- 1867 - OF Jake Stenzel was born in Cincinnati. He patrolled center field for five years (1892-96) while with Pittsburgh. Jake was a strong guy with the stick, putting up a line of .360/.429/.528 in his Allegheny years, adding 188 stolen bases. He was a monster in 1894, hitting .352 (oddly, his lowest one-season average while a North Sider) with 150 runs and 121 RBI, banging 13 HR, 20 triples, and 39 doubles while swiping 61 sacks. Stenzel scored 100+ runs in his final three seasons here. Per John Dreker of Pirates Prospects, Stenzel is the only player in baseball history to produce a .350 BA, 80 RBI, 100 runs & 50 SB line in a season four times (Honus Wagner only did it twice) and is the franchise leader in BA and OBP.
- 1896 - RHP Kirtley Baker was born in Covington, Kentucky. He started his baseball odyssey with the Alleghenys in 1890 as a 21-year-old, going 3-19/5.60 in 25 outings with one outing as a pinch runner (he stole a base). Over the course of the next 10 years, he would pitch for the Baltimore Orioles and Washington Senators between stops of a nine-team journey through the minors, hanging up the spikes following the 1900 campaign.
- 1902 - The Bucs whipped the Orphans, 7-2, at the West Side Grounds in a game that was highlighted by a brawl between Chicago’s Joe Tinker and the Pirates Wid Conroy. Steamed that Conroy had held him (literally) at second in the previous game, Tinker launched a punch at Conroy, who promptly retaliated before ump Hank O’Day could restore order. Conroy ended up with a 20 day suspension while instigator Tinkers was given a three day slap on the wrist. Pure baseball was at a minimum as the Pittsburgh Press described the game action as providing “an oversupply of bungling” and added that “neither team did sufficient good playing to deserve a victory.” Chicago morphed into the Cubs during this season because of the youthfulness of their roster. They had gone as the Orphans since 1898, when their longtime manager Pop (aka Cap) Anson was fired; the media called them the "Orphans" because they had lost their Pop.
Rollie Hemsley - undated photo/Retro Archives |
- 1907 - C Ralston “Rollie” Hemsley was born in Syracuse, Ohio. Rollie spent the first four years (1928-31) of his 19-year, eight-club MLB stay with Pittsburgh, starting the last two and putting up a .264 BA. After being traded, he went on to have five All-Star years with three different clubs. After retiring, he was a coach for the Philadelphia Athletics and Washington Senators while also managing in the minors. He was selected Minor League Manager of the Year by The Sporting News in 1950 while serving as pilot of the Columbus Red Birds.
- 1908 - Per the Pittsburgh Press: “The bright...star of the game was ‘Honus’ Wagner who clouted the bulb for a home run, a double, a single, scored two runs...and made a bold steal of home…” as the Pirates beat the Reds, 5-3, at Exposition Park. The Bucs scored three times in the eighth to turn the game their way with Hans driving in the lead run and stealing home for an insurance marker, getting the jump when the Cincy catcher tried to catch the runner at first, Ed Abbaticchio, napping with a snap throw behind him. Abby was wide awake, though, and got back safely as Honus took advantage of the play to sneak home. Vic Willis got the win with Nick Maddux tossing the final frame for the save.
- 1910 - The Pittsburgh Press described it as “...a contest marked by free and easy hitting by both sides, sensational fielding and mediocre pitching...” as the Pirates defeated the Cubs at Forbes Field by a 6-5 tally. Honus Wagner was the spark plug, banging out three hits and sending four runners home; he delivered the game-winning blow, a three-run, bases-loaded double in the seventh that “did the cleanup act.” Howie Camnitz was the “mediocre” hurler, giving up five runs in four innings before Deacon Phillippe came in and spun shutout ball for five frames while giving up three hits. Redbird Solly Hofman had the day off; he became the first NL first baseman to play an entire game without registering a putout.
Lefty Gerheauser - undated photo via Find-A-Grave |
- 1917 - LHP Al “Lefty” Gerheauser was born in St. Louis. Lefty tossed during 1945-46 for the Bucs as a swingman, going 7-12 with a 3.93 ERA. He came to the Pirates from the Philadelphia Phils in exchange for Vince DiMaggio. Lefty spent six years hurling in the show with another 13 seasons in the minors before hanging ‘em up for good. He got on with his life in Joplin, Missouri, and stoked his baseball jones by coaching at the Mickey Owens Baseball School.
- 1924 - Cincinnati’s Eppa Rixey retired the first 23 Bucco batters that he faced and had a 1-0 lead in a duel with Ray Kremer. But the Pirates scratched out a run in eighth and added three more in the ninth, with the big blow a two-run single by Kiki Cuyler, to claim a 4-3 win at Redlands Field. The Reds almost came all the way back, scoring twice in their half of the ninth, with Edd Roush, representing the tying run, cut down at the plate on a strong relay by SS Glenn Wright. Pittsburgh was outhit, 13-6, in the contest, with no walks or errors by Cincy to help grease the basepaths, but put together four of the raps in the ninth inning for the victory.
- 1926 - The Pirates bought 19-year-old OF Fred “Brick” Brickell from Wichita of the Western League for $15,000. He stayed with the Pirates for five years, off-and-on. Fred had speed, a good glove, and a pretty good Pittsburgh BA of .312 w/a 94 OPS+, but tried to break into an outfield that consisted of three Hall of Famers, the Waner Brothers and Kiki Cuyler. When Kiki left the team, Fred lost out in a battle with Adam Comorosky for that third spot. He was traded to Philly in a waiver deal for Denny Sothern in 1930 and played there through the 1933 campaign. Brick was later recognized as a member of the Kansas Baseball Hall of Fame.
- 1933 - Arky Vaughan hit for the cycle against the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field. He went 5-for-5 with five RBI and three runs scored in a 15-3 Bucco victory. He was (and still is) the youngest MLB player to hit for the cycle, at 21 years, 3 months of age. He had lots of help on this day as Pie Traynor had four hits, Gus Suhr three, and Adam Comorosky added a homer and double. Bill Swift cruised by hurling a complete game, six-hit victory.
Arky Vaughan - 1934 Goudey |
- 1934 - The battle between Philadelphia’s Dick Bartell and Bucco Arky Vaughan, who replaced him at shortstop in Pittsburgh, continued to be waged at Forbes Field. Bartell held a grudge from the prior series when he was “beaned” by a Vaughan DP relay. After he popped out (both Dick and Arky had 0-fer days) he “exchanged pleasantries” with Vaughan, including a bit of fist shaking. As a reward for his antics, Bartell was low bridged the next time up by eventual game winner Waite Hoyt. Not only were the Pirates riled at “Sir Richard,” but so were the fans. After the game, Bartell went into the seats after a heckler. Volney Walsh, Pittsburgh Press beat writer, wrote “He was stopped in this effort by the club trainer, who grabbed little Dick by the belt and hauled him away…” The Pirates won, 11-5, behind Gus Suhr’s three hits and a Paul Waner homer.
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