- 1860 - Utilityman Jim McDonald was born in San Francisco. He spent most of his brief career with the Alleghenys in 1884, batting .159 while playing 2B, 3B and the outfield. Tho he only got into 43 big league games for three teams between 1884-85, he did have a long minor league career on the coast, mostly playing in the California League from 1878-94. When he was done, he stayed in the game as an umpire with four years as an NL arbiter.
Brownie is far right, bottom row and serving as Denny Lyon's personal armrest (1896 Pirates Team photo) |
- 1875 - LHP John “Brownie” Foreman was born in Maryland. He tossed for two big league campaigns, spending 1895-96 with the Pirates before being released and finishing out his second year with the Reds where he joined his brother Frank, also a hurler. Brownie, who came up as a 19-year-old, went 11-9-2/4.25 with the Bucs. He played pro ball from 1893-1900, with nine different stops in the minors and after his baseball days he became a policeman.
- 1881 - 1B Bayard “Bud” Sharpe was born in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Bud played in the majors in 1905 and again in 1910 for three teams, and was with the Pirates to open 1910 and going 3-for-16 in four games before being traded to Boston as part of the Kirby White deal. The Penn Stater was also a noted soccer player, spending his off season as a booter. Sharpe was a player and manager in the minors along with scouting for Boston, but was plagued by health problems and eventually succumbed to tuberculosis at age 34.
- 1902 - The Pirates shut out the Giants 2-0 to sweep a four game set against New York at Exposition Park‚ as Jack Chesbro beat Dummy Taylor in five innings of a rain-shortened affair. Ginger Beaumont and Tommy Leach scored first inning runs on a hit by Kitty Bransfield and a Giant error. Tempers did flare, although not between players. The Giants’ Jimmy Jones knocked the mask off umpire Bob Emslie while arguing a strike call and was suspended for the season. The Pirates beat a lot of teams that year; they won the NL pennant by 27-1/2 games with a record of 103-36.
- 1912 - OF Bud Hafey was born in Sacramento, California. He spent three years in the show, hitting .222 with the Pirates in 1935-36. His cousin, Chick Hafey, apparently got the deep end of the gene pool and was elected to the Hall of Fame. Bud only got one full season of major league ball, spending most of 1930-41 in the minors.
Bud Hafey 1979 Diamond Greats of 1935 |
- 1913 - The Giants’ Christy Mathewson was tagged for nine runs on 10 hits in five innings at Forbes Field as the Pirates took a 9-1 victory from New York. One Giants player speculated that manager John McGraw left his ace in so long because he had gone golfing at Schenley Park before the game, a sport that Muggsy thought was bad for pitchers’ arms. Ralph Davis of the Pittsburgh Press wrote “Whether golf or something else was responsible, it is certain that Mathewson took the drubbing of his long career.” George McQuillan went the distance for the win.
- 1926 - RHP Clem Labine was born in Lincoln, Rhode Island. The 13-year vet spend his last full-time days with the Bucs in 1960-61. The Pirates signed him in mid-August after the Tigers released him as a complement to ElRoy Face. In 15 games through the remainder of the season, he slashed 3-0-3/1.48, helping the Bucs to the pennant. After the ‘61 season (4-1-8/3.69), he finished out with three games with the Mets in 1962 at the age of 35. One of the early closers, when he retired his 96 career saves ranked fourth in MLB history. Clem went on to work in the sporting goods business and died at the age of 80 in Florida where he was working a Dodger fantasy camp.
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