- 1883 - The Union Association, a short lived baseball league, was formed in Pittsburgh. It had a bit of local flavor, as one of the original clubs was the Altoona Mountain City, which folded after 25 games, and later the Pittsburgh Stogies, a club that formed after the Chicago Browns franchise relocated to the Steel City and lasted for about three weeks before folding again.
- 1891 - The Pirates and hometown pitcher Mark “Fido” Baldwin had a contentious relationship during his three year (1890-92) Buc career. At one point, the team fined him $50, leading him to request his release. Instead, manager Ned Hanlon decided to work Fido like a dog; he started and won a pair of complete game victories on this date against the Brooklyn Bridegrooms at Eastern Park (Per the Pittsburgh Press: “The Pittsburg club covered itself in glory and bathed the Bridegrooms in humiliation and gloom…”) while earning 26 victories during the campaign. The Penn State grad retired the following season, came back for a game, and the Bucs released him. He finished the season with the NY Giants and then retired from MLB for good. Baldwin became a doctor working out of Passavant Hospital (then a North Side institution), and lived out his days in Homestead, where he was raised. He’s buried at Allegheny Cemetery.
- 1926 - 3B George Freese was born in Wheeling, West Virginia and attended both WVU and Pitt where he was a football & baseball star. George spent parts of three seasons in the show, with his most active campaign being in 1951 with the Bucs when he hit .257 and started 49 games at the hot corner. George played 17 years in the minors for six different organizations with a .301 lifetime BA. After his playing days ended, Freese coached for the Cubs and managed for a dozen years in the minor leagues. The older brother of 3B Gene Freese (who actually started ahead of him for the ‘55 Pirates), George made his home in Portland after playing four years of minor league baseball for the Portland Beavers. In 2008 he was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame.
George Freese - 1955 Bowman |
- 1933 - Pitching is the name of the game, and the Bucs had plenty against the Brooklyn Dodgers, sweeping a twin bill by 1-0 and 2-0 tallies at Forbes Field. Heinie Meine’s five-hitter topped Sloppy Thurston in the opener, with Meine scoring the game’s only run in the ninth, driven in by Pie Traynor. Lloyd Waner went 4-for-5 at the top of the order. Waite Hoyt tossed a four-hitter in the nitecap to best Dutch Leonard as Traynor and Tommy Thevenow drove in seventh and eighth inning scores to complete the sweep of the Brooklynites.
- 1947 - Ralph Kiner hit two homers against Boston Braves’ pitcher Red Barrett in a 4-3 win at Forbes Field to set a record of eight home runs in four games. (Tony Lazzeri had hit seven round-trippers in four games in 1936.) Kiner had three of the four Bucco RBI while Rip Sewell went the distance for the win. The day before, Kiner had tied the MLB record for homers in a doubleheader with four, a record that’s since been eclipsed. Big Ralph had three long balls the day before, making it the second time in the campaign that he had five homers in back-to-back games.
- 1948 - The Pirates whipped the Cubs, 7-3, at Wrigley Field as Rip Sewell won his 11th game and the Chicago staff generously donated 14 walks to the Bucco cause. Pittsburgh was within sniffing distance of first, sitting just 2-1/2 games behind league leading Boston. But that was as close as they were to get, fading badly down the stretch to lose out to the “Spahn, Sain, and pray for rain” Braves. They finished fourth with 83 wins, 8-1/2 games behind Boston.
- 1949 - For the second time in his career, Ralph Kiner hit four consecutive homers. His first pair came in a 7-3 win against the Cubs on Sunday, then after an off day, he added two more against the Phils in an 11-6 victory. Both games were played at Forbes Field. Ralph collected 10 RBI in the two games to lead the attack for Murry Dickson and Cliff Chambers victories.
Ralph Kiner - 2020 Topps Allen & Ginter |
- 1951 - Scout Jon Niederer was born in Hanover, Pennsylvania. He went to Duquesne University and began his baseball career as a ticket seller for the Pirates in 1973. Four years later, he became a scout, signing Stan Belinda while operating a series of “Little Pirates” camps. After leaving the Bucs in 1986, he bird-dogged for the Angels and Mariners before passing away in 2009.
- 1952 - The Pirates split a twilight doubleheader against the Boston Braves, winning the opener, 8-1, behind a pair of Ralph Kiner home runs and Bob Friend’s seven-hitter to break an eight-game losing streak, then returning to form to absorb a 16-0 plastering in the late game. The Bucs set a new team low by suffering its 104th defeat (the old mark for damage done was 103, set in 1917) on their way to a 42-112 finish, and the match at Forbes Field drew just 2,608 fans. They also used Branch-Rickey inspired batting helmets for the first time during the regular season, plastic caps with a foam layer around the head band, both at-bat and in the field. All the Buccos but Joe Garagiola wore one; his helmet size was too big. The Post-Gazette noted the headgear with a terse “New Helmets But Same Bucs” headline. The Buc FO introduced the helmets during spring training and finally Branch Rickey ordered their use on this date. Coincidently, we’re sure, Rickey owned stock in the company that made the helmets, American Baseball Cap, that were designed by Ed Crick and Ralph Davis of Cleveland. The Pirates mellowed some after a couple of seasons, requiring them only for batting when the players bellyached about the weight in the field. It took awhile, but the headgear caught on and was mandated by the MLB in 1970.
- 1960 - A crowd of 21,261 cheered the first-place Pirates over the Giants, 6-1, and set a new Pittsburgh home attendance record of 1‚521‚251, edging the old mark set in 1948. The final attendance for 1960 was 1,705,828, which would be the high water mark until the 1988 Pirates drew 1,866,713 at TRS. The victory put the Bucs 7-1/2 games up on the NL field and cut their magic number to 11; they clinched the National League pennant two weeks later.
- 1960 - OF Trench Davis was born in Baltimore. He was signed in 1980 out of Southern HS as a 19-year old. He got on the radar as a stolen base machine with a .275 BA on the farm and had a cup of coffee with Pittsburgh in June. He played in 15 games for the Pirates in May 1986, hitting just .130 (he hit 4-for-30 in his Pirates stint with one stolen base), and became a Bucco footnote when he was optioned back to the minors to make room for Barry Bonds. He signed with the Braves in 1987, spent most of the season in AAA with six MLB outings, and played out his career in the Mexican League.
Mike Roessler - photo via Diamond Baseball Academy |
- 1963 - RHP Mike Roesler was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana. He had a couple of brief MLB stops, tossing five games for the Pirates in 1990 with a line of 1-0/3.00 to close out his MLB work. Roesler bounced around the Pirates and Kansas City Royals’ farm systems afterward before pitching in Taiwan and then retiring in 1992. He was inducted into the Northeast Indiana Baseball Hall of Fame in 2006 for his sporting exploits at Fort Wayne’s Bishop Luer HS and later at Ball State.
- 1964 - The Pirates waived and then sold C Smoky Burgess to the pennant-chasing Chicago White Sox for $50,000. He went 1-for-5 off the bench for the Sox that finished one game behind the Yankees in the 1964 AL race. Smoky found his final home in the Windy City; he played there until 1967, ending his career at the age of 40 with 18 MLB seasons to his credit.
- 1969 - Doing it with their arms and sticks, pitchers Jerry Koosman and Don Cardwell not only pitched 1-0 wins but drove in the winning scores to lead the Mets to a DH sweep of the Bucs. Bob Moose and Dock Ellis took the hard luck losses at Forbes Field, with Moose throwing a five-hitter with 10K and Ellis a six-hitter with 11 whiffs. Though defeats, the games were the second and third in a row that Buc starters had fanned 10+ hitters; Bob Veale started the string the day before with 12 K in a 3-2 win over the Cardinals.
- 1979 - The Pirates whitewashed the St. Louis Cardinals, 2-0, at TRS behind John Candelaria’s six-hit, 8-1/3 innings of shutout ball and Ed Ott’s bat. Bill Madlock singled, stole second and scored on Ott’s single in the second inning before Otter tripled in the fifth and touched home on Phil Garner’s knock to give the Pirates their two runs. Kent Tekulve nailed down his 27th save of the season by retiring the last two Cards and stranding Redbirds at second and third.
Frankie Osoria - 2008 Topps |
- 1981 - RHP Franquelis Osoria was born in Santiago, Dominican Republic. Osoria was waived by the Dodgers after the 2006 campaign and claimed by the Bucs. He worked his first year mainly in Indianapolis, but saw considerable time with the Bucs, going 0-2/4.76 ERA in 25 outings. He was with the big club for most of the 2008 season with a slash of 4-3/6.08 in 43 games. Frankie finished his career in the Dominican Winter League, pitching in his native land through the 2015 year. Like fellow Dominican Antonio Alfonseca, Osoria had an extra digit on his throwing hand, though it didn’t seem to give him much of an edge.
- 1985 - The Bucs banged out three homers to rout the Cubs, 10-2, at TRS. RJ Reynolds and Mike Brown connected off Dennis Eckersley, but the big blow was a two-out grand slam by Don Robinson off of Warren Brusstar in the eighth frame. Robinson became one of just five Pirates pitchers to clean the bases, and another MLB reliever wouldn’t hit a grand slam until 2021, when Daniel Camarena of San Diego did the deed. Robby picked up the save for Rick Rhoden, tossing two innings of one-hit ball with three whiffs. Though The Caveman hit well for a hurler (.238 in ‘85), that swing produced his only homer and RBIs of the year.
- 1992 - It was a wild and wooly finish at Veterans Stadium, but the Bucs came out on top of the late-inning shootout by a 9-7 tally. Ahead, 1-0, in the bottom of the sixth, the Phils used four singles, a walk, error and passed ball to push the lead to 4-0. The Bucs took notes and in the seventh, they cobbled together three singles, a three-base error and a sac fly to tie the game. There was more weirdness in the eighth. The Pirates had runners on first and second with two away when Orlando Merced struck out swinging. But the ball got away from the catcher (wild pitch ruled), Orlando beat the throw to first, and Spanky LaValliere’s rap chased a pair home for Pittsburgh’s first lead. It didn’t last long; with two on via walks and two outs, Dave Hollins went deep off Stan Belinda and Philly was back up, 7-6. Mitch Williams came in to close it out for Philly, but Jay Bell’s triple, between three more singles, a balk and a walk, put the Buccaneers back on top, and Belinda returned the game to normalcy with a 1-2-3 ninth for the blown save/win exacta.
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