- 1894 - C Bill Haeffner was born in Philadelphia. Bill had a three-year major league career that took 14 years to earn. He got a cup of coffee with Philadelphia in 1915 and with the NY Giants in 1928 while seeing his only serious time with Pittsburgh in 1920, batting .194 in 54 games. What he did in between is a mystery to us; Baseball Reference and the other chroniclers don’t have any record of him playing in the minors, although he most assuredly did play somewhere. We do know that Haeffner served as the head baseball coach at La Salle University from 1947 to 1952.
- 1894 - Wilbur “Mayor” Fisher was born in Green Bottom, West Virginia. His MLB career consisted of one at bat for the Bucs in 1916 as a 21-year-old. Not much info on him; he played for Marshall University as a P/OF and the last pro listing for him was in 1917, when he played for Petersburg Goobers of the Virginia League. He worked in the coal mines after playing ball.
George Gibson - 1909 American Tobacco |
- 1905 - The Bucs collected eight hits, including a home run by George Gibson against Christy Mathewson, and won 2-1 over NY at the Polo Grounds. The game was halted for a time by umpire Jim Johnstone after a Giants fan tossed a bottle at Pirate RF Otis Clymer while he was chasing a ball. Clymer had already made one great play in the pasture and apparently the home crowd didn’t want another. Charlie Case and Mike Lynch tossed a five-hitter for the win.
- 1914 - The frustrated Pirates were probably tired of Forbes Field after splitting a twin bill with the Dodgers, winning the opener 3-0 and losing the evening game 6-5 in 10 innings. The first game of the series went 21 frames, and that was after the Pirates lost a pair to the NY Giants the day before. So the Bucs and Gotham nines played five games in a span of three days that lasted 58 innings, the equivalent of three twin bills. The G-Men & Dodgers took four of the matches, two in extra innings and another by a run. The only victory was behind Bob Harmon’s complete-game, six-hit shutout. The contests were part of a 19-of-20 games homestand (they had one road game in Chicago) that finished 7-13, though they did end the season 39-36 in Oakland. Pittsburgh would finish seventh with a 69-win campaign that year.
- 1916 - OF Johnny “Hippity” Hopp was born in Hastings, Nebraska. He played three years in Pittsburgh (1948-50) with a .291/24/244 line as a Bucco. During his 14 year big league career, Hopp played in five different WS with the Cards and Yankees and was an All-Star in 1946. Hippity had a kind of odd stay with the Pirates. In 1949, he was traded to the Brooklyn Dodgers for Marv Rackley, but three weeks later, the trade was voided (Branch Rickey claimed Rackley had a bum arm, though he disagreed) and the two players returned to their original teams. As a Bucco in 1950, Hopp had a streak of eight straight hits before the New York Yankees purchased his contract at the beginning of September. Besides “Hippity,” he was also known as “Cotney” (as in cottony) due to his prematurely white hair. Johnny was a coach through the fifties for Detroit and St Louis before getting a day job.
- 1918 - RHP Al Lyons was born in St. Joseph, Missouri. He put in four big league years with a stop with the Pirates. In August of 1947, Pittsburgh purchased his contract from the Yankees for and he appeared in thirteen games, going 1-2/7.31 over 28-1/3 IP, and hitting his only MLB homer as a Bucco. The Yankees won the pennant and World Series that year while the Pirates finished in last place, but the Bronx Bombers remembered their ol’ bud and voted Lyons 1/2 World Series share ($2,915). After the season, the Pirates sent him to Boston as part of the Johnny Hopp/Danny Murtaugh deal. He got into a handful of games for the Braves and then spent several seasons in the PCL, where he became an OF/P hitting 99 homers and winning 47 games over seven seasons. He retired after the 1956 campaign and served for years as a Mets scout.
- 1925 - LHP John “Windy” McCall was born in San Francisco. He worked part of seven years in the majors, with a brief stop at Pittsburgh in 1950, getting no decisions and tossing to a 9.25 ERA in just two outings. He was pitching injured; a line drive hit him in the hand and he was bruised so badly that he couldn't grip the ball. He was sent to Indianapolis to recover and was later sold to Boston. He was a Marine during WW2 that served in the Pacific Theater, delaying his entry into pro ball (he was signed at 17 by Brooklyn but didn’t get to go pro until he was 21). Still, he played in the majors until 1957 and closed out his pro career in the PCL after the 1959 campaign, becoming a mover. Windy got his nickname from Ted Williams; McCall said “I guess they think I talk too much.”
- 1930 - George Grantham and Adam Comorosky each homered and combined with Pie Traynor to go 9-for-14 with nine RBI and seven runs scored as the Pirates defeated Boston 12-4 at Braves Field. Glenn Spencer went the distance for the win.
Forbes First Night Game - 7/19/1930 Pgh Press |
- 1930 - While the Pirates were away, the Homestead Grays played. And it was a historic game, as the Grays squeaked out a 5-4, extra-inning win against the storied Kansas City Monarchs in the first night game ever played at Forbes Field (KC was credited w/hosting the first night baseball game earlier in the year) in front of 6,000 fans. Homestead fell behind 4-0, but put up a pair in the fifth and then rallied to tie the game in the ninth. A line-out DP frustrated the Grays in the 11th, but Buck Ewing’s infield hit scored George Scales with the game winner an inning later. Leadoff men Jake Stephens and Vic Harris provided the juice, collecting five hits and scoring four runs. 34-year-old George Britt went the distance, as did the Monarch’s Chet Brewer, who would spend almost 20 years as a Pirates scout after his playing days. The illumination was provided by 35 sky-high “projectors” with three lights each; apparently the only issues were with the electrical cables laid along the park railings and foul pops behind the plate. The teams played a day-night doubleheader the next day. Bucco owner Barney Dreyfuss was at the game and told Ralph Davis of the Pittsburgh Press “It is interesting, and provides entertainment for many people who cannot get away from work for afternoon contests...(but) I don’t think night baseball will ever replace the daylight brand in popularity.” It would take the Pirates another decade (6/5/1940) before they would play their first home night game under the hand of Dreyfuss’ son-in-law Bill Benswanger.
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