- 1865 - RHP Paul “Al” Maul was born in Philadelphia. He worked two years for the Alleghenys (1888-89), one season (1890) for the Pittsburgh Burghers, and spent 1891 as a Bucco. He went 2-8/6.24 with the Alleghenys & Pirates and 16-12/3.79 in the Players League. Al spent 10 more campaigns in the big leagues after leaving the Bucs, primarily as a Washington Senator. Maul coached at Lehigh and then spent a decade as a Philadelphia A’s scout. Although he had a cranky arm throughout his career, his cheerful, upbeat demeanor earned him the nickname “Smiling Jack.” Maul came up as an outfielder before moving to the hill and hit .241 over his career.
- 1892 - LHP Arnie Stone was born in North Creek, New York. His MLB days were in 1923-24 when he toiled for the Pirates, posting a line of 4-3/3.77 in 35 games (two starts). The 31-year-old Stone tossed for two more years in the minors before retiring back home to New York.
Arnie Stone snip - via Baseball Reference |
- 1903 - LHP Jack Tising was born in High Point, Missouri. Jack was a minor-league lifer who got his big league time with the Bucs in April/May of 1936, making 10 outings (six starts) and posting a 1-3/4.21 line as a 32-year-old. The spitballer pitched from 1924-46 in the bushes (he took off 1929-31 before the itch returned) and won 167 games, appearing over 600 times before retiring at age 42.
- 1909 - Detroit jumped on Howie Camnitz early, scoring five times in the second and third innings after Pittsburgh had taken a 2-0 lead in the opening frame, and never looked back in taking a 7-2 win over the Bucs at Forbes Field to square the World Series at a game apiece. Wild Bill Donovan limited the Pirates to five hits with seven whiffs. Tommy Leach was the only Pittsburgh batter to solve him, cracking a pair of doubles; Wee Tommy drove in the first run and scored the second. Ty Cobb stole home against reliever Vic Willis in the third inning to plate the fifth Tiger tally.
- 1911 - In a 10-inning, 6-5, loss to the Chicago Cubs at the West Side Grounds, Honus Wagner collected a pair of hits to finish the season with a .334 BA to win his eighth NL batting title. No one would wear that many crowns again until Tony Gwynn equaled Hans’ mark in 1997.
- 1944 - SS Freddie Patek was born in Seguin, Texas. Known as “The Cricket” - he was 5’5” and chirpy - Freddie played his first three seasons (1968-70; .244 BA) with Pittsburgh and then spent nine more years in the American League, mostly with KC. He was a speedy, glove-first shortstop who was blocked in Pittsburgh by Gene Alley. He played on three pennant-winning Royals squads, was chosen as an All-Star three times and led the league with 53 stolen bases in 1977.
Freddie Patek - 1970 promo photo/Pirates |
- 1947 - RHP Bob Moose was born in Export. He went to Franklin Regional HS, where he threw three no-hitters and was drafted by the hometown Bucs in 1965 during the 18th round. The righty added one more to his resume in the MLB, tossing a no hitter against the Mets on September 20th, 1969. In a decade with the Pirates - he first twirled in the show at 19 - he slashed 76-71-19/3.50. He died tragically in an auto accident while heading to a golf party celebrating his birthday in 1976, entering and departing this vale on the same date. Sparky Anderson, skipper of the rival Reds, upon hearing the news, summed it up aptly: “How sad. Only 29. How sad.”
- 1959 - RHP Ray Krawczyk was born in Sewickley. The local kid was raised in California but the hometown nine reclaimed him by drafting Ray in the first round (4th overall) of the 1981 MLB June Draft (Secondary Phase) from Oral Roberts University. He got a handful of outings with the Bucs from 1984-86, appearing in 24 games and going 0-3/8.65. He got a couple of more shots with California and Milwaukee, but he was out of baseball following the 1989 season. He’s now based out of Orange County and pushes a training device he invented, the Throw Trac.
- 1960 - Vern Law won his second contest against the Yankees, thanks to his own two-out RBI double followed by Bill Virdon's two-run knock in the fifth inning. Roy Face retired the final eight Bronx Bombers for the save at Yankee Stadium. The 3-2 victory stopped the Buccaneer bleeding to even the Series at 2-2 after a pair of New York runaways. The game’s big play was Virdon’s leaping grab of a Bob Cerv drive at the wall (he and Roberto Clemente actually crashed into one another after meeting at the fence) in the seventh inning, saving a pair of runs.
Felix Fermin - 1988 Donruss |
- 1963 - SS Felix Fermin was born in Mao, Dominican Republic. He played for the Pirates, the team that first signed him, from 1987-88, hitting .265 in 66 games. He was traded to Cleveland and spent the next five years as their starting shortstop, ending his 10-year career with stops at Seattle and then with the Chicago Cubs. His nickname was "El Gato" because of his cat-like reactions on defense. After his playing days, he went on to manage in the Dominican and Mexican Leagues.
- 1969 - Danny Murtaugh was hired for the third time as Bucco bench boss. He replaced Alex Grammas, who was serving in Larry Shepherd's spot. For 19 of the next 22 years, Grammas coached third base and infield for Sparky Anderson’s staff, with a three-year stint as manager of the Milwaukee Brewers. As for the Whistling Irishman, he would manage the Pirates between 1970-71, retire for health reasons, then take the helm for a final time from 1973-76.
- 1969 - Don Hoak passed away on the same day that Danny Murtaugh was named manager, a job the Tiger thought he deserved. His widow, singer Jill Corey, claimed that Hoak died of a broken heart because the Pirates had passed him over for skipper, although he actually suffered a fatal heart attack chasing after a relative’s stolen car. Hoak was a Tiger to the end.
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