- 1863 - IF Simeon Henry Jean “Sam” LaRocque was born in St. Mathias, Quebec. Sam played fairly regularly for Pittsburgh in 1890, getting into 111 games w/481 PA, hitting .242, but after just one outing in 1891 was shipped to Louisville, where he ended his pro career. Sam remained active in the minors afterward, working as a player/manager through 1907.
- 1891 - 2B Jack “Wobby” Hammond was born in Amsterdam, New York. A star high school athlete signed by the Indians out of Colgate, he got three brief stops in the show, his last being a nine-game, 12-at bat stand with the Bucs in 1922 when he was 31, batting .273. Wobby showed a good stick in the minors, but mostly played at Class A. He retired from the American Association Kansas City Blues the year after his Pirates debut, hitting .300 in his final pro hurrah.
Chief Zimmer w/Cleveland - 1887 Goodwin/Old Judge |
- 1901 - After a bout of American League raids and player league-jumping, the National League suits sat down with Pirates catcher Chief Zimmer, the president of the Players Protective Association. The two sides agreed to contract concessions for NL players who stayed home, including recognition of the union, a one-year reserve clause and minor league clarifications. Zimmer promised to suspend members of the union who jumped leagues in return. The summit didn’t work; the players expected more leeway and continued to chase a more lucrative paycheck from the AL while the union, beset by both sides, folded after the 1903 season.
- 1909 - The Pirates traded IF Charlie Starr to the Boston Doves for a PTBNL, C Mike Simon, who was sent to the Bucs a few days later. 1909 was Starr’s last season while Simon was a Bucco backup for the next five years, compiling a .244 BA and tossing out 45% or more of base stealers four of his five campaigns. Mike spent his last two campaigns in the Federal League.
- 1916 - LHP Elwin “Preacher” Roe was born in Ash Flat, Arizona. Preacher worked early in his career with the Pirates from 1944-47, where he was 34-47/3.73. He started off with two strong years, but an off season cracked noggin in 1945 from a tussle with a basketball ref was followed by a pair of poor campaigns. Preacher was traded to the Brooklyn Dodgers and bloomed (a spitter added to his arsenal was said to have helped him mightily), earning four All-Star berths and pitching in three different World Series. There are two versions of how he got his childhood nickname. One story is that he was an ornery kid, and his grandma called him "Preacher" in hopes that he would eventually behave like a man of the cloth. The other more likely bit of lore is that a minister and his wife used to ride young Elwin around whenever they went out for a ride on their buggy, and he became known as Preacher because of his association with them.
Preacher Roe - 1974 TCMA Nicknames |
- 1930 - C/3B Vic Janowicz was born in Elyria, Ohio. A gridiron All-America and Heisman Trophy winner at Ohio State, Janowicz passed on football to sign for $75K as a bonus baby with the Bucs. He hit only .214 over two seasons (1953-54) as a bench player. He returned to football late in the 1954 season with the Washington Redskins as a kick returner and became their starting halfback in 1955. An automobile accident in 1956 ended his athletic career.
- 1936 - Tommy Padden, a Pirates catcher, reportedly tossed a silver dollar about 475 feet over the Merrimack River and into a snow pile in front of a large crowd who came to witness the exhibition. Tommy was copy-catting the feat of the Washington Senator’s Walter “Big Train” Johnson, who flipped a coin across the Rappahannock a few days prior to duplicate the alleged long-toss (the deed is of dubious veracity) of George Washington per the New Hampshire History Blog.
- 1941 - 1B George “Sonny” Kopacz was born in Chicago. Sonny was a AAAA player who spent 14 seasons in the minors, eight in AAA, and in 1970 was the International League’s MVP with a line of .310/29/115 for the Pirates Columbus Jets. That campaign earned him a cup of coffee with the Bucs, but in 10 games he went 3-for-16 with no extra base knocks. He spent three more seasons a step away in AAA, retiring after the 1973 season at the age of 32.
- 1961 - Pitching coach Stan Kyles was born in Chicago. After an 11-year minor league pitching career, Kyles began coaching in the indie leagues and quickly got gigs with the Cubs (1992-93, 1997-2000), Rockies (1994-96) and Brewers (2001-12), spending his final three years as Milwaukee’s bullpen coach. Starting in 2013, he taught in the Pirates system throughout various levels until 2021, when he became a victim of MLB’s minor league consolidation.
Joe Martinez - 2010 photo George Gojkovich/Getty |
- 1983 - RHP Joe Martinez was born in South Orange, New Jersey. Joe joined the Bucs at the 2010 deadline as part of the Javy Lopez deal with the Giants. He got into five outings, but didn’t impress despite a 3.12 ERA and was waived to Cleveland. He appeared in three more MLB games for the D-Backs and Tribe in 2012-13, then retired in 2014 at age 31 after 1,100 minor league IPs.
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