Tuesday, October 15, 2024

10/15: Kremer Wins Game 7 v Sens In '25, Tele Cup; Kent Goes, Forbes Joyride, Waner Bros on Tour, Alleghenys Reform; HBD Juan, Mendy, Carlos, Mitchell, Red, Gale, Bill, Don, Mules & Bob

  • 1881 - HD “Denny” McKnight resurrected the Allegheny Baseball Club of Pittsburgh (it had disbanded after the 1877 season) during a meeting at the St. Clair Hotel and joined the newly formed American Association. In 1887 they entered the National League and in 1891 morphed into the Pittsburgh Pirates after “pirating” away infielder Lou Bierbauer from the Philly A’s. 
  • 1887 - RHP Bob Harmon was born in Liberal, Missouri. He tossed for four seasons for the Pirates (1914-16, 1918), posting a 39-52-4/2.60 line while splitting his time between starting and the pen. After his pro baseball career ended in 1918, he became a successful dairy and crop farmer in Louisiana, becoming an active participant in both the community and the local sports scene. 
  • 1892 - On the last day of the season, Cincinnati Reds pitcher Charles “Bumpus” Jones no-hit Pittsburgh at League Park in his major league debut. Bumpus won 7-1, fanning three and issuing four walks. It wasn’t much of a launching pad - his MLB career lasted eight games and he won just one other decision. Bumpus still remains the only player to pitch a no-hitter in his first MLB appearance. Bill James, according to Wikipedia, gave him the distinction of being the “mathematically least likely pitcher ever to have thrown a no-hitter in the major leagues.” 
  • 1896 - RHP John “Mule” Watson was born in Arizona, Louisiana. He worked five games for the Pirates in 1920, one of three teams he played for that season. He didn’t impress the Bucco brass, compiling the worst ERA (8.74) for any of the four teams he spun for over a seven-year career. Mule did enjoy his 15 minutes of fame, although in a different set of flannels - on August 13th, 1921, he started both games of a doubleheader, and did pretty well, too, winning 4-3 and 8-0 contests in a pair of complete game outings for the Boston Braves against Philadelphia. 
Claude Ritchey - Harwell Collection/Detroit Public Library
  • 1900 - The Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph offered a silver cup to the winner of a best-of-five series at Exposition Park between the NL’s top two teams, the Pirates and the Brooklyn Superbas; Brooklyn won the 1900 title by 4-1/2 games over the Bucs during the regular season. Two future Hall of Famers faced off in the opener as NL ERA leader Rube Waddell (2.37) went against “Iron Man” Joe McGinnity, who topped the league with 28 wins. McGinnity whitewashed the Pirates for eight innings before two unearned runs in the top of the ninth cost him the shutout. Not only was he hurt by shoddy fielding, but he had been knocked out briefly the inning before during a rundown when he was accidentally kneed. He refused to come out after he regained his breath and went the distance for a five-hit, 5-2 victory. Claude Ritchey banged out a pair of knocks in a losing cause. 
  • 1903 - OF George “Mule” Haas was born in Montclair, New Jersey. Haas was signed as a youngster by the Bucs and worked his way to the show in 1925, getting in four games and going 0-for-3. Haas was in a wrong-time, wrong place situation - the Pittsburgh outfield that season featured Kiki Cuyler, Clyde Barnhart and Max Carey. Mule was sold to Atlanta after the season due more to the logjam than performance. He played 11 more seasons for the Philadelphia Athletics and Chicago White Sox, hitting .292 and playing in three World Series. Haas got his nickname in the minors while playing at Birmingham when the local beat man wrote that his bat had the kick of a mule after he homered. 
  • 1925 - Before the final game of the World Series, Senators OF Goose Goslin got some column inches in the Washington Post to debunk reports that Pirates C Earl Smith had gotten under his skin by clowning around behind the dish when Goslin hit. “That’s a lot of apple sauce,” Goslin wrote. “Smith simply is one of these ‘funny boys’ who gets a big kick out of trying to get smiles from the crowd. His imitation of flopping of wings, goose calls and such seem to have worried others worse than it has me. I think my batting record, which includes three home runs and a double out of my seven hits, proves that his antics have not upset me much. The fact is that I have been kidded by experts and have paid absolutely no attention to Earl’s amateurish efforts.” Goose added that Clark Griffith, Washington’s president, had complained to Commissioner Landis “on the grounds that Smith’s actions take away from the dignity of the game” and might even lead to a brawl. “I can promise one thing,” Goslin wrote. “I don’t intend to start any trouble.” Goose and Smith factored one another out; each went 1-for-4 during the deciding contest. 
Earl Smith 10/7/1925 Press photo
  • 1925 - In Game Seven of the World Series at Forbes Field, played on a muddy track soaked by a two-day rainstorm (the game was delayed a day), Kiki Cuyler laced an eighth-inning two-out, two-run, bases loaded double off Washington's Walter “Big Train” Johnson to lead the Pirates to a 9-7 comeback victory and their second World Championship, made all the sweeter by rallying from an early 4-0 deficit. Ray Kremer got the win, his second of the Series, with four innings of one-run relief after pitching a complete game win two days before. Errors by SS Roger Peckinpaugh, the AL MVP, in both the seventh and eighth innings led to four unearned runs. He had a tough Series in the field, committing a record eight errors. With the victory, the Bucs became the first team to win a World Series after being down three games to one. The Series was a big financial hit, grossing a record-setting $1.2M. Winning shares were $5‚332.72 while the losers pocketed $3‚734.60. It took a while, but Bucco manager Bill McKechnie became the first MLB skipper to win a World Series title with two different teams when his  Cincy Reds beat the Detroit Tigers in the 1940 Fall Classic. 
  • 1926 - RHP Don Carlsen was born in Chicago. Carlsen was signed by the Cubs as an IF, played a season and then went into the service, coming back two years later as a pitcher. He played in a game for Chicago, then in 1951-52 tossed for Pittsburgh, going 2-4/5.43 in 12 games (seven starts). Don worked in the Pirates minors until 1957, retiring after that campaign. 
  • 1927 - LHP Bill Henry was born in Alice, Texas. The veteran reliever spent the latter half of the 1968 campaign with the Pirates. It was his 15th year in the show and the creaks showed as he had the worst line of his career, compiling no record but tossing to an 8.10 ERA and giving up 18 runs (15 earned) and 29 hits in 16-2/3 innings over 10 appearances. Bill got into three games with the Astros the following year and then hung up his mitt. Henry did have a nice career run despite the messy finish as he ended his MLB days credited with 572 outings, 46 wins, 90 saves and a 3.26 ERA with an All-Star game and World Series during his tenure. 
The Waners - November 1927 photo Ray Gallavan/Press
  • 1927 - Although the New York Yankees Murderers Row pushed the Pirates out of the spotlight with a World Series sweep, the Bucs strong season kept the Waner brothers on a big stage a little longer as the "Waner Wonders" vaudeville team toured Loew movie houses in St. Louis, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Baltimore and other stops for six weeks. Paul blew sax, Lloyd bowed the fiddle, and they told baseball stories between tunes. Per Bob Hersom’s Oklahoman article, "Every so often," Lloyd said, "we'd hit the same notes as the orchestra." The Waners were each paid $2,100 a week, culminating with a $3,000 payday in the Big Apple, stipends that way outstripped their baseball compensation. Even with more big money waved at them, the brothers turned down an extension of their tour; they had to catch up on their off season fishing, hunting and golfing. 
  • 1928 - OF Gail Henley was born in Wichita, Kansas. He hit .300 in his only year with the Pirates (and in the big leagues), 1954, but the spot he was auditing for was more than adequately locked up with the arrival of Roberto Clemente the next year. Henley did serve some minor league time, then managed eventual Pirates skippers Jim Leyland and Gene Lamont. After some time as a skipper in the minors for the Detroit Tigers, Henley joined the Los Angeles Dodgers as a scout and organizational manager before retiring as a scout for Tampa Bay. 
  • 1936 - RHP Art “Red” Swanson was born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He was signed by the Pirates as a bonus baby in 1955 and spent the next two years in the show, as required by the signing rules, and barely appeared, with 10 outings in all. Red got more work in 1957, slashing 3-3/3.72 in 32 appearances before being sent to the minors, where he pitched until 1963. His dad was Al “Red” Swanson, who coached baseball at LSU and from whom Red picked up his nickname. 
  • 1951 - OF/1B Mitchell Page was born in Los Angeles. A third round pick of the Pirates in 1973, he tore it up in the minors for four years before being shipped to Oakland in part of the big ‘77 deal that brought Phil Garner to Pittsburgh. He spent seven seasons, four as a starter (.273/64 HR from 1977-80), on the coast before returning to the Pirates in 1984. He went 4-for-12 as a late-season call up, spending most of his time at AAA Hawaii. Mitchell retired after the year and coached off and on for the Royals, Cards and Nats before passing away in 2011. 
Mitchell Page - All Star Cards Collectibles photo
  • 1958 - Some joyriders sneaked into Forbes Field, hot-wired a maintenance truck parked overnight by the scoreboard and rode around the park until they crashed the vehicle several rows deep into the first base boxes, causing $3,000 worth of damage to the ballyard due to their midnight ride. 
  • 1967 - IF Carlos Garcia was born in Tachira, Venezuela. In seven (1990-96) Bucco seasons, he hit .278. Carlos was named to the 1993 Topps All-Star Rookie Team and the NL All-Star squad in 1994. In 1995, he was a hitting machine who had a 21-game hitting streak in June and then a 15-game hitting streak in September. García later coached for Seattle and was the first base coach and infield instructor for John Russell’s staff in 2010. He was named the manager of the Bradenton Marauders in December 2010, and in 2013-14, Garcia managed the Altoona Curve before being released by the Pirates. He then coached and managed in the Mexican League until 2018 and is now a clinic hitting coach. 
  • 1973 - IF Mendy Lopez was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Mendy got bits and pieces of seven campaigns in the majors, with some of 2001-02 with the Pirates where he hit .217 in 25 games (he spent almost all of 2002 in AAA Nashville). After his MLB retirement in 2004, he played in Korea, Mexico (where he was the 2006 MVP) and the Dominican. Mendy joined the organization in 2015 as the Pirates DSL manager, then was the Bucs Latin American Field Coordinator from 2017-21 and became Bradenton’s batting coach the following season. 
  • 1978 - RHP Juan Cruz was born in Bonao, Dominican Republic. Juan finished up his 12-year career in Pittsburgh in 2012, getting into 43 games and going 1-1-3/2.78 with 14 holds as part of the support group of closer Joel Hanrahan. With several other late inning options available, the Pirates released him in late August and that was the final leg of his MLB journey. 
  • 2002 - No job is safe: head Trainer Kent Biggerstaff was fired by Dave Littlefield. Biggerstaff, 54, had spent the past 17 years as the Bucs’ head trainer after serving a four-year apprenticeship under Tony Bartirome, who he replaced in 1986. He went on to become an athletic trainer for the PGA Tour, the Summer Senior Olympics, and Minor League Umpires Concussion Coordinator. In 2018, Kent was elected to the National Athletic Trainers Association Hall of Fame.

Monday, October 14, 2024

10/14: Postseason - Rook, Bert & Nellie Stop O's, Zane Whips Braves; Cutch MoY, Deal Nixed, Expansion, Roster Shuffles, Bell-Abrams; HBD Miguel, Kris, Duaner, Ryan, Midre, Scoops, Tom, Ken, Fireman, Oscar, Ona & Norm

  • 1863 - LHP (as speculated by SABR; his pitching side is not known for sure so...) Norm Baker was born in Philadelphia. He got his first taste of the pros with the Alleghenys in 1883, going 0-2/3.32 in a three game tryout and getting released before he put in 10 days on the roster to qualify for a contract. (His ERA wasn’t very indicative of his pitching; he gave up seven earned runs but 16 tallies overall and yielded 24 hits and 11 walks in 19 IP). Baker went on to pitch for the American Association’s Louisville and Baltimore franchises, although he was best known for irritating teammates (he was described as a “contrarian” who argued for the sake of arguing) and a man who never let a contract stand in his way - he switched among amateur, independent and minor-league clubs as freely as the law allowed and then some. He was injured in 1889 in a train accident and tried to come back, but his arm never fully recovered. Baker umped and managed briefly afterwards, then went on to have a career as a music store keyboard salesman while playing and co-managing for the company team.
  • 1886 - IF Ona Dodd was born in Springtown, Texas. The TCU alum got into five games for the Bucs in 1912 after being selected from Waco, went 0-for-9, and that ended his MLB journey. He played in the Texas League afterward through 1918. Dodd was the second player from Texas Christian to reach the show, and the only one of the 40+ Horned Frog MLB players to play for Pittsburgh. 
  • 1896 - CF Oscar Charleston was born in Indianapolis. The Hall of Famer played for the Homestead Grays from 1930-31, and from 1932-37 was the player/manager for the Pittsburgh Crawfords during their heyday. He consistently hit .340+ for the Crawfords, with a .363 BA in 1932. That club, with brother Hall of Famers Josh Gibson, Satchel Paige, and Judy Johnson on the roster along with “Charlie,” is considered among the best Negro League teams ever fielded. 
Oscar Charleston - photo National Baseball Hall of Fame
  • 1909 - The Pirates scored three times in the first inning, but the Detroit Tigers came back to take a 5-4 win at Bennett Park to force a seventh game in the World Series. The Cats used a balanced attack, banging out 10 hits, five of which were doubles, to give George Mullin the win and send Vic Willis to defeat. The Pirates scored three first-inning runs, keyed by a Hans Wagner double, and almost pulled it out in the ninth. Leadoff singles and a misplayed bunt brought the Bucs within a run with runners on the corners and no outs, but Pittsburgh couldn’t cash in. Bill Abstein was tossed out at home on George Gibson’s bouncer to first and Ed Abbaticchio banged into a game-ending DP to kill the golden goose. It was also the first officially sanctioned series to go the full seven-game limit.
  • 1913 - RHP Hugh “Fireman” Casey was born in Atlanta, Georgia. Casey was a nine-year vet (he lost a couple of years to the war) who spent most of his time with the Dodgers; he played with the Bucs for most of his final campaign in 1949, going 4-1-5/4.66 before being released to the Yankees for his final four outings. He had started as a fireballer, but an arm injury made him go to a curve and a new pitch, the splitter (although most opponents considered it a spitter, not splitter). Hugh was also noted for once getting into a brawl with author Ernest Hemingway in Cuba where the Dodgers were training. He got his nickname because he was an early baseball fireman, doing what a reliever should - putting out fires. Hugh came to a sad end, committing suicide in 1951 after losing a paternity suit and being sued for back business taxes due from his bar/restaurant.
  • 1915 - LHP Ken Heintzelman was born in Peruque, Missouri. He pitched for Pittsburgh from 1937-42, was off during the war years, and then returned for 1946-47. In eight years, the southpaw made 154 appearances with 86 starts and went 37-43 with a 4.14 ERA. His son Tom, went on to play MLB ball with the Cardinals and Giants as an infielder between 1973 and 1978. 
  • 1934 - RHP Tom Cheney was born in Morgan, Georgia. Cheney put in eight seasons of MLB ball, working for the Bucs in 1960 and a bit in ‘61 (2-2/4.67 overall) before going to the Senators for Tom Sturdivant. Tom had control issues throughout his career but terrific stuff, and holds the record for most K in a game with 21 in a 16-inning, 228-pitch win for Washington in 1962. Still, he only won 19 games in 71 starts over those eight years. He appeared to have turned the corner in 1962-63, but in August of the ‘63 campaign blew out his elbow and only got into 18 more MLB games before he was done. 
Tom Cheney - 1961 Topps
  • 1946 - OF/1B Al “Scoops” Oliver was born in Portsmouth, Ohio. He played 10 of his 18 big league years (1968-77) in Pittsburgh with a line of .296/135/717 and three All-Star berths. Scoops was a key member of the early ‘70s clubs that won a World Series and five pennants in six seasons. He holds the distinction of hitting the last home run at Forbes Field while also driving in the first run ever scored at Three Rivers Stadium. Al was dubbed “Scoops” as a minor league player at Gastonia because of his glove work at first. And his leather was excellent no matter where they put Oliver, who played 840 MLB games in center field. 
  • 1952 - 22-year-old Pirate OF Gus Bell was traded to the Giants for outfielders Gail Henley and Cal Abrams, along with C Joe Rossi. Bell spent the next 13 years in the show, nine with the Reds and four as an All-Star, belting double figure homers for the next eight seasons with a high of 30 long balls in 1953. Abrams hit well in his two Bucco years (.273/15 HR) before being traded to Baltimore, but Henley got just 30 MLB at-bats and Rossi was a wash-out. 
  • 1968 - The Pirates, in the midst of a youth movement, shed some years when they lost OF Manny Mota, 1B Donn Clendenon and 3B Maury Wills to the Montreal Expos along with pitchers Dave Roberts, Al McBean and Ron Slocum to the San Diego Padres during the expansion draft. 
  • 1969 - The Pittsburgh Press reported that the Pirates were a little flummoxed as to what to do with their peach-fuzz trio of Al Oliver, Richie Hebner and Bob Robertson. The consensus: keep Scoops at first base, move Big Red to third and deal The Gravedigger, who was used in a platoon role during the past season. Fortunately, when the season started, all three were still here thanks to Oliver’s versatility - he played first base and both outfield corners full-time (151 games, 609 PAs), allowing Robby to stay at first and Hebner to man the hot corner as platoon guys, with both getting 450+ dish visits. It kept that core together - Richie was 22 while the other pair were 23, and the trio remained intact as Pirates teammates through the 1976 season and five flags. 
Nellie Briles - 1972 Topps World Series
  • 1971 - Nellie Briles tossed a two-hit, two-walk shutout at the Baltimore Orioles, and the 4-0 win put the Pirates up three games to two in the World Series. The Birds never got a runner to second as two Orioles reached with two outs and the Bucs turned a pair of DP on the other set as Nellie faced just 29 hitters. Every Pirate batter reached base during the game, with Bob Robertson hitting a solo shot at Three Rivers Stadium in front of 51,377 Pittsburgh fans. 
  • 1971 - OF Midre Cummings was born in Christiansted, St. Croix, in the US Virgin Islands. A first round pick of the Twins in the 1990 draft, he came to Pittsburgh as part of the John Smiley deal. Between 1993-97, he barely got over 500 at bats for the Bucs, hitting .217. After the Pirates let him go, he played until 2005 and turned his bat around, never hitting under .263, although he remained a bench guy, playing fewer than 100 games in any given season. 
  • 1978 - OF Ryan Church was born in Santa Barbara, California. Church was signed to a one-year/$1.5M FA contract by the Bucs in 2010 in the hope that he would provide at least a platoon, if not starting, bat for the outfield. But Church had suffered a second concussion while playing in 2009 and never recovered his old mojo as a hitter, batting .182 and being sent to Arizona at the deadline. He played out the year there, hitting better (.265), but it was his final bow in the show after seven MLB seasons after the D-Backs non-tendered him following the campaign. 
  • 1979 - Staring at elimination, Pittsburgh had Bill Mazeroski throw out the first pitch. That Maz mojo apparently did the trick as Jim Rooker and game-winner Bert Blyleven combined to toss a six-hitter against the Orioles at TRS to keep the Bucs alive with a 7-1 victory. Rook went five frames, leaving with the Birds ahead, 1-0, before Blyleven and the Buc bats took over. Tim Foli tripled and had three RBI, Bill Madlock went 4-for-4, and Dave Parker and Phil Garner had a pair of knocks. The Pirates’ win left Baltimore ahead in the World Series win column three games to two. It’s also the last World Series game played in Pittsburgh.
Duaner Sanchez - 2003 Upper Deck
  • 1979 - RHP Duaner Sanchez was born in Cotuí, Dominican Republic. The Pirates got him from the D-Backs in July, 2002, for Mike Fetter, and Sanchez was tagged for 15 runs in 8-1/3 IP during his nine outings as a Bucco. He was released in 2003 and the Dodgers claimed him, with Duaner putting together a solid three-year run with LA and the Mets as a set-up man after that. His career took a hard hit in 2006, when a cab he was riding in was sideswiped by a drunk driver, separating his shoulder and pretty much ending his major league days. He put in a full year with the Mets in 2008, albeit with a 4.32 ERA (it was 2.60 before his injury) and after a quick stop at San Diego, he spent 2009-11 in the Dominican, Mexican and indie leagues before retiring from pro ball. 
  • 1980 - Charley Feeney of the Post Gazette wrote that the Bucs offered the California Angels SS Tim Foli in exchange for 1B Jason Thompson, and the Halos countered by asking for a SS Dale Berra/RHP Enrique Romo package. No deal was struck, but focus and perseverance sometimes pay off. The Bucs landed Thompson late during the following spring training camp by sending the Halos C Ed Ott and LHP Mickey Mahler. JT proved solid with the stick - in his five Pirate campaigns, he hit .259 with 93 HR and a 125 OPS+. Otter played one more season and was done while Mahler pitched from 1981-83 in the Angels system, but only made 12 MLB outings, working out of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League and serving as a depth option for the Cali club. 
  • 1984 - LHP Kris Johnson was born in West Covina, California. Johnson was a #1 pick (40th overall) of the Bosox out of Wichita State in 2006. They released him in 2011 and the Bucs signed him. He got into four Pirates games (one start) in 2013, slashing 0-2/6.10, and was traded to the Twins after the season to get Duke Welker back. He carved out a solid six-year run beginning in 2015 (60-43/2.81) with Hiroshima in the Japanese League before retiring in 2021. 
  • 1991 - The Pirates Zane Smith was the victor as the Bucs took a 1-0 win over the Braves at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium and a 3-2 lead in the NLCS. Tom Glavine was the loser, touched up only in the fifth when Chico Lind singled home Steve Buechele. The Braves lost a run when David Justice missed third base while heading home after a two-out, fourth-inning single in a decision that was controversial with its replay inconclusive, allowing the original call to stand. 
The Slide even made bobblehead notoriety...
  • 1992 - Pittsburgh lost the seventh game of the NLCS to the Braves at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, 3-2, when Sid Bream scored in the ninth, barely beating Barry Bond's off-line throw and Spanky LaValliere’s lunging tag to begin a two-decade long Bucco Dark Age. Pittsburgh carried a two-run lead into the last frame when a Chico Lind error and two walks proved fatal. Francisco Cabrera, whose two-out pinch-hit single tallied Bream, was a backup catcher who had only 11 plate appearances during the regular season. Karma quickly caught up; the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Bravos four games to two in the World Series, taking all four of their victories by one run with three of those wins claimed during their last at bat for their first of back-to-back Fall Classic titles. 
  • 1992 - LHP Miguel Del Pozo was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. He bounced around and had TJ surgery in 2016, landing with Pirates in 2020 as a minor league FA. Del Pozo had been beaten up some in his rookie year with the Angels, and it continued during his season in Pittsburgh. He was called up in 2020 and still had big problems finding the strike zone. Miguel walked eight in 3-2/3 IP and posted an ERA of 17.18; he declared for FA after the season and signed with the Tigers. He was DFA’ed after the 2022 season and signed with Detroit, was released after TJ surgery and is in the Giants system now. 
  • 1994 - The players may have been on strike, But GM Cam Bonifay was still trying to beef up the edges of the club. LHP Randy Tomlin was DFA’ed (he declared for free agency but never landed another MLB gig) to make room for IF Nelson Liriano, who was claimed from the Colorado Rockies. Earlier in the week, Cam picked up C Mark Parent on waivers from the Chicago Cubs and added a pair of outfielders, Jacob Brumfield and Micah Franklin, in deals with the Cincinnati Reds. 
  • 2015 - Andrew McCutchen was selected as Pittsburgh’s Male Athlete of the Year in a voter's poll for the City Paper’s “Best Of” issue. Charlie Deitch wrote a feature on Cutch, saying “...the reason (for the award) seems like a simple one: He's really good at playing baseball. But it's more than that...this guy really loves the game; he says it with his words and his actions.”

Notes: Quiet Week...

The quest for the crown... 

Pirates Stuff:

  • MLB's Winter meetings will be held in Dallas this December 9-12, featuring the GM meetings and Rule 5 Draft. Last year, the Pirates added just one player (OF Gilberto Celestino, who was sold to the Cubs in July w/o appearing for the Bucs) before December.

Farm Stuff:

  • Indianapolis Indians president/CEO Randy Lewandowski was named the 2024 Minor League  Executive of the Year.
  • RHP Mike Burrows was yanked from the AFL Scottsdale Scorpions roster (no reason given), and replaced by RHP Valentin Linarez. Linarez, 24, began the year AA-Altoona before being sent to Hi-A Greensboro after a rough go with the Curve. The 6-5 Domincan's combined '24 slash was 4-2-2/4.98 with 71 K in 56 IP. 
  • Hurricane Milton chewed up the Buc Lecom/Pirate City facilities in Bradenton a bit, but the complex avoided a major hit (primarily the park wall and practice fields fencing were dinged) and should be ready for spring training.
Family Ties Stuff:
  • Former Bucco All-Star reliever Mark "The Shark" Melancon joined the San Diego State Aztecs' staff as pitching development coordinator.
  • Indians, Twins, Red Sox, Yankees, Pirates and Angels pitcher Luis Tiant passed away Tuesday. El Tiante tossed for the Bucs in 1981 (2-5/3.92), the year before ending his 19-year career.
Playoffs:
  • It's down to four - The Mets and the Dodgers go at it for the NL crown (LA up 1-0) while the Yankees and Guardians vie for the AL title. The two winners meet on October 25 to begin this year's grand finale, the Fall Classic.

Sunday, October 13, 2024

10/13 Through the 1930s: Rizzo Deal, Waner, Rhyne Called Up; Postseason - Ray Stops Sens, Babe & Bats Do In Tigers; Smoky City; HBD Dick, Xavier, Charlie, Frank, Jack & Rube

  • 1876 - LHP George “Rube” Waddell was born in Bradford, Pennsylvania. He pitched just two seasons for the Pirates (1900-01), but his legend deserves mention. He wore out his welcome with Pittsburgh, getting into two games in 1901 after leading the NL in ERA (2.37) the year before with the Bucs. His eccentricities: He was a fire fanatic in a good way; Rube always wore a red t-shirt so he could join up with any fire-fighting brigade that he found in action. Though he never showed up drunk at a game, he was a heavy drinker - The Sporting News called him a “sousepaw” - and was distracted by crowds, who would mesmerize him by flashing shiny objects at him. In exhibition games, he had his teammates sit around him on the mound. Waddell also wrestled alligators in the off season. Current baseball historians believe he was autistic or had ADD before the conditions were known. But Rube could throw a baseball. He won 193 games and struck out 2,316 batters in his career (349 whiffs in 1904 alone). Rube K’ed three batters on nine pitches in 1902. He was one of the great drawing cards of early baseball, and is in the Hall of Fame. The story of his life was foretold by the stars: Rube was born on Friday the 13th and died on April Fools Day. 
  • 1888 - Manager, coach & scout Jack Onslow was born in Scottdale, between Connellsville and Mt. Pleasant. Jack had a brief MLB career, consisting of two seasons and 36 games as a catcher before coaching for Bill McKechnie’s Pirates (1925–26), the Washington Senators (1927), St. Louis Cardinals (1928), Philadelphia Phillies (1931–32) and Boston Red Sox (1934). Onslow also scouted for the Chicago White Sox, Boston Braves and Boston Red Sox. He was the White Sox skipper from 1949-50 and managed minor league squads for six seasons. 
  • 1889 - SS Frank Smykal was born in Chicago. He got a six-game cup of coffee with the Bucs in 1916, going 3-for-10 with three walks. He was one of a group of SS’s on the roster as it was Hans Wagner’s final season; the spot stayed patchwork after the Dutchman left until Rabbit Maranville arrived in 1921. It was the 26-year-old Smykal’s only taste of MLB ball, and after his Pirates stint that he went home to Chicago for good, where he lived until he passed away at age 60. 
Pgh Commercial Gazette Clip 10/14/1899
  • 1899 - Smoky City, home field edge: The Louisville Colonels scored four runs in the ninth to take a 6-5 lead over the Pirates at Exposition Park, as a thick‚ black mist from the local mills slowly settled over the field. The game was called before the Bucs could bat because of poor visibility (darkness, technically) caused by the smokestack fog, and much to Louisville's consternation, the score reverted to the last full frame, the eighth inning, giving Pittsburgh a 5-2 victory. 
  • 1903 - Boston won the first World Series five games to three (it was best-of-nine) with a 3-0 win at the Huntington Avenue Baseball Grounds in front of 7,455 fans. In a battle between Deacon Phillippe and Bill Dinneen, the key blow was Hobe Ferris’ two-run single in the fourth inning, following a Bucco boot. Dinneen tossed a four-hitter, and ended the game with his seventh K, whiffing Honus Wagner. Even in that rubber-armed era, the Pirates had piled way too much work on Phillippe, who started five of the eight games (and went the distance in all of them) because of an injury to Sam Leever’s shoulder, the mental breakdown of Ed Doheny, a 16-game winner during the season, and the defection of 1902 rotation members Jack Chesbro and Jesse Tannehill to the American League. Pittsburgh owner Barney Dreyfuss added his share of the gate receipts to the players' share, so the losing team's players actually finished with larger individual shares than the winning team ($1,316.25 to $1,182.00). An appreciative Dreyfus also gave the Deacon a bonus and 10 shares of stock of Pirates ownership for his yeoman efforts on the slab. 
  • 1906 - IF Charlie Hughes was born in Lawrenceville. Hughes, a gifted gloveman who developed his skills on Ammon Field, played two seasons for the Pittsburgh Crawfords (1931 & 1934) and another campaign for the Homestead Grays (1933). Hughes started in the local black sandlot leagues, playing for the Bluesox of Herron Hill/Lawrenceville and the Edgar Thompson mill team. He played 32 years for ET, off-and-on, where not only did you get to play ball but had a job in the mill to pay the bills. (Carnegie/US Steel sponsored teams starting in the late 1800s). 
Fred Clarke - 1909 American Caramel
  • 1909 - The Pirates broke out the bats at Forbes Field in front of 21,706 fans to take a 3-2 lead in the World Series with an 8-4 win over the Tigers. Fred Clarke had two hits, including a homer with three RBI/two runs scored, to lead the offense. Tommy Leach, Bobby Byrne and George Gibson also had a pair of raps while Babe Adams cruised to his second WS win, giving up six hits and fanning eight. The Bucs tortured Detroit on the basepaths, stealing five bases in six tries. 
  • 1912 - RHP Xavier Rescigno was born in New York City. He tossed for the Pirates during the war years of 1943-45 (it was his entire MLB career), slashing 19-22-16/4.13 in 129 games (21 starts). The curve ball whiz tossed for Manhattan College and was signed by the Yankees but didn’t take off until he joined the Brooklyn organization and was tutored by Burleigh Grimes. The Pirates eventually bought his contract and sent him to Albany, and they brought him and Ralph Kiner up in 1943. He worked through the ‘45 season when at age 32, he was overtaken by the wartime talent returning from the service back to baseball. He worked in the minors for five more years before retiring. Rescigno was known as “Mr. X” and was the first guy named Xavier to play in MLB (there have been six in big league history and the Pirates rostered three - Rescigno, Nady and Paul). In fact, while in his 90s, one of his final acts as a baseball elder was to meet up with the newest MLB Xavier at the time, OF’er Nady, during a game at San Diego, and Rescigno followed up with a letter welcoming Nady into the Xavier fraternity. 
  • 1925 - The Pirates, on the recommendation of scout Joe Devine, bought OF Paul Waner (who had 280 hits and a .401 BA) and SS Hal Rhyne from the Pacific Coast League champs, the San Francisco Seals, for $100 K. Hall-of-Famer Waner played 15 years for the Bucs from 1926-40, hitting .340 with one MVP and four All-Star outings (ASGs didn’t begin until 1933, when he was 30 years old). Rhyne played two years in Pittsburgh and batted .258, but couldn’t move Glenn Wright off of short. Hal played five more years for Boston and the White Sox. 
  • 1925 - Pittsburgh evened the World Series at three games each as they downed the Washington Senators, 3-2, at Forbes Field. Ray Kremer bested Alex Ferguson, giving up six hits. Pirates leadoff man Eddie Moore had two hits, including a homer, two runs scored and an RBI; Pie Traynor and Clyde Barnhart drove in the other tallies, with all the scoring posted in the first five innings. 
Eddie Moore - 1925 photo Bain/Library of Congress
  • 1932 - IF Dick Barone was born in San Jose. The 27-year-old Barone was called from Columbus to become the back-up to Dick Schofield in 1960 after Dick Groat was injured. He played in three games (once as a starter) over the final month, and those three contests made up his entire major league career. He was 0-for-6 while flawless in the field, but wasn’t included on the Pirates' 1960 World Series roster as Groat returned to the roster for the postseason. Barone's baseball claim to fame is that he once started a game in place of Hall of Famer Bill Mazeroski. Afterward, he played in the minors through 1962 and saw his pitcher grandson, Daniel, play in the show in 2007 with the Florida Marlins. 
  • 1937 - The Bucs got OF Johnny Rizzo from the Cards for 1B Bernard Cobb, C Tom Padden, OF Bud Hafey and cash. The rookie Rizzo hit 23 homers in 1938, a team record that lasted for nearly a decade (it was broken by Jason Bay and Josh Bell, both who hit 26 dingers), and was traded early in 1940 for Vince DiMaggio. Rizzo went downhill in 1941, and ‘42 was his last MLB season as he enlisted in the Navy the following year. He came back from the service in 1946, spent four years in the minors and retired to work in the sporting goods field and as an auto salesman.

10/13 From 1940: Shep Hired; Postseason - Maz Mr. Game 7, Roberto Rips O's Bucs Even Up w/Braves In '71 & '72, Saul's Gang; HBD Jose, Hayden & Bob

  • 1941 - Pittsburgh selected Fayette City and Connellsville HS’s Jim Russell from Memphis of the Southern Association in the minor league draft. He hit .277 from 1942-47 for the Bucs (in 1944 he led the Pirates in hitting with a .312 BA and 109 runs scored) before spending his next four MLB campaigns playing for the Boston Braves and Brooklyn Dodgers, with Jim’s career cut short by heart problems he had contracted as a child. He stayed in baseball afterward, scouting for the Dodgers and Washington Senators for a decade. Jim’s claim to fame is that he was the first player in Buccaneer history to hit a pinch hit grand slam, banging it against the Dodgers in 1943. He’s a member of the Mon Valley, Western Pennsylvania and Pennsylvania Hall of Fames. 
  • 1942 - 3B Bob Bailey was born in Long Beach. As a prep player, he was inked to the largest signing bonus ever paid up to that time, a reported $135,000, and began his 17-year pro career in Pittsburgh (1962-66) where he hit .257 with occasional power before being dealt to the Los Angeles Dodgers with Gene Michael for Maury Wills. Bailey had his best years with the Montreal Expos in the early seventies, with three 20+ HR seasons and three more with 80+ RBI. When he retired, Bob spent a decade managing in the Montreal system with side gigs as a hitting instructor. He passed away in Las Vegas at age 75. 
  • 1960 - Game Seven of the World Series at Forbes Field ended with this call by NBC’s Mel Allen “There's a drive into deep left field, look out now… that ball is going, going, gone! And the World Series is over! Mazeroski… hits it over the left field fence…” Bill Mazeroski led off the bottom of the ninth with the most dramatic home run in Series history, a blast off Ralph Terry, breaking a 9-9 tie with the Yankees and bringing Pittsburgh its third World Championship. It’s still the only homer to win a seventh game in the ninth inning. Hal Smith hit a key two-out, three-run shot in the eighth to give Pittsburgh a short-lived lead before Maz stole his thunder. Harvey Haddix, the fourth Pirate hurler, recovered from a blown save in the ninth to get the win in front of 36,683 ecstatic rooters. Maz’s blast also cost Casey Stengel his job; the Ol’ Perfessor “retired'' as NY manager five days after the loss, telling the media "I wasn't retired - they fired me." Other factoids: Bobby Richardson of the Yankees was named MVP of the Series, the only time that someone from the defeated team has been so honored, and it was the only World Series game ever played without a strikeout recorded by either club. The event has been celebrated on its anniversary outside the remaining FF wall since 1985. 
Maz's trot - 10/14/1960 photo Jim Klingensmith/Post-Gazette
  • 1967 - Larry Shepard was named manager, replacing Danny Murtaugh, who in turn had replaced Harry Walker earlier in the year. He lasted two seasons, circularly replaced by Murtaugh, then became the pitching coach of Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine under Sparky Anderson from 1970 through 1978. He finished his coaching career with the San Francisco Giants in 1979. 
  • 1971 - Roberto Clemente had three hits while Milt May drove in the winning run with a pinch-hit single in the eighth as the Pirates rallied to defeat the Baltimore Orioles, 4-3, at TRS in Game Four of the Fall Classic. Luke Walker gave up three runs in the first frame before heading to the showers with two outs, but Bruce Kison came to the rescue, tossing 6-1/3 one-hit innings, then Dave Giusti saved it by pitching perfect ball over the last two frames. It was the first scheduled night World Series game in baseball history (in 1949, the lights were turned on in the ninth inning at Ebbets Field because of darkness in a WS game between Brooklyn & the Yankees) and set two attendance records with 61M TV viewers listening to Curt Gowdy and Bob Prince call the action while 51,378 fans blanketed the park. It was a success all around; by 1987, all World Series games would be scheduled under the lights and the win evened the Series at two games apiece. It also got foul poles added to TRS the following season after a rhubarb over a Clemente drive (the Bucs claimed homer; the ump called foul) led the Pirate brass to discovered that TRS’ painted yellow foul line had a 20” recess between the fence on the field and the back wall, leaving enough room for a curving ball that would otherwise kiss the foul line to instead slide foul. Local baseball icon from Donora, Stan “The Man” Musial, tossed out the game’s first pitch. 
  • 1979 - The Bucs took a 6-3 lead into the eighth against the Orioles in the fourth game of the World Series, but they and 50,883 fans were stunned by a six-run eighth by the Orioles and a 9-6 loss snatched from the jaws of victory at Three Rivers Stadium. Kent Tekulve, inheriting a mess from Don Robinson, gave up a pair of two-run doubles to Terry Crowley and John Lowenstein to take the defeat. The Pirates banged out 17 hits, but stranded 10 with two DP, a caught stealing and a throw-out at home. Willie Stargell had three knocks, including a homer and double, but Pittsburgh fell into a three games to one hole against Baltimore. 
Willie Stargell - 1979 Topps WS Patch
  • 1984 - RHP Hayden Penn was born in La Jolla, California. Penn appeared in 33 games over four years in the majors. His last three outings were with the Pirates in 2010, when he gave up eight runs in 2-1/3 IP after being claimed off waivers from the Florida Marlins during training camp. Penn was sent to AAA Indianapolis, then his contract was sold and he threw in Japan for three seasons afterward for Chiba-Lotte, winning a Japan Series game (their World Series) in 2010. He made his last hurrah with the indie Bridgeport Bluefish in 2013, retiring at age 28. 
  • 1985 - Saul Finkelstein sat at the base of the flagpole by the Forbes Field wall outside Schenley Plaza and listened to a taped NBC radio broadcast of Chuck Thompson and Jack Quinlan calling the seventh game of the 1960 World Series on his boombox. After that day, the memorial event soon evolved into an annual party & ceremony open to all under the auspices of the Game Seven Gang, often drawing an assortment of politicos and members of the championship team to mingle with the fans in Oakland once again. 
  • 1991 - Pittsburgh evened the NLCS at two games with a 10-inning, 3-2 win at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium over the Braves. Mike LaValliere’s two-out, pinch hit single off Mark Wohlers scored Andy Van Slyke, and Stan Belinda tossed two scoreless frames for the win. Steve Buechele banged out three hits, giving him five straight knocks over two games to tie an NLCS record that stood until 2003. 
  • 1992 - The Pirates pounded the Braves, 13-4, at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium to even the NLCS series at three games each. Tim Wakefield won his second game while Jay Bell, Barry Bonds and Lloyd McClendon homered. The Bucs ran away with the game early after an eight-run second inning, featuring a pair of hits by Bonds and McClendon during the frame. 
  • 1994 - C Jose Godoy was born in Maracaibo, Venezuela. He was signed in 2011 by the Cards and had cups of coffee with Seattle and Minnesota. The Twins waived him in 2022 and the Bucs, in need of another catcher (he was the season’s seventh), claimed him. Jose got into eight August games, got one hit and was sent to Indy when Tyler Heineman returned to action. Jose then had stops with the Orioles, Yankees and Rangers before spendingt ‘24 in the Phils system.

Saturday, October 12, 2024

10/12: Leyland Signs, Wood - Pizarro, Polo Grounds Finale; Postseason - Blass Stops '71 O's, Sens Go Down in '25; HBD JT, Casey, Joe, Erv, Pete, Sunset Jim, Frank, Pop & Charlie

  • 1854 - Utilityman Charlie Morton (no relation to later Bucco pitcher Charlie “Ground Chuck'' Morton) was born in Kingsville, Ohio. He got his brief career off to a fine start by batting .296 in 1882 for the Alleghenys, but was released in July and finished the year with St. Louis. He spent a year in the bushes and played in 54 more games for Toledo and Detroit as player/manager for both clubs to close out his MLB days; his Pittsburgh stint was the only time he hit over the Mendoza Line. After some managing, Charlie later went on to found the Ohio-Pennsylvania League and was its president during its existence from 1905-12. Over that time, it hosted a lot of local Western PA ball clubs (Braddock, Butler, Homestead, Mansfield/Carnegie, McKeesport, New Castle, Pittsburgh, Sharon and Washington). In fact, it was home to 40 teams from 20 towns in those eight years. 
  • 1856 - Charles “Pop” Smith was born in Digby, Nova Scotia. He played the infield for the Pittsburgh Alleghenys from 1885-89. Pop only hit .220 for the Alleghenys, but could run (117 stolen bases in 557 games, 225 as a Pirate) and was a good glove man who played second or short equally well. He spent 12 years in big league ball, playing for 10 teams (Pittsburgh was the only club he stayed with for longer than two campaigns) and was one of the earliest Canadian major league players, first joining the show in 1880. In 2005, he was recognized with his induction into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame. 
  • 1860 - 1B/C Frank Ringo was born in Parkville, Missouri. He didn’t make much of a dent in Pittsburgh, getting into just 18 games for the Alleghenys from 1885-86 and batting .209. Ringo was an alcoholic who couldn’t conquer his demons (he had gotten straight but later relapsed) and in 1889 became the first known major league player to take his own life, via a morphine overdose. 
  • 1874 - 3B “Sunset Jimmy” Burke was born in St. Louis, Missouri. Burke spent seven years in the show with part of 1901 (Pittsburgh was his third team that season) and all of 1902 as a Bucco, hitting .276 in 74 games before he was traded to St Louis. He played in the NL until 1905, then spent time mostly in the American Association until 1913. Sunset Jimmy was a player/manager for the St Louis Perfectos, coach for the Detroit Tigers, manager for the St. Louis Browns, and a coach for the Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs and the New York Yankees, finally retiring in 1933. Jimmy got his nickname from a superstition/habit of his, believing it was unlucky to eat dinner until after sunset. 
Jimmy Burke (Indianapolis) - 1909-11 T206
  • 1882 - Negro League OF and manager John Preston "Pete" Hill was born in Culpepper County, Virginia, but was raised in Pittsburgh after arriving in town as an infant. He played for 11 teams during his Hall of Fame career, getting his first taste of organized ball as a teen with the semi-pro Pittsburgh Keystones in 1899. A reader poll by the Pittsburgh Courier in 1952 selected Pete as the fourth best outfielder in the history of the Negro Leagues, running in pretty good company, behind only Oscar Charleston, Cristobal Torriente and Monte Irvin in the voting. 
  • 1901 - RHP Erv Brame was born in Big Rock, Tennessee. He spent his five-year MLB career (1928-32) with Pittsburgh, going 52-37/4.76, mostly as a starter who was shuttled to the bullpen in his last season. He was 16-11 in 1929 with 19 complete games in 28 starts, then posted a 17-8 record and led the National League with 22 complete games in 29 starts in 1930. Erv sported a nice stick, with a career batting line of .306 with 21 doubles, eight homers, 43 runs scored and 75 RBIs in 416 big league at bats. The Pirates called on Erv 78 times as a pinch hitter and he hit .322 in that bench bat role. 
  • 1906 - SS Joe Cronin was born in San Francisco. He spent his first two seasons (1926-27, .257 BA) of a 20-year career in Pittsburgh, getting in 50 games before being sold. The Bucs should have exercised a little more patience. During the next 18 seasons with Washington & Boston, Joe posted a .301 BA, made seven All-Star teams, and eventually entered the Hall of Fame. 
  • 1909 - The Tigers, behind George Mullin’s five-hit whitewash, evened up the World Series at two games with a 5-0 win at Bennett Park. Deacon Phillippe tossed four shutout innings for Pittsburgh after relieving starter Lefty Leifield, who gave up three runs in the fourth with the bases empty and two outs, to give the Pirates a chance, but the bats never warmed up. Pittsburgh fielders didn’t help out as they committed six errors during the contest although none led to a score. 
Vic Aldridge - 1925 photo Bain/Library of Congress
  • 1925 - Five different Pirates banged out a pair of knocks as Pittsburgh used a 13-hit attack to overcome some great Senator glovework to defeat Washington, 6-3, at Griffith Stadium. Vic Aldridge’s complete game win kept the Bucs alive in the World Series, although down two games to three. Clyde Barnhart had a pair of hits, two RBI and a run scored (Max Carey, Kiki Cuyler, Glenn Wright and Earl Smith also had two raps) while Washington’s Joe Harris, who would play for Pittsburgh’s 1927 World Series club, homered as the bright spot in the Sen’s offense. 
  • 1930 - RHP Joe Trimble was born in Providence, Rhode Island. Joe was a standout in high school and signed with Cincinnati. He lasted until 1950 but had arm woes; he left baseball and joined the Marines, seeing action in Korea. The time off strengthened his arm; he came back and was signed by the Bucs in 1954. Trimble was later lost to Boston in the Rule 5 Draft, but they returned him to the Pirates after a brief MLB look. Following a year at AAA Hollywood, he got some work for Pittsburgh in 1956, but went 0-2/8.24 in five games (four starts) with his arm again failing him. That finished him in baseball, although he did pretty well afterwards, going to night school and eventually becoming a local VP for Coca Cola in Providence. He also ran the John Trimble Fund Pro-Am Golf Tournament for Autism, which has raised more than a million dollars to help fight autism. 
  • 1960 - Whitey Ford again owned the Bucs in the World Series, tossing a seven-hitter as New York blanked Pittsburgh 12-0 at Forbes Field to stave off elimination and force a seventh game. Bobby Richardson tripled twice and had three RBI as the Bronx Bombers amassed 17 hits against Bob Friend and a beleaguered bullpen. Roberto Clemente and Hal Smith had a pair of hits each for the Pirates, who added to their misery by bouncing into three double plays. 
  • 1963 - The final baseball game at the Polo Grounds (it was demolished the next year after Shea Stadium opened) was the Hispanic American All-Star game, the first and only one held in MLB history (it was originally planned to be an annual affair). The starters were Juan Marichal and Pedro Ramos while the roster of Latino stars included Pirates Roberto Clemente (who also served as the National League manager), Manny Mota, who delivered a clutch two-run pinch-hit single, and Alvin McBean, who was credited with the win, in a 5-2 NL victory. The game drew 14,235 fans who were entertained by Tito Puente, Tito Rodríguez and La Lupe as warm-up acts before the game. 
  • 1966 - The Pirates traded out-of-options RHP Wilbur Wood to the White Sox for cash and a PTBNL (Juan Pizarro). Chicago converted him to a straight knuckleball guy and he responded by becoming a rubber-armed reliever before being flipped to a 300-inning-per-year starter later in his career. The Bucs were rumored to have been offered a Wood-for-Hoyt Wilhelm deal earlier, but that was nixed with one reason being that the Pirates lacked a knuckleball receiver with any experience, which helped grease the skids for Wood. That allowed Wilhelm to tutor Wood when he arrived in Chi-town. Under his guiding hand, Wood pitched twelve seasons for Chicago and won 168 games with three All-Star appearances. His career was cut short in 1976 when Ron LeFlore’s liner broke his kneecap; Wood missed that campaign and was generally ineffective afterwards. 
  • 1971 - The Bucs broke open a duel between Mike Cuellar and Steve Blass by scoring three times in the seventh on the way to a 5-1 World Series win at TRS in front of 50,403 fans. Bob Robertson blasted the deciding three-run homer after he missed a bunt sign (Roberto Clemente was aboard and tried to call time when he saw Big Red had missed the sign, but Cuellar was already into his motion so his effort was ignored). Steve Blass was sitting next to Danny Murtaugh in the dugout at the time, and told the skipper: "If you fine him (Robertson, for missing the bunt sign), I'll pay." Murtaugh didn't. Blass’ three-hit gem left Pittsburgh with a pulse, down two games to one in the Fall Classic. 
  • 1979 - The Pirates brought the World Series back to TRS and 50,848 fans with Danny Murtaugh’s widow Katie tossing out the first pitch, but they were run off the field, 8-4, by Baltimore, which lit up John Candelaria with a five-run fourth inning. The Birds were led by Kiko Garcia, who drove in four runs with four hits. For the Bucs, Willie Stargell had a pair of raps and scored twice while Phil Garner chipped in with two RBI and Omar Moreno added a pair of doubles. It was too little, too late against Scott McGregor as the Orioles went up two games to one. 
  • 1982 - 1B/3B Casey McGehee was born in Santa Cruz, California. Casey played eight years in the majors, making a Pittsburgh stop in 2012. The Pirates got him from the Brewers before the campaign for Jose Veras; after hitting .230 w/eight HR, the Bucs moved him at the deadline to the Yankees for Chad Qualls. Casey played for the Tigers some in 2016 and spent 2017-18 in Japan. 
Casey McGehee - 2012 photo Mike McGinnis/Getty
  • 1990 - Danny Jackson, Norm Charlton and Randy Myers combined on a one-hitter as Cincinnati beat the Pirates, 2-1, to win the NLCS in six games. 1B Carmelo Martinez had the only Bucco hit, a double that scored Barry Bonds (aboard on a walk) as Zane Smith took the loss at Riverfront Stadium. Jim Leyland started a back-end reliever, Ted Power, in order to keep the Reds from using their favored platoon lineup (he followed him with LHP Smith in the third) and it almost worked. The game clincher was an over-the-fence catch by RF Glenn Braggs, robbing Carmelo Martínez of a two-run homer with an out in the ninth, to preserve the win in dramatic fashion. The Reds carried their momentum forward to sweep the Oakland Athletics in the World Series. 
  • 1990 - The Bucs began working on 1991 right after the NLCS loss to the Reds when GM Larry Doughty, on thin ice after a late-season roster screw-up (he lost Wes Chamberlin and another prospect via a waiver snafu), and manager Leyland both agreed to new two-year contracts. Doughty, whose agreement was to expire on October 31st, wanted a three-year deal but accepted a two-year extension plus an option year, guaranteeing his services through the 1992 season. Leyland's current contract was extended in a deal thought to be worth $500,000 per year. The Pirates' manager since 1986, this deal locked up Leyland through 1993. 
  • 1991 - Utility man JT Riddle was born in Frankfort, Kentucky. The Pirates signed the utilityman to a one-year, $850K MLB contract as a free agent. He had hit .229 over three years (2017-19) for the Miami Marlins and was out of options, so it was a make-or-break camp for him. JT began the year on the IL and was recalled to the MLB roster in early August. He was released after the season with a BA of .149. JT had stops with the Twins and Reds plus a minor-league gig with the Mets from 2021-22, was unsigned in ‘23 and played indie league ball in 2024. 
  • 1991 - The Braves returned to Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium and pasted the Pirates, 10-3, to take a 2-1 lead in the NLCS. Pittsburgh collected 10 hits but stranded 11 runners as John Smoltz easily topped John Smiley. Jay Bell and Orlando Merced homered for Pittsburgh, but their firepower wasn’t enough to overcome a four-run first frame by the Bravos and a three-run pinch hit homer by Sid Bream in the eighth inning. Smoltz’s next trip to the hill was when he shut out the Bucs in the seventh game.

Friday, October 11, 2024

10/11: Rube K's 12, 41 For Cannonball; Postseason Play - Walk Stops Bravos In '92, Bert/Bullpen Whip O's In '79 Contest, Hans Tops Tigers In '03; Tracy Hired, G-Deal Nixed, Jerry, Burleigh Released; HBD Shane, Ty, Wayne & Buttercup

  • 1885 - OF Lew “Buttercup” Pessano Dickerson was born in Tyaskin, Maryland, and made a brief stop in the City. Dickerson hit .249 while playing five different positions for the Alleghenys in 1883, and during his career played in three different major leagues (The American Association, the National League and the Union Association.) His nickname "Buttercup" was given to him by his Cincinnati Reds teammates during the 1879 season, after the "Little Buttercup" character in Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta H.M.S Pinafore. No, we don’t why; Buttercup in the musical is described as a “bumboat woman.” On the other hand, Dickerson was known as a lush, league-jumper and street hustler, so maybe he was a “bumboat” ballplayer. Also, he’s sometimes referenced as the first Italian ballplayer (he’s a member of the Italian-American Sports Hall of Fame, a gang that apparently doesn’t check ID very well), but it ends up the “Pessano” name associated with Dickerson is actually his given middle name, bestowed to honor Doc Pessano, who delivered him, as was a custom of the era. Ed Abbaticchio is generally recognized as the first paesano in baseball - the first cumpa in pro football, too; he was an all-around athlete - who played for the Pirates from 1907-10. 
  • 1886 - Lefty Ed “Cannonball” Morris claimed his 41st win of the year by a 4-1 score against the New York Metropolitans at Recreation Park, three days after he had shut them out to open the series. His 41 wins set an Alleghenys/Pirates record and led the American Association that season (Pittsburgh joined the NL the following year), as did his 12 shutouts and 1.032 WHIP. Cannonball also worked 555-⅓ IP in 64 appearances (63 starts and one save) while posting a 2.45 ERA. 
  • 1900 - Rube Waddell punched out a National League season-high of 12 batters in a 2-1 win over the Chicago Orphans at Exposition Park. He led the senior circuit with a 2.37 ERA and was second with 130 strikeouts in 208-1/3 IP, even though his record was just 8-13. He led the league with fewest hits allowed per nine (7.5), most strikeouts per nine (5.6; no other twirler averaged four) and WHIP (1.107). Rube only pitched twice more for Pittsburgh in 1901 before being sold to the same Chicago Orphans and embarking on a Hall-of-Fame career, mostly based on stints with the Philadelphia Athletics and St. Louis Browns. 
Rube Waddell - 1905 Pgh Press image
  • 1905 - With the season over, Hans Wagner took his barnstorming team of Buccos through a week-long schedule of local challengers both as a final bow after the campaign and a chance to earn a little beer money before heading home to help carry the troops through the offseason. Other players on the touring team were Claude Ritchey, Tommy Leach, Otis Clymer, Heinie Peitz, George Gibson, Deacon Phillippe, Patsy Flaherty, Otto Knabe and one or two other Pirates tagalongs. This date opened the postseason tour with a game in Homestead. 
  • 1909 - Honus Wagner became the first player to steal three bases in a World Series contest as Pittsburgh beat Detroit at Bennett Park, 8-6, in Game Three of the Fall Classic to go up two games to one. The next player to swipe three sacks was the LA Dodgers Willie Davis, who matched the feat in 1965 (the Cards’ Lou Brock in 1967 and the Rays’ BJ Upton in 2008 also scored the hat trick). Nick Maddox struggled on the hill but went the distance for the win, buttressed by a five-run first inning outburst by the Bucs against Ed Summers; all the opening runs were unearned as Motown made three errors in the inning. It was a sloppy affair as 11 of the 14 runs were unearned; Motown had five boots and the Bucs committed a pair. Honus Wagner had three hits with three RBI, and Bobby Byrne, Tommy Leach and Bill Abstein each added two more knocks.
  • 1912 - RHP Wayne Osborne was born in Watsonville, California. Osborne made seven MLB mound appearances; two of them were with the Bucs in 1935, giving up a run in an inning and two-thirds while also getting a call to pinch-run once. He did have a long professional career, starting right out of high school in 1931 as a teen and tossing until he was 30 with 13 campaigns in the Pacific Coast League spent with Hollywood, Mission and Portland to his credit. Old age didn’t catch up to him; his ball playing days ended when the country beckoned and he was drafted in 1943. It was a surprise call to arms by Uncle Sam - Osborne was missing a finger on his pitching hand, which he used to his advantage in mastering the curveball per Donald Wells in “Baseball’s Western Front.” 
The Pirates didn't mail it in - 10/12/1925 Press
  • 1925 - The Big Train, Walter Johnson, shut out the Pirates, 4-0, on six hits at Griffith Stadium to give the Senators a three games to one lead in the World Series. Washington scored all four runs in the second inning off Emil Yde, the big blow being a three-run homer by Goose Goslin, with Joe Harris adding another long ball. Johnson was in complete control; only one Pirate runner reached second all day as the Sens moved within a victory of defending their World Championship. 
  • 1934 - It was the end of an era as the Pirates released 40-year-old RHP Burleigh Grimes, who was in the third Bucco stint of his 19-year MLB journey, slashing 48-42-5/3.26 in his five Pirates seasons The Hall of Famer was the last player to legally toss a spitter, one of 17 hurlers exempted when the pitch was outlawed in 1921. He went on to a long career as a coach, manager and scout. 
  • 1966 - The Pirates released one of baseball’s elite pinch hitters, Jerry Lynch, ending a 13-year MLB career that was spent evenly split between the Bucs and Cincinnati (he started and ended in Pittsburgh). He had 116 pinch hits during his tenure (.263 BA), which ranks him 10th all-time, and is third on the all-time pinch hit home run list (he was first when he retired) with 18. 
  • 1971 - In a game that was delayed a day by rain, Brooks Robinson set a World Series record by reaching base five consecutive times (three hits, two walks) against the Pirates as Baltimore won Game 2 by an 11-3 count. Bob Johnson and Bob Moose were hit hard at Memorial Stadium - the Orioles scored nine times in the fourth and fifth frames and belted three homers during the laugher. The Bucco runs came in the eighth on one swing, Richie Hebner’s three-run shot. 
The Gravedigger - 1971 Pirates Picture Pak
  • 1972 - Bob Moose's wild pitch in the ninth inning allowed George Foster to score the winning run with two outs as the Cincinnati Reds beat the Bucs, 4-3, at Riverfront Stadium to capture the NLCS. The Pirates had entered the ninth inning with a 3-2 lead but couldn’t hold on. Johnny Bench's lead-off solo homer against Dave Giusti tied the game before Foster’s scamper won it. Cincy pitching was the difference. Pittsburgh led the NL with a .274 team BA, but hit just .190 during the NLCS, scoring only 10 runs in the final four games. The Reds lost the World Series to the Oakland A’s in seven games. It was also the last game ever played by Roberto Clemente, who went 1-for-3. 
  • 1977 - IF Ty Wigginton was born in San Diego. He came over from the Mets as part of the Kris Benson deal and played for the Pirates from 2004-05, primarily at third, but hit just .237 and was fairly immobile at the hot corner. Wiggy played 12 seasons before his last game in 2013, making stops at eight different cities. Ty’s now a high school coach, following in his dad’s footsteps. 
  • 1979 - Pittsburgh pushed a run across in the ninth to knot the World Series with Baltimore at a game apiece, taking a 3-2 win at Memorial Stadium. Bill Madlock and Ed Ott drove in second inning runs while Eddie Murray homered and doubled to plate a pair. Jim Palmer and Bert Blyleven started the game and left it to the bullpens to decide. Both teams left the bases loaded in the seventh. Bill Robinson singled to start the ninth against Tippy Martinez, and Matt Alexander came in to run, only to be caught stealing. With Don Stanhouse on the mound, Bill Madlock drove one deep to center, but it was a loud out. The Bucs kept on, though, as Ed Ott hit a ground ball single, Phil Garner drew a four pitch walk, and pinch hitter Manny Sanguillen singled to right for the lead. Don Robinson got the win and Kent Tekulve the save, striking out a pair of O’s in the ninth. 
  • 1979 - LHP Shane Youman was born in New Iberia, Louisiana. Shane made 23 appearances (11 starts) in 2006-07 for Pittsburgh with a line of 3-7/5.13, and that was the only action of his MLB career. He spent the next four years pitching in the indie leagues, then another four campaigns on the mound in Korea, while spending some winters tossing for Latin clubs. He returned to pitch in Korea in 2018 at age 37, and now coaches high school players in Texas. 
Shane Youman - 2007 Fleer Rookie
  • 1983 - Pirates beatman Charley Feeney of the Post Gazette wrote that the Bucs and Giants had submitted a big late-August trade proposal for league approval, but were denied by National League President Chub Feeney because of a rules violation. Per the article, the Buccos were going to send 1B Jason Thompson, 2B Johnnie Ray, LHP Rod Scurry and OF Lee Lacy to the Bay for OF Jack Clark and lefty reliever Gary LaVelle. GM Pete Peterson was looking for a power bat to replace OF Dave Parker, who was in the walk year of his contract (The Cobra signed with the Reds after the season). The catch? The Pirates wanted two unspecified players to stay with the team until the end of the season as the Bucs were in a pennant race at the time (they ended up in second place after the smoke cleared), but that ran counter to a reg that forbid a club from keeping players on their original team after they were announced as part of a deal. The talks had begun back in June, with San Francisco seeking 2B Denny Gonzalez and C Tony Pena as part of the original package. 
  • 1992 - The Pirates kept their season alive against the Atlanta Braves at Three Rivers Stadium, scoring four times in the first inning to chase Steve Avery and then coasting behind a three-hitter by Bob Walk to a 7-1 win. Lloyd McClendon and Jeff King each had three knocks while the Bucs drilled five doubles among their 13 hits. The Pirates returned to Atlanta down three games to two in the NLCS. Deion Sanders flew to Pittsburgh for the game after playing for the Miami Dolphins that afternoon, looking to become the first player to take part in two pro games in different sports on the same day, but even in a blowout loss, Neon Deion didn’t get into the lineup for the Bravos. It was also Barry Bonds' last home game as a Pittsburgh Pirate. He went 2-for-5, doubled, stole a base, scored twice and drove in a run after a first-inning ovation from the 52,929 fans. It was also the last playoff game in Pittsburgh for 21 years until the 2013 NLDS against the Cards at PNC. 
  • 2000 - As expected, ticket prices for the new PNC Park went up from the TRS days. The majority of $20 TRS seats jumped to $23-$25 and overall prices ranged from $9-$35, with most fees going up $2-$5. The Pirates prices were still lower than most of the new parks, and the FO cited a view closer to the action and more comfortable seating as the reason for the hike.
  • 2005 - The Pirates hired Jim Tracy as manager, signing him to a three-year deal a week after he left the Dodgers top job after a four-year run. It was the first time in two decades that Pittsburgh went outside the organization to select its field boss, since the hiring of Jim Leyland from the White Sox. Tracy lasted two years in Pittsburgh (135-189) before being axed, then signed on as a bench coach at Colorado and replaced Clint Hurdle as skipper of the Rox in 2009. Clint returned the favor by becoming the Pirates manager in 2011. May the circle be unbroken...

Thursday, October 10, 2024

10/10: Postseason - Drabek Tames Reds In '90, TSN Danny, Maz & Tiger Top NY In '60, SI Vern; Roberto - Latin HoF, '61 Expansion; RIP Lefty, HBD Cutch, Renegade, Shelby, Gene, Myrl, Homer, Dave & Ad

  • 1867 - RHP Addison “Ad” Gumbert was born on Frankstown Avenue in Pittsburgh’s East End. He won 123 games in nine MLB seasons and was a good enough hitter that he played 38 games in the outfield. Ad was a Buc from 1893-94, going 26-21/5.73, and even played seven games in the pasture with a .263 BA. He and his brother Billy just missed one another; Billy pitched for the Bucs in 1892, a year before Ad arrived. After he hung up the spikes, Gumbert became a popular local politico and an active community leader. He was elected sheriff of Allegheny County and later County Commissioner while also serving as chairman of several charitable and civic organizations. 
  • 1868 - LHP Dave Anderson was born in Chester, Pennsylvania. He tossed a couple of big league campaigns, finishing up his career with 13 starts for the 1890 Alleghenys with a line of 2-11/4.67. He then toiled for local minor league clubs before hanging it up after the 1891 season. 
  • 1879 - P/UT Homer Hillebrand was born in Freeport, Illinois. Homer was a Princeton grad that was good at multitasking. His MLB career was spent with the Pirates from 1905-06 & 1908, and he pitched in 18 games (11 starts) with an 8-4-1/2.51 line. He also played 26 games in the field at 1B, OF and C (even though he was a lefty), hitting .237. Homer sat out the ‘07 year to rest a sore arm that never bounced back, causing him to retire after tossing one frame in ‘08. 
  • 1894 - RHP Myrl Brown was born in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania. Myrl started his career late, at age 24, following his service during WW1. He quickly became a minor league ace and in a bit of a bidding war, Barney Dreyfuss bought him from the Reading Orioles in August, 1922, for $20K (Brown kept one-third; the rest went to his team) and he got into seven games (five starts) with a line of 3-1/5.97. He won his first three starts, a feat unmatched until 2013 when Gerrit Cole won his first four outings, and even with the meh counting numbers, the Bucs liked what they had seen of him. But he showed up for camp in 1923 with a dead arm; Pittsburgh sent him to a couple of minor league teams to see if it would recover, but with no luck. He took a full year off to nurse it and came back in 1924 to work three straight 250+ IP seasons in the bushes, but never got another call. 
Myrl Brown - 1921-22 Kolb's Mothers Bread pin
  • 1903 - The fourth and final home match of the Series at Exposition Park before 17,038 fans saw Deacon Phillippe start his fourth game of the ‘03 WS against Cy Young, who was making his third start. Boston won the match easily, 7-3, and returned home up four games to three, looking for just one more win to claim MLB’s first World Series crown. Kitty Bransfield went 3-for-4 for the Pirates while Jimmy Sebring and Phillippe added a pair of knocks during the afternoon. 
  • 1904 - In the final year without a formal October Classic (the 1903 World Series was set up by the two pennant-winning clubs, Pittsburgh and Boston, not by the leagues themselves), the Naps and Pirates opened a five-game postseason exhibition series of their own at Cleveland’s League Field. It was a natural rivalry due to the proximity of the cities, as a bragging-rights NL-AL clash with both teams finishing fourth in their league and with a bit of star power on display featuring the era’s two best hitters, Hans Wagner and Nap Lajoie (the Cleveland nine was called the Naps in Lajoie’s honor). Alas, the fans didn’t want to see meaningless fall baseball and stayed away in droves, with the Naps taking the series, 2-1-2. 
  • 1925 - The World Series moved to Griffith Stadium and Washington took a two-to-one lead in games with a 4-3 win, scoring twice in the seventh off Ray Kremer when a walk and an infield single eventually came home to score. DC’s Alex Ferguson and Firpo Mayberry scattered eight hits; Max Carey had a pair of them. Pittsburgh loaded the bases with one out in the ninth, but Mayberry got Clyde Barnhart on a pop to the catcher and Pie Traynor on a fly to center to close out the win. The game is famed for the Sens’ Sam Rice’s catch. With two outs in the bottom of the eighth, Earl Smith drove a ball to right-center field. Rice caught the ball at the fence, flipped over its top and landed in the stands, disappearing for 15 seconds or so. When Rice popped back up, the ball was in his glove and the umpire, Cy Rigler, called the batter out. The ump's explanation was that as soon as the catch was made the play was over, so it didn’t matter if Rice dropped it during his tumble or not. Rice was mum about the grab - “The ump called him out” was all he’d say - and seemed to enjoy the life-long conversation piece. After his death in 1974, a letter he penned was opened at Cooperstown, and he had written "At no time did I lose possession of the ball." 
  • 1930 - A MLB All-Star team played its first game in Cuba on a 10-day barnstorming tour, including Pirates reps OF Paul Waner, 3B Pie Traynor and P Larry French. The Cubans proved to be worthy opponents then as now, winning four of the seven games played on La Isla. 
Gene Tenace - 1983 Topps Traded
  • 1946 - C Gino Tennaci (Gene Tenace) was born in Russellton, Pennsylvania, in northeastern Allegheny County. Gene’s claim to fame came as an Oakland Athletic, where he played eight of his 15 MLB years. His final hurrah was in Pittsburgh, where Tenace spent his last season as a utility player and pinch-hitter, appearing in 53 games in 1983 and batting .177. He retired after being released in spring training the following year. Gino was considered a candidate to replace Chuck Tanner as manager but Chuck hung in for another season and so Tenace began his coaching odyssey with Houston, going to Toronto (twice), Boston and St. Louis before retiring in 2009. 
  • 1960 - Vernon Law was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated during its 1960 World Series coverage. He won a pair of games against the Yankees and the Cy Young Award as he finished the regular season 20-9/3.09. The Deacon went through some injury-plagued campaigns afterward and even considered retirement, but rallied to win the National League Comeback Player of the Year award in 1965, with a 17-9/2.15 slash, along with earning the Lou Gehrig Award for his contributions on and off the field. Law finished his career with a slash line of 162-147-13/3.77 with 483 outings (364 starts). 
  • 1960 - Bill Mazeroski’s two-run double was the big blow as Harvey Haddix and Roy Face claimed a 5-2 win and three games to two World Series lead against New York at Yankee Stadium, packed with 62,753 fans. Don Hoak also chased home a pair of runs; he and Smoky Burgess each had two knocks. Pittsburgh outhit the Yankees 10-to-5 to move within a game of the crown. 
  • 1961 - The expansion draft claimed six Pirates - the Houston Colt .45s took OF Roman Mejias, P Bobby Shantz, P Jim Umbricht and C Hal Smith, while the New York Mets selected OF Joe Christopher and P Al Jackson. All but Shantz and Jackson had been members of the 1960 title team. 
Joe Christopher - 1961 Topps
  • 1970 - LHP Albert “Lefty” Leifield passed away at the age of 87 in Fairfax, Virginia. Leifield tossed for the Pirates from 1905-12. From 1906-11, he was a regular in the Pittsburgh rotation, winning 15 or more games each season and slashing 109-84-7/2.38 with 28 shutout victories. In 1909, he went 19-8 to help the Pirates win the National League pennant although he lost his only World Series outing that year; he was the last remaining member of that Fall Classic club. Lefty spent five more years in the majors after the Pirates traded him to the Cubs with several minor league stops, fighting a sore arm in his later years. Per SABR’s Lenny Jacobson, after his playing career, Leifield coached for the Browns, Red Sox, and Tigers, also managing in the minors for seven years. Lefty then worked in the St. Louis water department before spending his last years fishing, betting on horses, and taking in an occasional game at Busch Stadium. 
  • 1970 - Danny Murtaugh was featured on the cover of The Sporting News for the story “Bucs’ Secret Weapon.” His ‘70 team made the transition from Forbes Field to Three Rivers Stadium and won the National League East, only to be swept by the Cincinnati Reds in the NLCS. 
  • 1972 - Cincinnati, facing elimination, took the Pirates behind the woodshed at Riverfront Stadium, winning, 7-1, to force a winner-take-all showdown for the NLCS crown. Ross Grimsley tossed a two-hitter, with both hits posted by Roberto Clemente, including a solo homer. Dock Ellis went five frames, giving up three unearned runs on a pair of two-out errors. The Big Red Machine then teed off on relievers Bob Johnson and Luke Walker to run away with the contest. 
  • 1979 - The Orioles rocked Bruce Kison for five first-inning runs (Buster got one out before being yanked) and then hung on to take the first game of the World Series, 5-4. Willie Stargell homered with a pair of RBI and Dave Parker banged out four knocks while Jim Rooker, Enrique Romo, Don Robinson and Grant Jackson pitched three-hit ball over the last 8-2/3 innings. Mike Flanagan gave up 11 hits, but went the distance for Baltimore’s win at Memorial Stadium. 
Cutch - 2009 walk-off winner via MLB.com
  • 1986 - Andrew McCutchen was born in Fort Meade, Florida. Cutch, a five-time All-Star and MVP selected in the first round (#11) of the 2005 draft, was the face of the team after replacing Nate McLouth during the 2009 season until he was traded after the 2017 campaign. Andrew slashed .291/203 HR/725 RBI as a Bucco and won Baseball America’s Rookie of the Year, four Silver Sluggers, a Golden Glove, two Player’s Choice Outstanding Player of the Year and the Roberto Clemente award during his Bucco tenure. In 2018, he was traded to the San Francisco Giants and then moved to the New York Yankees, Philadelphia Phillies, and Milwaukee Brewers before returning home in ‘23. 
  • 1990 - RHP Shelby Miller was born in Round Rock, Texas. A first round pick (19th overall) of the Cards in 2009 out of high school, he debuted in 2012. After a nice three-year run, injuries piled up on him and he underwent TJ surgery, making only 16 starts over the next five years (he opted out of the Covid-shortened 2020 season). The Cubs cut him loose in 2021 and the Pirates signed him in July as a long man option, calling him up from Indy in September. He got into 10 games, signed with the Yankees and then the Giants, Dodgers and Tigers. 
  • 1990 - Pittsburgh stayed alive in the NLCS by edging the Reds, 3-2, before a crowd of 48,221 at TRS to cut the Cincinnati margin to three games to two. Doug Drabek worked into the ninth, then Bob Patterson came on to get the last two outs to save the victory. Andy Van Slyke and Barry Bonds each chased home a run and scored a run against Tom Browning to lead Pittsburgh’s attack. The Pirates also rewarded the field bosses by announcing that Jim Leyland’s staff of Rich Donnelly, Bruce Kimm, Gene Lamont, Ray Miller, Milt May and Tommy Sandt, would return intact for the 1991 campaign. 
  • 1991 - Steve Avery and Alejandro Pena combined to stop the Bucs, 1-0, on four hits at TRS to knot the NLCS at three games apiece in front of 57,533 fans, the largest crowd in Pirates history. Mark Lemke’s two-out, bad-hop double that bounded over 3B Steve Buechele’s shoulder in the sixth scored David Justice, who had walked & then stole second, to send Zane Smith to a tough defeat. Bobby Bonilla doubled to lead off the ninth and took third on a wild pitch with one away, but Pena got Buechele on a comebacker and caught Curtis Wilkerson looking on three pitches to save the game. 
AVS - 1992 Donruss Triple Play
  • 1992 - John Smoltz won his second NLCS game, 6-4, in front of 57,164 boosters filling the seats at TRS, to put the Bucs in a 3-1 hole as Doug Drabek took the loss. The Bucs managed just six hits, with Andy Van Slyke banging out a double and triple. Drabek had a rare rough outing off the slab and Randy Tomlin was touched for a pair of runs in relief. 
  • 1994 - RHP Dave Bednar was born in Mars and is a grad of Mars Area HS. He was a late-round pick of the Padres in the 2016 draft from Lafayette College and joined the hometown nine in 2021 as part of the Joe Musgrove package. He only worked 17 innings total for San Diego, but was dominating in the spring for the Pirates, and even with an option to burn made the Opening Day roster. The Pirates slowly slid him into high leverage situations and moved him into the closer’s role when Richard Rodriguez was traded. Despite missing much of August/September of 2022 with a bad back, he earned 19 saves over the year and was selected to Team USA for the 2023 WBC. He went on to post a 39-save campaign and an All-Star berth to go with a 2.00 ERA in 66 outings. But the Renegade took a tumble in ‘24, posting a 3-8-23/5.77 slash line and losing his closer job in September as home runs and control issues plagued him. He missed most of the spring and three weeks later in the season due to injuries. 
  • 2010 - Pirates RF Roberto Clemente and Cuban/Negro Leagues Martin “El Immortal” Dihigo, who played for the Homestead Grays in 1927-28, were inducted into the inaugural class of the Latino Baseball Hall of Fame.