Sunday, March 13, 2022

3/13: Mo Goes; Comedian Crystal; Roberto In Vegas HoF; OF Omen; HBD Jason, Gary, Al, Eddie & Chappie

  • 1875 - RHP Charles “Chappie” McFarland was born in White Hall, Illinois. After four years with the Cardinals, he spent his final campaign of 1906 spinning for three clubs, including six outings with the Bucs. He went 1-3/2.55, with five starts after Pittsburgh sent Ed Karger to the Cards for his services in June; by August he was waived and finished his MLB days with Brooklyn and one final start. Chappie had a brother, Monte, who tossed for the Cubs. After McFarland's baseball career, he stayed in show biz by opening the first vaudeville theater in Houston, then becoming a movie theater manager in charge of several houses. 
Eddie Pellegrini - 1953 photo via Out of the Ballpark Developments
  • 1918 - Utilityman Eddie Pellagrini was born in Boston. He lost four years to the service but still put in eight seasons in MLB, his last two (1953-54) with the Bucs, hitting .237. After retiring, Pellagrini spent 32 years as the manager of the Boston College Eagles. Fun fact: in 1946, Eddie hit a home run in his first MLB at bat with the Red Sox. 
  • 1939 - OF Al Luplow was born in Saginaw, Michigan. He closed out his seven-year MLB career as a Buc in 1967 after the Pirates bought his contract from the Mets, hitting .184 in 55 games. Al made one of baseball’s great grabs in 1963 when he went flying over a five-foot fence in right to steal a three-run homer from Boston's Dick Williams at Fenway Park, landing in the bullpen and climbing back over the wall with the ball raised in his hand. And yes, they’re related: former Pirates OF’er Jordan Luplow is his great-nephew. 
  • 1940 - All-purpose player Gary Kolb was born in Rock Falls, Illinois. Kolb played all three OF spots, 2B, 3B and catcher for the Bucs in 1968-69 (he played every position in the minors and all but pitcher and short in the majors). But while the glove was willing, the bat was weak and he hit just .186 as a Pirate, ending his MLB career. His cousin Danny, a RH reliever, also finished his nine-year run in the majors as a Bucco in 2007. 
Gary Kolb - 1968 Topps
  • 1955 - Per Thomas van Hyning of SABR, Roberto Clemente (Puerto Rico), Carlos Bernier (Puerto Rico) and Roman Mejías (Cuba) became the first major-league all-black, All-Caribbean outfield when Pittsburgh visited the Phils at Clearwater during spring camp. Clemente went 3-for-4 while Bernier & Mejias each added a hit in a 10-inning, 4-3 win. Bernier is considered by many to be the first black Pirate (he played in 1953), but the team gave that nod to Curt Roberts, who joined the club a year later. 
  • 1975 - Roberto Clemente and 13 others were inducted into Las Vegas’ Black Athletes Hall of Fame. James Brown hosted and Aretha Franklin provided the entertainment as Roberto (in memory), Roy Campanella and a dozen other athletes were honored during the affair at Caesar's Palace Convention Center. 
  • 1988 - 1B Jason Rogers was born in East Point, Georgia. He was traded by the Milwaukee Brewers for OF Keon Broxton and P Trey Supak depth during the 2015 off season as the Pirates were looking to fill a void at first base. However, Jason was bumped from the mix when the Bucs later signed veteran free agents John Jaso and David Freese, then shot himself in the foot by going 2-for-25 in 2016. Rogers was released the following year and took his game to Japan. 
Jason Rogers - 2016 photo Dave Arrigo/Pirates
  • 2002 - 2B Warren Morris went from '96 College World Series hero at LSU to starting for the Pirates and coming in third place in the Rookie of the Year vote in 1999 to being cut - and unclaimed - on this day. He became a Bucco as part of the Esteban Loaiza deal with Texas in 1998 and starter the following year, but saw his line drop from .288/15 HR in 1999 to .204/2 HR in 2001, when he spent half the season at AAA Nashville. He got another shot in Detroit in 2003, but it was his last MLB hurrah, and he retired after the 2005 season. 
  • 2008 - In a spring game against the Pirates, comedian and lifelong Yankee fan Billy Crystal led off as the DH after signing a one-day contract with New York. He made contact, fouling a fastball up the first base line, but was eventually struck out by Paul Maholm on six pitches. He joined Garth Brooks, Tom Selleck and Will Ferrell as celebrities who appeared in a MLB exhibition game.

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