- 1872 - OF/player-manager Fred “Cap” Clarke was born in Winterset, Iowa. Hall-of-Famer Clarke was discovered by Barney Dreyfuss, and came to Pittsburgh with most of the Louisville team in 1900 in a ploy masterminded by Dreyfuss. He was the left fielder and manager from 1900-11, and then mostly skippered, with a couple of spot appearances, from 1912-15. His Pirate line was .299/.379/.418, he hit .300 or better 11 times, and was player/manager for four pennant winners and two World Series teams. He guided the club to 14 straight first-division finishes, 1,422 wins, and compiled a winning % of .595. Cap got his nickname in 1897 when he became player/manager for Louisville; in that era, the skipper was referred to as the team’s captain.
1890 Allies - Dab Studios |
- 1890 - The Alleghenys closed their season by losing, 10-4, to the Brooklyn Bridegrooms at Washington Park. It was the franchise’s most disastrous campaign as the club won just 23 games after being decimated by defections to the Players League. The Pittsburgh Press noted that “The Alleghenies showed themselves world-beaters yesterday by more than equaling the Louisville record of games lost… the Allies (Alleghenys) lost their 113th game.” The next season, they became the Pittsburgh Nationals/Pirates, shifted North Side yards from Recreation Park to Exposition Park, and finished with a more respectable 62-73 mark.
- 1903 - Deacon Phillippe, working on a day’s rest, allowed four hits in a 4-2 win over Boston Americans in the first World Series, giving the Pirates a 2-1 lead in games. Ed Phelps doubled twice and Claude Ritchey had a pair of hits to lead the Pirate attack. The contest was played at the Huntington Avenue Baseball Grounds. It was a rowdy crowd of 18,000+ officially (extra fans scaled the fence while others crashed the gates, swelling the number) and the Boston police had its hands full keeping them off the playing field; several balls that looked playable ended up hits when they landed in the SRO crowd that was standing just outside the foul lines and lining the outfield fence.
- 1905 - C Johnny Riddle was born in Clinton, South Carolina. In parts of seven seasons (his MLB debut was in 1930 and his last at-bat in 1948), Johnny never got into more than 25 games. His swan song was in ‘48 with Pittsburgh, where he joined his younger brother, All-Star pitcher Elmer, on the roster and hit .200 in 10 games as a player/coach. He got to catch his brother and at 42, was the oldest NL player to appear in a game that year. Johnny also was part of one of the rarely seen over-40 batteries in baseball history when at age of 42 he caught for Fritz Ostermueller, who was 40. After that campaign, Riddle worked as a coach for the Pirates (1948–50; he only coached during his last two years), Cardinals (1952–55), Braves (1956–57), Redlegs (1958) and Phillies (1959). He picked up the nickname of “Mutt” as a youth but it was never used much during his ball-playing days.
Nick Maddox - 1908 photo Bain/Library of Congress |
- 1908 - The Pirates moved 1/2 game ahead of the Cubs and Giants with a 3-2 win over the Cardinals at Robison Field, the Bucs eighth straight victory. Nick Maddox tossed a five-hitter and drove in a run, with other RBIs coming from the bats of Tommy Leach and Honus Wagner, to beat Art Fromme. Their next game was against the Cubs, and local interest was so high that the Pittsburgh Press opened four phone lines and posted telegraphed bulletins at their office with the game’s blow-by-blows. Alas, the Bucs lost that game and finished second in one of the hardest fought NL pennant races.
- 1909 - In the first MLB match of 100-or-more-win teams (Pittsburgh had 108 victories, Chicago 100), the Pirates dropped the Cubs at West Side Park by a 4-1 count. Manager Fred Clarke rested some key starters for the upcoming World Series clash with Detroit, sitting not just himself (he was a player/manager) but SS Honus Wagner and C George Gibson, too. The Bucs didn’t miss a beat even without Cap, the Flying Dutchman and Mooney as Lefty Leifield was masterful, tossing a four-hitter to tame the Cubs. It was sweet vengeance; Pittsburgh had lost the 1908 NL flag to Chicago by one game and then watched the Cubs defeat the Tigers to win the October Classic.
- 1914 - Bob Harmon ended a disappointing season for the Bucs on a high note, tossing a two-hit, 1-0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds at Forbes Field in the home finale. Both Redleg runners were caught stealing by C Bob Schang, and Harmon faced the minimum 27 batters while topping King Lear. Wally Gerber’s triple in the seventh drove in the game’s only score.
Bob Harmon - 1916 Standard Biscuit |
- 1915 - The Pirates ended their season with a 5-3 win over the Reds at Redland Field. Retiring manager Fred Clarke hosted his players at a banquet after the game, celebrating not only his retirement (Jimmy Callahan took the reins in 1916), but his 43rd birthday before the team scattered during the off season. The next day, he arrived back in Pittsburgh and was given a public send off in front of 500 at the Hotel Schenley. Carnegie Steel veep HP Bope served as toastmaster of the event with team owner Barney Dreyfuss and Pittsburgh Mayor Joe Armstrong among the featured speakers.
- 1915 - The Federal League came down to a bang-bang finish when the Chicago Whales beat the Pittsburgh Rebels, 3-0, at Weeghman Park, the future Wrigley Field. Because of various unplayed games (Chicago finished the year with one game less than Pittsburgh and two fewer than St. Louis), the standings were in flux. The Rebels, managed by “Rebel” Oakes, were a nose ahead of the pack down the stretch but dropped a twin bill to the Windy City nine at Exposition Park the day before and needed a sweep of a doubleheader in Chicago to retake first. Pittsburgh ground out the lidlifter 5-4 in 11 innings behind Al Wickman’s three RBI to stay alive, but the Whales scored three times off Elmer Knetzel in the sixth frame (he went 5-2/3 IP as the starter; he already won the first game with three innings of shutout relief work) of the finale to claim a title-clinching 3-0 victory, with the key blow a double that Oakes came within a hair of running down, but instead had glance off his glove. The Whales won the FL by .001% over the St. Louis Terriers and .004% over the Rebels, a smoking finish to what would be the final season for the Federal League.
- 1917 - OF Frank “Fats” Kalin was born in Steubenville, Ohio. He had a seven-game MLB career, with three of those contests as a Pirate in 1940, going 0-for-3 with a pair of walks. Kalin was considered a prospect with the White Sox in early 1943 and broke camp with Chicago, but he never got much chance to show his stuff in the majors as he served in the military during World War 2, starting that season. He was 28 when he was discharged and spent the next four years in the Pirates system at Hollywood and Indianapolis. We’re not certain about the origin of his nickname, although he was 6’, 200 lbs., which seems to give a pretty good indication of the why.
Bob Skinner - 1959 Topps (reverse) |
- 1931 - LF/1B Bob Skinner was born in La Jolla, California. The “Dog” (a Bob Prince nickname derived from Skinner’s Marine Corps - the Devil Dogs - days) played for the Bucs in 1954 and then 1956-63, hitting .280. He was the starting left fielder for the 1960 World Series champs. Skinner was the Phillies manager from 1968-69, famously resigning when Richie Allen beefed about going to an exhibition game. He coached for several clubs after that, including the Pirates from 1974-1976 and again from 1979-1985. His son Joel was drafted by the Pirates and played in the show, though not in Pittsburgh, later coaching/managing in both the majors and farm for several organizations.
- 1936 - RHP Jack Lamabe was born in Farmingdale, New York. Jack tossed for seven big league seasons, making his debut as a Bucco in 1962, going 3-1-2/2.88 in 46 appearances. He, along with Dick Stuart, was part of the Jim Pagliaroni/Don Schwall deal with Boston the next year, before following the itinerant route of a reliever by tossing for six more teams. After he hung up the spikes, he spent a decade coaching college ball at Jacksonville and LSU. Jack’s a member of the U of Vermont (his alma mater) Athletic Hall of Fame and the Jacksonville U Athletic Hall of Fame. Lamabe also picked up an odd family tree of nicknames with the Red Sox (variously Tomato, Tomato Face, the Old Tomato, ‘Mater, or Pizza Face) begun by pitcher Dick Radatz and popularized by Bosox announcer Ned Martin, who called him “The Old Tomato.” Jack had a round, red face and loved to nosh on pizza, making the love apple monikers fitting references.
- 1937 - The Pirates swept a closing day doubleheader from the Reds at Forbes Field‚ 4-3 and 4-0‚ extending their winning streak to 10 and running the Reds' losing run to 14. The Bucs finished 21-1 against Cincinnati, winning the last 17 decisions of the season. Ken Heintzelman tossed a six-hitter to take the opener in his MLB debut. Woody Jensen scored twice and Fred Schulte had a pair of RBI to lead the attack. The second game was called after seven innings with Jim Weaver and Mace Brown combining on a three-hitter (Weaver was excused after three innings so he could get an early jump on the off season). Bill Schuster and Gus Suhr each scored and drove in a run.
Ken Heintzelman - undated 1930s photo/Burke |
- 1939 - Frankie Frisch jumped from the Boston Braves’ broadcasting booth to Pittsburgh’s managing gig, signing for two years with the Pirates to replace Pie Traynor, who resigned. The Fordham Flash skippered the Bucs for seven seasons from 1940-46, compiling a 539-528 record but only finishing higher than fourth once (second place - 1944). Frisch had been the Cards field general prior to the Pittsburgh job and became the Cubs manager afterwards, then retired back to the mic. He was named to the Hall of Fame in 1947 as a player.
- 1948 - Luke Easter's grand slam highlighted the Homestead/Washington Grays' 19-hit assault on the Birmingham Black Barons in the fourth game of the Negro World Series, played at Pelican Stadium in New Orleans. The Grays won the contest, 14-1, and shortly thereafter claimed the Championship in five games. This was the final Negro World Series‚ as the Negro National League became a casualty of MLB integration and folded its tent during the winter.
- 1969 - Scout Ismael Cruz was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The son of old Pirates scout Pablo Cruz, he trawled Colombia for the Bucs and Reds before moving up the international scouting ladder with the Mets, Toronto and his current organization, the Dodgers.
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