Rosey Rowswell, The Real Bob Smith, Cecilio Guante & Stolmy...
- 1884 - Pirate announcer Rosey Rowswell was born in Alton, Illinois (although raised in Tarentum). In 1936, he joined KDKA as a Pirate broadcaster, and remained there until his death in 1955. His last on-air partner was Bob Prince from 1948-54, who called Rowswell his mentor. Rosey was an unabashed homer, and known for his home run call of “Open the window, Aunt Minnie, here she comes” followed by the sound of shattering glass. He also coined the term “Buccos” and “FOB” (when the bases were loaded, the were Full Of Buccos). Roswell died in Pittsburgh in 1955 at the age of 71 and was buried in Allegheny Cemetery.
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Rosey, Hans and The Gunner circa 1950 via Legendary Auctions |
- 1931 - LHP Bob Smith was born in Woodsville, New Hampshire. The journeyman worked out of the Pirate bullpen from 1957-59, where he went 8-19-1 with a 3.74 ERA in 75 appearances. Smith’s everyday name played havoc with him. While with the Boston system, a similarly built lefty of the same name was often confused with him, and the Sox had to revert to using initials to differentiate the pair. In Pittsburgh, he suffered a more embarrassing fate - Smith’s 1958 Topps card, he claims, has the picture of Cardinal outfielder Bobby Gene Smith rather than his, and he has never autographed that particular card because of that mix-up.
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The Real Bob Smith 1959 Topps series |
- 1960 - P Cecilio Guante was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The righty was a bridge guy for Pittsburgh for five seasons (1982-86) and went 13-17-20/3.06 in that role before being traded to the Yankees as part of the Doug Drabek deal.
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Cecilio Guante & Junior Ortiz chillin' in the pen 1985 photo by Mariene Karas/Pgh Press |
- 1990 - RHP Stolmy Pimentel was born in San Cristobal, Dominican Republic. He’s been a Buc since 2013, coming over from the Red Sox and going 2-1 with a 4.50 ERA. The old Sox Prospects scouting report on him still holds true: “Excellent overall stuff, but struggles with the consistency of his mechanics.”
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Stolmy Pimentel 2013 photo by Carl Kline/Baseball America |
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