Tuesday, September 17, 2019

9/17 From 1980: Bye Jim; Baseball Is Back; JHK Plantar Fasciitis; Pedro Pops; Game Stories; RIP Donn; HBD Sean

  • 1982 - LHP Sean Burnett was born in Dunedin, Florida. The southpaw made his Pittsburgh debut in 2004 as a starter. After surgery made him sit out a year, he returned in 2008-09 as a reliever, slashing 7-8-1/4.54 as a Pirate. Since the Pirates traded him to Washington at the 2009 deadline, he’s tossed for the Nats (three times), Angels, Dodgers, Braves and Twins, again proving that lefties have a long MLB shelf life. He was released by the Phils during camp in 2017 and hasn’t worked since. 
Sean Burnett - 2009 Upper Deck
  • 1991 - The Pirates pounded the Cubs 9-2 at TRS. Barry Bonds hit his 25th homer off former Buc Mike Bielecki and drove in a pair to become the eighth Bucco to have consecutive 100+ RBI campaigns. Steve Buechele drove in three runs with a 2B, 3B & sac fly, four different Pirates scored twice and Doug Drabek cruised to his 14th win with a ninth inning mop-up from Bob Patterson. 
  • 1992 - It took 13 innings, but the Pirates finally defeated the Montreal Expos 3-2 at TRS. Danny Cox, the Bucs’ sixth pitcher, got the win after Cecil Espy led off the 13th with a triple and scored on Jay Bell’s infield single to the SS hole. The game took four hours and 35 minutes to play, but was worth the time for Bell, who had two hits and ran his hitting streak, which had began on 8/24, to 22 games before the Phils’ Terry Mulholland stopped him the next night.
  • 1996 - Manager Jim Leyland announced that he’d leave the Pirates at the end of the season. The two-time Manager of the Year didn’t spend much time collecting unemployment - he quickly found a new job as skipper of the Florida Marlins, signing a five-year deal with the Fish on October 4th and then winning the World Series in ‘97. 
  • 2001 - After a week of mourning following the Twin Towers attack, MLB baseball resumed. At PNC Park, the Pirates handed out "I Love NY" buttons to fans (the scheduled flag giveaway was delayed when the manufacturer couldn’t meet the dateline), a banner in left field read, "NYC, USA, We Are Family" and the Bucs wore flags on their sleeves and decals on their helmets. Fans signed a giant poster of support for NYC and over the course of two days, nearly $300,000 was donated for various related causes such as the NYC Police & Firemens pension and for groups active in NYC’s recovery. The baseball faithful weren’t quite ready to return to normalcy - over 25,000 tickets had been sold for the game, but only about 8,000 folk showed up at the yard, passing through a new, heightened security protocol. One fan told the Post Gazette “It’s going to be hard to cheer. How can you cheer when people are still buried? But life needs to go on.” The game started with an ovation for the teams - the Mets, appropriately, were in town - and chants of “USA, USA.” NY won the game 4-1, scoring three times in the ninth off Mike Fetters to break open a tight game started by Todd Ritchie and Al Leiter. The Mets wore caps honoring New York firefighters, police and rescue workers, plus American flags on their jerseys and hats. The series was originally scheduled to be played in NY; the teams flipped so the Mets home dates were in October. 
  • 2005 - 1B Donn Clendenon passed away in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. He played the first eight years (1961-68) of his 12-year career with the Bucs. Donn was a twelve sport letterman in football, basketball & baseball at Morehouse College (Martin Luther King Jr. was his freshman “big brother”), and signed with the Pirates in 1957 largely because of his stepfather, Nish Williams, a former Negro League player. The Pirates eventually moved Dick Stuart to clear a spot for Clendenon, with the karma repaid in 1968, when he was lost in the expansion draft to make room for Al Oliver after slashing .280 BA/106 HR/488 RBI as a Bucco. It didn’t hurt his career - he ended up the World Series MVP for the ‘69 Mets. Donn was a youth advisor for the Allegheny County DA’s office as a Pirate and earned a law degree from Duquesne following his playing days with a practice in Dayton, Ohio. He was later hooked on drugs and cleaned up with rehab in Utah, prompting him to move to South Dakota. Clendenon continued to work in law and as an addiction counselor before succumbing to leukemia at age 70.
  • 2009 - The USA's Pedro Alvarez became the fifth player to hit three home runs in a single Baseball World Cup game. El Toro drove in six runs during a 14-3 defeat of Taiwan on the road to the US’ 2009 BWC crown. Alvarez, a Vanderbilt All-American and the Pirates first-round pick of 2008, made his MLB debut the following year after moving quickly through the levels at Lynchburg, Altoona and Indianapolis. 
  • 2015 - Rookie IF Jung-Ho Kang broke his leg and tore a ligament in his knee when he was upended by the Cubs' Chris Coghlan on a take-out slide in a game with playoff implications at PNC Park. Kang and Coghlan both accepted it as part of the game. They were adult about it; Cub manager Joe Maddon, not so much as he said “I don't think it's his knee. He has plantar fasciitis is what I heard,” which did not sit very well in the Pirates' locker room. JHK missed the rest of the season and didn’t play again until May, 2016. The Bucs lost the game, 9-5, but held off Chicago in the race to host the Wild Card Game, which Chicago won behind Jake Arrieta.

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