Thursday, June 17, 2021

6/17: 100 For Walkie, Candy; 6 For Petey; Cutch's 1st Longball; Gravedigger Takes Two; Gems & Game Tales; HBD Bennie, Joe, Zeb, Pete & Bob

  • 1861 - OF Pete Browning was born in Louisville. One of the great hitters (and terrible fielders - he was known as “The Gladiator” because of his fights with fly balls, although others claim it was due to his tussles with league suits and the media) of early baseball, he played 50 games for 1891 for Pittsburgh, batting .291. He may not have played here long, but he had an influential 13-year career. Per Wikipedia: One of the ballers to jump to the outlaw Players League (he actually helped create it), Browning's decision to sign with Pittsburgh in 1891 helped cement the team's new nickname of "Pirates." When the PL collapsed, its members were supposed to return to their original franchises. Pittsburgh, though, signed several players who were theoretically under the control of other clubs, starting with second baseman Lou Bierbauer. Other franchises decried these acts of "piracy", and the name stuck. Browning is also remembered as the inspiration behind Hillerich & Bradsby's iconic "Louisville Slugger" (another of his nicknames) bats. He was the first player to buy bats from the company and they used the name a few years later to both recognize its roots and cash in on Pete’s fame. Finally, The Gladiator retired with a .341 lifetime BA, leading SABR to name him as an overlooked but deserving 19th Century Hall of Fame player. The fact he was an early union agitator and helped form the Players League plus his later bouts of alcoholism, all of which made his relations with the media contentious, hurt his cause. 
Pete Browning - Mears Hologram/TSN
  • 1887 - OF Bob Coulson was born in Courtney, in New Eagle Township in Washington county, and raised in Donora. That Mon Valley community is noted for nurturing stars like Stan the Man and Ken Griffey Sr (Junior was born there), but Bob was its first contribution to the majors. He played three years for three MLB teams, then the Penn State product spent two more seasons in the bushes spanning the country with stints in Newark, Kansas City and Portland. He finally got a chance to finish his career at home, playing 18 games for the Pittsburgh Rebels in 1914, hitting .203 before retiring to Washington county where he became a Register of Wills, Department of Labor inspector and Assessment Officer. He’s buried in Beallsville Cemetery. 
  • 1891 - SS Zeb Terry was born in Denison, Texas. He was raised in California and attended Long Beach Poly HS, which has produced 19 MLB players including Tony Gwynn, Milton Bradley, Rocky Bridges and Chase Utley, before going to Stanford and then the majors. Zebelon played seven years in the show, spending the 1919 season with the Pirates. He batted .227, then spent three more pretty solid campaigns with the Cubs (.280 BA). Zeb (and especially his wife) tired of the travel and in 1922 retired to the life of a real estate developer in LA. In 1955, Terry was part of Stanford’s first Sports Hall of Fame class along with guys like Ernie Nevers, Frankie Albert, Bob Mathias, Hank Luisetti, and Pete Desjardins. 
  • 1910 - RHP Joe Bowman was born in Kansas City. He tossed for the Bucs from 1937-41, split between starting and the pen, with a record of 33-38-6 and a 4.35 ERA. Joe knew his way around a batter’s box, too, hitting .281 with 38 RBI as a Pirate. Bowman became the Scouting Director for Charlie Finley's Kansas City A's from 1960 to 1968. When the A's moved to Oakland in 1968, Bowman became a regional scout for the Atlanta Braves for a short time before spending two decades scouting for the Baltimore Orioles. 
  • 1932 - RHP Bennie Daniels was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He underperformed in his Pittsburgh years, going 8-16-1 with a 5.84 ERA, though his FIP was a more solid 3.98. He was traded to the Washington Senators, where he put up workmanlike numbers for five more seasons. Bennie bounced around after baseball and served time for embezzlement, but flew straight after his release, working as a clerk in the VA system and then riding the autograph session circuit after retiring. 
Bennie Daniels - 1960 Topps
  • 1969 - Richie Hebner was the man of the hour in a twinbill sweep at Forbes Field against the first place Chicago Cubs, driving in the game’s only run in a 1-0 victory in the opener and then plating a walk-off RBI in a 4-3 nightcap win. Bob Veale won the lidlifter with a save by Bruce Dal Canton. Steve Blass won the second game in relief, and helped himself by scoring the winning run. 
  • 1983 - The Candy Man won his 100th MLB game by a 2-1 count over the Phils at TRS. He went seven innings, giving up an unearned run on four hits with a walk and eight whiffs before his arm stiffened; Manny Sarmiento and Kent Tekulve covered the last two frames to deliver the victory. Marvell Wynne, Mike Easler and Dave Parker each had a pair of hits, with the Cobra’s fourth inning triple being the pivot point, driving in a run and then scoring the game winner. The Pirates made it interesting, losing two guys on steal attempts with another thrown out on the bases. Candelaria’s dad came in from Puerto Rico to see the game; it was only the second time he saw his son toss in the MLB, the first being during the ‘79 World Series. 
  • 1993 - Bob Walk tamed the Mets and Doc Gooden, 6-2, at TRS to notch his 100th win (77 were as a Bucco). Walkie gave up six hits and went the distance for his milestone victory. The Pirates broke out of a slump to chase Gooden after three frames with the attack led by Jeff King, who had three hits and drove four runners home. 
  • 2001 - The Pirates scored with two outs in the ninth when Brian Giles singled and came around on Aramis Ramirez’s double to claim a 1-0 win for Todd Ritchie against the Cleveland Indians at PNC Park. Ritchie went the distance, giving up just four hits to the Tribe. 
  • 2004 - Tike Redman broke up a pitching duel between Kris Benson and Bartolo Colon by banging homers in the seventh and eighth innings to lead the Pirates to a 5-2 win over the Anaheim Angels at PNC Park. Jack Wilson also went long. In more good news, C Neil Walker of Pine-Richland HS, signed with the Bucs for an estimated $2M. The Pirates top pick (#11 overall), he was the top rated HS catcher in the draft after hitting .657 with 13 home runs during his senior campaign. Walker took in the game after his presser, even getting in some BP, and the next day flew to Bradenton to begin pro play with GCL Pirates. 
Tike Redman - 2004 Upper Deck
  • 2007 - Nate McLouth doubled twice to drive in four runs and Jack Wilson scored three times as the Bucs held off the Chicago White Sox 8-7 at PNC Park. Matt Capps surrendered two runs in the ninth to keep it interesting but hung on for the save of Shawn Chacon’s W. 
  • 2009 - Andrew McCutchen hit his first MLB homer off future teammate Francisco Liriano of the Minnesota Twins at the Mall of America Field during an 8-2 Buc win. He added another knock, marking his sixth multi-hit game in 13 starts. Andy and Adam LaRoche both went yard, the first brother combo to homer in the same game for Pittsburgh since the Waners in 1938. Ian Snell won the contest with help from John Grabow and Steven Jackson. 
  • 2012 - Pedro Alvarez had a big day at Progressive Field, driving in six runs in a 9-5 win over the Cleveland Indians. El Toro homered twice and doubled, banging his first bomb off future teammate Jeanmar Gomez. Alex Presley also went long in a game won by Tony Watson.

5 comments:

WilliamJPellas said...

Neil Walker had a nice, solid career but I always had the sense that he would have been a better ballplayer, perhaps a star, if he hadn't torn up one of his wrists while he was in the minors. He came back from that, obviously, but IIRC it was a fairly serious injury and a lot of guys are never really the same after that. OTOH I don't recall hearing about him having any further trouble with it once he made it to The Show, so maybe he just was what he was. Which was still a reliably solid-to-better than average player during his prime, just not a top tier guy.

Ron Ieraci said...

Agreed with the Kid, Will, as a solid 2B. Had plenty of stick for his position, and tho he wasn't real rangy - I'm not big on tall middle infielders as a rule - he was as good on his feet at chasing down "no man" land and foul pops as anyone I remember playing the middle.

WilliamJPellas said...

Yes, Walker was a reliable glove man in addition to his good-for-a-2B bat, and I agree with your observation about his ability to chase down awkwardly placed pop-ups. That is NOT easy to do, not at all, and he was very good at it. Again, all in all he was a better than average starter during his peak years and had a solid-average career overall. I just wonder if he lost that top gear that would have gotten him over the top into All-Star territory when he hurt his wrist in the minors.

Ron Ieraci said...

TBH I never heard any talk about limitations because of his wrist, but he did have big problems with his back in his later years as I recall.

WilliamJPellas said...

Right, yes, his back definitely gave him some trouble his last handful of seasons. No doubt that contributed to his somewhat early retirement.