- 1887 - RHP Jack Ferry was born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. He worked sparingly for Pittsburgh from 1910-13, posting a 10-6 record with a 3.02 ERA in 160-⅔ IP and then closing out his career on the farm in 1916. Ferry’s claim to fame: he was the first Seton Hall grad to play MLB.
- 1874 - OF “Popup John” Ganzel was born in Kalamazoo, Michigan. He began his seven-year MLB career in Pittsburgh in 1898, getting into 15 games and batting .133 after being purchased from Grand Rapids of the Western League. John was sold to Detroit in May, spent some time seasoning, and then played for the Chicago Cubs, New York Giants, New York Highlanders, and the Cincinnati Reds. After his 19-year pro career ended, he managed twice in the majors (Cincinnati Reds, Brooklyn Tip-Tops) and skippered for 16 seasons in the minors. The six-footer was also known as “Long John.” Baseball was in his blood; John also had four brothers who played pro ball.
- 1879 - C Art “Buck” Weaver was born in Wichita, Kansas. In his second MLB campaign as a 24-year old, he was released by St. Louis in early June and the Pirates claimed him as depth behind Ed Phelps and backup Harry Smith. As the third wheel, he got into 16 games and hit .229. Weaver got in two more MLB seasons but played in the minors until 1914, signing with high-altitude clubs like Denver and Salt Lake to help him combat his life-long battle with asthma. Beside being one of several Buck Weavers, the scrawny catcher was dubbed by the baseball press as Scissors, Stilt, the Human Hatpin, and Six O’Clock Weaver, because when he stood, he resembled clock hands pointing at six per SABR’s Bill Lamb. After surviving his asthma and a plant explosion during his post-baseball days, Buck died young at age 37 from peritonitis following appendicitis surgery.
Arky Vaughan - 1930's photo NL Service Bureau |
- 1932 - The Pirates obtained the rights to SS Arky Vaughan from Tulsa of the Western League through a working agreement between the clubs. The Hall of Famer spent the next 10 years in Pittsburgh, winning All-Star honors for eight consecutive years while piling up a .324 BA. He and Honus Wagner may be the best 1-2 punch at short for one franchise in the sport’s history.
- 1933 - OF Bobby DelGreco was born in the Hill District. He spent two years with the Pirates in 1952 and 1956, hitting .219. His career spanned nine seasons, and he played regularly with the Phils and A’s. After finishing his playing career, his day job was as a delivery driver for the Pittsburgh Press and he moonlighted by tossing BP for the Bucs into the nineties.
- 1954 - 1B Dale Long announced that he wouldn’t take his demotion to the Hollywood Stars sitting down. He planned to file a protest with Commissioner Ford Frick, as the 28-year-old reigning PCL MVP said he had been claimed on waivers by the KC Athletics and should be in their big league camp instead of the minors. The appeal didn’t work out for him, but he was back with the Bucs in 1955 after hitting 27 bombs for the Stars to begin a nine-year MLB run, including a record-setting eight-game home run streak in 1956 as a Pirate.
- 1958 - Bill Mazeroski reported to camp after six months in the military, 10 pounds lighter and apparently Army Strong. The 21-year-old second-year starter played in 152 games, hit .275 and made his first All-Star appearance while also earning his first Golden Glove.
- 1964 — Shea Stadium in New York opened for its first regular season game, the Mets v the Bucs. Pittsburgh spoiled the Home Opener for the New Yorkers in front of over 50,000 fans by a 4-3 tally. Willie Stargell’s homer, double and two RBI gave Bob Friend, who went the distance, just enough support for the victory as the Pirates had 16 hits, but stranded 13 to keep it close. Pops had four hits while Donn Clendennon and Roberto Clemente added three each.
Willie Stargell - 1964 Topps |
- 1970 - After eight consecutive Opening Day defeats, the Mets finally won a lidlifter by beating the Pirates 5-3 at Forbes Field. It took 11 innings, but Ron Taylor, with a Tug McGraw save, whipped Chuck Hartenstein after ex-Bucco Donn Clendenon singled home a pair of runs off Joe Gibbon. Joe had relieved Hartenstein to face a pinch-hitting lefty who NY skipper Gil Hodges then yanked for Clendenon. The starters,Tom Seaver (eight IP) and Steve Blass, who went 10 frames, left the game to the bullpens. New York became the first team to have won a World Series (1969) before winning a season opener. As for the Pirates fans, well, they acted up at the end, throwing odds and ends on the field before some kids took a sprint across the diamond to cap a bad day at the office.
- 1972 - Richie Hebner wore #3 for the first time (it was during a workout during the 1972 player’s strike) instead of his usual #20 out of deference to 3B Pie Traynor, who had passed away three weeks earlier. Although Traynor had told Hebner that he wanted him to keep his old number throughout his career, Richie said that “I just couldn’t do that after Mr. Traynor died.” He was the last to wear it as the number was retired on April 18th during the home opener. Hebner wore #3 through 1976 before leaving for Philly, and was issued #10 when he returned to the Buccos in 1982.
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