, Cuba. Ordenana spent from 1942 to 1954 in pro ball, playing in 11 leagues with 14 teams. After appearing in one big league game with the Pirates in 1943, going 2-for-4 w/three RBI while handling seven chances at short, he spent the rest of his pro career in the minor leagues. Despite that promising debut, Mosquito (so called because of his quickness) hurt his MLB cause by batting just .250 without ever swatting a homer.
  • 1960 - RHP Lee Tunnell was born in Tyler, Texas. The Baylor righty was the Bucs’ second pick in the 1981 draft. He arrived in Pittsburgh the following September and then went 11-6/3.85 in 1983, but his four year run (1982-85) produced just a 17-24/4.06 line overall.
  • 1975 - Westinghouse Broadcasting stunned Pirate fans by announcing that Bob “The Gunner” Prince and sidekick Nellie King were getting the ax. At the time, no major league broadcaster had ever spent more years (29) with one team than Prince had with the Pirates. The reasons given were that the pair didn’t do enough to promote the team and went off-topic too often (guilty of the latter, but not the former). Despite a parade in his support that drew 10,000 fans, the duo were replaced by Milo Hamilton, formerly of the Atlanta Braves booth, and Lanny Frattare, the voice of the Pirates AAA Charleston club.
Ian Snell 2008 Upper Deck Spectrum
  • 1981 - RHP Ian Snell was born in Dover, Delaware. He spent parts of six seasons (2004-09) as a Pirate starter, showing promise but never quite getting over the hump with a line of 33-46/4.75. Ian was demoted to Indy in 2009, at his own request, and traded to Seattle a month later. He bombed there and was DFA’ed in June of 2010, ending his MLB career, although he did make a couple of comeback efforts. 
  • 1991 - Mark Sauer was named as club president after Carl Barger left to run the Florida Marlins. He oversaw the cost-cutting that gutted the Pirates' 1990-92 powerhouse teams as per the orders of the Pirates' public-private ownership to reduce payroll. He was eased out of action by the Kevin McClatchy group and resigned in the summer of 1996; McClatchy took his spot.

4 comments:

leefoo said...

I cried the day they let Gunner go. I never did like Milo or Lanny.

Ron Ieraci said...

It was a bad transition, Lee, which makes me think it was more a p**sing match between the two parties (and tho the Gunner was the people's choice in this affair, he wasn't entirely the innocent he portrayed) than any thought-out deal. But no matter who was in the right, after the trigger was pulled it was insanity to go to a vanilla, national-TV type announcer after decades of Prince and Rosey Rowswell. It was kinda like replacing Jerry Lee Lewis with Van Cliburn as the house pianist.

WilliamJPellas said...

I well remember listening to Bob Prince's "Gunner Network" show that ran for a few years on various PA radio stations following his dismissal from the Pirates' broadcast booth. From what little I know from reliable sources, I think you're right, Ron, to say that Bob "wasn't the innocent he portrayed". But unless he was impossible to worth with and/or flagrantly insubordinate, there is no way he should have been fired. Much less replaced by the likes of Hamilton and---far worse---Frattare. I often thought that Frattare didn't even like baseball very much. He certainly had zero "feel" for the fabric and lore of the game and no comprehension of the many subtleties that are part of every contest. In my opinion he was a lounge lizard, a poor knockoff of a real baseball announcer. He would have been okay as a voiceover guy or perhaps as a straight vanilla, big network type of guy. But a hometown play by play man he definitely wasn't.

Ron Ieraci said...

Yah, Will, Gunner's replacements were network-style broadcasters, definitely a bad, or at least different, fit for Pittsburgh. I don't really have any beefs with any of post-Prince gang professionally; I'm just old enough to be raised on street-corner thumpers and like that vibe. Pirate management has always had a problem connecting with the fanbase. Even now, the only local bang will be a one-day FanFest and then nada until Opening Day. So the Gunner's incident was just an early example of what in my eyes has become a long-running situation.