Monday, November 4, 2024

Notes: Dodgers Champs, Tri Wins Golden Glove, Buc FA's, Moves & News

HOPE YOU HAD A 🎃🎃 WEEK & the Fall Classic envelope, please...

Pirates Stuff: 

  • Pirates who declared for free agency after the World Series: OF Andrew McCutchen, C Yasmani Grandal and pitchers Aroldis Chapman, Ryan Borucki & Jalen Beeks. 
  • 1B/3B Malcom Nuñez, 23, re-signed with the Pirates on a minor league deal with an invite to spring training. He hit .250 w/11 HR for Indy last year, playing 87 games at the hot corner, 40 at first and a handful as DH.
  • Hey, another infielder who was on layaway: The Pirates claimed IF Tristan Gray, 28, off waivers from the A's. The Pirates drafted Gray in 2017 and traded him, along with Daniel Hudson, to the Rays for Corey Dickerson in 2018. He's been an insurance minor league piece with 17 MLB games in the past two seasons. Gray isn't a big BA guy but has some pop and may be worked at 1B when he joins Indy.

World Series Stuff:

  • LA went to Yankee Stadium and took their third straight game, 4-2, behind the arm of Walker Buehler and the bat of Freddie Freeman, who in three games has three homers. Shohei Ohtani gave the Dodger fans a scare by banging his shoulder on Saturday, but was back as DH for Game #3. Freeman set the Fall Classic mark with another dinger in Game #4; that's six straight WS games that he's gone long in. But it was far from enough; sparked by Anthony Volpe's grand slam, the Bronx bats woke up to stay alive with a runaway 11-4 dub. In Game Six, the Yankees wasted an impressive display of muscle and a 5-0 lead before an inning of little league glove/brain work let LA tie the score and eventually claim the crown, 7-6. Freeman was the MVP.
MLB.com graphic

Other Stuff: 

  • Jared Triolo won the Golden Glove as a utility player. He played every infield position, mainly the unsettled third and second base spots.
  • 2023 Pirates 1B and current Twins first-sacker, Carlos Santana, won a Gold Glove. Slamtana, at 38, is the oldest first-time non-pitcher to earn the award.
  • Royal's C Salvador Perez won this year's Roberto Clemente Award.
  • Inspired by basketball and soccer, plans are afoot to start a Women's Pro Baseball League (WPBL), which hopes to begin play during the summer of 2026.
  • Yankees RHP Gerrit Cole, 34, opted out of his contract. The club could either void the option by adding one year/$36M to his current deal or allow him free agency.
  • The Rangers claimed RHP Roansy Contreras off waivers from the Angels, where his line was 1-4-2/4.13 after LA bought his contract from the Pirates (1-0/4.41) in May. He’s controllable for another four seasons but has no minor league options.
  • Plum HS RHP Scott McGough, 35, had his option declined by Arizona. He pitched a bit for Miami, went to Japan for four years and returned in '23 with the D-Backs.
  • RHP Daniel Hudson, 37, who pitched for Pittsburgh in 2018 before being traded, retired from the LA Dodgers with a World Series ring, his second (he got his first in '19 with the Nats) after 15 years in the show.

11/4: Russ & Frankie - 1st Buc QO's, Mike #2 Rookie, Deacon - PC, Overdue Stops, FA Frolics, Brooklyn Bridge; HBD Chris, John, Logan, Dick, Spook, Fiddler & Wee Tommy

  • 1877 - 3B/OF “Wee Tommy” Leach was born in French Creek, NY. The 5'6" Leach hit 63 career homers; 49 were inside-the-park, which is still a NL record. Leach joins Willie Stargell, Ralph Kiner and Pedro Alvarez as the only Pirates to lead the league in long balls. During Leach's years in Pittsburgh (1900-12), the Pirates won the NL flag four times and were World Series champions once. His 1903 Fall Classic triple is the first World Series hit. Leach is still in the top 100 all-time in stolen bases (361) and runs scored (1,355), and for the Pirates, he's ninth in games played (1,548), at-bats (5,909), runs (1,007) & singles (1,229), sixth in stolen bases (246) and seventh in triples (137). 
  • 1922 - 2B Eddie “The Fiddler” Basinski was born in Buffalo, New York. Eddie was a Mr. Peepers look-alike, thin and with wire-rim glasses, who earned his nickname as a violinist who played for the U of Buffalo Symphony (and he was a good one, becoming concertmaster). He went straight from the sandlots to Brooklyn, mainly as an audition so the Dodgers could determine what minor-league level to start him at, and the sweet-fielding SS ended up in AA after a hot big league start. Eddie put in 13 minor league years mostly in the PCL (he moved to Portland and even, to his later regret, turned down a 1948 call to the Yankees to stay on his beloved West Coast). Aside from parts of two seasons with Brooklyn (Pee Wee Reese blocked him at SS and converted him to 2B) his only other showtime was with Pittsburgh in 1947, where he hit a paltry .199 in 56 games. Eddie’s glove made him a hit - in 1984, he was named to the all-time PCL All-Star team, then inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 1987 and the Pacific Coast League Hall of Fame in 2006. Beside “The Fiddler,” Basinski was also known as “Bazooka,” laid on him by Leo Durocher due to his strong arm. 
  • 1925 - 2B Forrest “Spook” Jacobs was born in Cheswold, Delaware. Spook spent 17 years in baseball (he wintered in the Cuban, Panamanian and Puerto Rican leagues) with three in the majors. His last season in the show was 1956, when the Bucs got him from the KC Athletics and he hit .162. He was selected into the Cuban and Delaware Sports Hall of Fames, along with a handful of smaller HoFs. His nickname came about because of the “spooky” way he could drop Texas-League bloopers over the infield for hits. 
Dick Groat - 2003 Topps Heritage Grandstand Glory
  • 1930 - SS Dick Groat was born in Wilkinsburg. The Swissvale Golden Flash HS star was a two sport ace and was twice named an All-America at Duke in basketball. He was selected as the Helms National Player of the Year in 1952 after averaging 25.2 points per game and played one season in the NBA. But he made a more permanent mark in baseball. As a Bucco bonus baby, he never played in the minors. He was the NL-MVP during the 1960 World Series campaign, and in his Pirate era (1952-62, with two years out for the service), he hit .286 and was a three-time All-Star. A Pitt basketball announcer, in 2011 Groat was inducted into the National College Baseball Hall of Fame, becoming the first man ever inducted into both the college basketball and baseball Halls of Fame. 
  • 1949 - The Pirates purchased IF Hank Schentz from the Brooklyn Dodgers. Hank put in a season plus with the Bucs, and marked the end of a frenzied bit of dealing between the two clubs. As noted by @JohnDreker of Pirates Prospects “Between October 2nd, 1946 and November 4th, 1949, the Pirates and Dodgers completed 12 transactions with each other. The two franchises then went over 17 years before making another deal, which was the Maury Wills trade.” Over that span, the Pirates got Eddie Basinski, Hank Behrman, Monte Basgall, Nanny Fernandez, Hal Gregg, Art Herring, Kirbe Higbe, Dixie Howell, Vic Lombardi, Gene Mauch, Cal McLish, Steve Nagy, Danny O’Connell, Marv Rackley, Stan Rojek, Schentz, Ed Stevens & Dixie Walker. The Bucs gave up Ed Bahr, Vic Barnhart, Hank Behrman (he went from Brooklyn to Pittsburgh back to Brooklyn), Jimmy Bloodworth, Jack Cassini, Billy Cox, Al Gerheauser, Al Gionfriddo, Johnny Hopp, Gene Mauch (he also went back and forth), Preacher Roe & Grady Wilson. Hopp and Rackley were returned to the Pirates and Dodgers respectively after their trade was voided. In all, 30 players were moved. The Pittsburgh GM trade master was Fred Hamey; Branch Rickey was the Dodger exec...and the flood gates slammed once Rickey became Bucco GM after the 1950 campaign. 
  • 1959 - Shortly after the highly-rated “$64,000 Question” TV quiz show scandal broke due to the leaking of the quiz answers to the winner, former Pirate Pie Traynor disclosed that he had been asked to participate in the show, but declined because he was told the category for his proposed session would be music. “I don’t know a thing about music. (But) I suppose that wouldn’t have mattered. I would have gotten the answers,” he suggested in hindsight with tongue-in-cheek. 
Logan Easley - photo via Steiner Sports Memorabilia
  • 1961 - RHP Logan Easley was born in Salt Lake City. He got into 27 games for the Bucs in 1987 and 1989, posting a 2-1-2/5.12, line. He came to the Bucs via Gotham: Easley was drafted by the New York Yankees in the 20th round of the 1981 draft and was traded to the Pirates in November of 1986 along with Brian Fisher and Doug Drabek for Pat Clements, Cecilio Guante and Rick Rhoden. Logan, btw, did more than pitch when he went to college. After retiring from baseball, he returned to his alma mater and put his degree to good use as part of the geology faculty at the College of Southern Idaho. 
  • 1966 - Maury Wills left the Los Angeles Dodgers team touring in Japan, griping about his injured right knee. He was granted his wish to go home for treatment, but a few days later, he was spotted on a Hawaiian beach jamming with Don Ho by vacationing Dodger GM Buzzie Bavasi. Wills had a deserved rep as hard to handle, and that was the last straw for the Los Angeles suits. On December 1st, he was traded to the Pirates for Bob Bailey and Gene Michael. 
  • 1967 - Bucco Cy Young winner Vernon Law was named pitching coach for the Pirates for new manager Larry Shephard. Law coached here from 1968-69, then became an assistant at Brigham Young University from 1969 to 1979. Vern also worked in Japan with the Seibu Lions from 1979-81 before managing in the White Sox organization at Denver in the American Association in 1984. 
  • 1976 - Richie Hebner, the Pirates only free agent, was claimed by eight teams (including Pittsburgh, which retained his rights) in the first Free Agent Re-Entry Draft. The Gravedigger could only deal with the teams that chose him, and he reached a deal with the Phillies six weeks later for three years & a tad over $600K; the Pirates had reportedly offered $270K over the same span. The Bucs selected 10 players for their wish list of free agents, including Rollie Fingers, Sal Bando and Reggie Jackson. Gene Tenace was the only one of the 10 wish-listers who ever ended up in a Pirates uniform, and that wasn’t until 1983, his final season. 
Richie Hebner - 1976 Topps
  • 1977 - Pirates Goose Gossage and Terry Forster were two of the eight players claimed (both drew the interest of 13 clubs) during the Free Agent Re-Entry Draft; Bobby Tolan didn’t get enough suitors (three or more were required), allowing him to play the field. The Goose went to the New York Yankees, Forster to the Los Angeles Dodgers and Tolan took his game to Japan. The Pirates selected seven players to chase, with reliever Rawly Eastwick being their prime target. They didn’t sign any, with Eastwick nixing the Bucs and inking a deal with the Bronx Bombers. 
  • 1978 - The Pirates had two of their free agents claimed, Duffy Dyer (who signed with Montreal) and Dave Hamilton (who went with Oakland) during the Free Agent Re-Entry Draft. Two other players, Steve Brye and Cito Gaston, drew no takers and saw their careers end after the ‘78 campaign. Pittsburgh chased 13 players, including ex-Bucco Wilbur Wood, Pete Rose, Tommy John and Mike Marshall. For the first time since the draft began three years ago, they actually signed a FA they claimed - OF Lee Lacy, who inked a six-year deal for a reported $1.05M. They took a twisty route to land RHP Dave Roberts. They picked him, but he signed with the Giants. Persistence pays; the Bucs kept an eye on him and eventually reeled him in as part of the Bill Madlock trade in June. 
  • 1978 - LHP John Grabow was born in Arcadia, California. Grabow, a third round draft pick in 1997, pitched from 2003-09 for the Bucs until traded to the Cubs. In 390 Pirate appearances, he went 20-15-6/4.09. In 2009, Grabow pitched for the US in the World Baseball Classic, the first Bucco to be named to the US squad. His last MLB season was 2011 with the Cubs. 
  • 1982 - RHP Chris Resop was born in Naples, Florida. Resop tossed for the Pirates from 2010-12 after being claimed off waivers from the Braves and posted a line of 6-8-2/3.88 in 159 appearances, mainly as the Bucs bullpen bridge guy. He was heavily involved in civic/charity work while a Bucco and was voted the Pirates Roberto Clemente Award honoree in 2012. Chris retired during the 2014 season after eight years in the MLB and returned to his hometown. 
Chris Resop - 2012 Topps
  • 1987 - Padres catcher Benito Santiago was the unanimous selection as the NL Rookie of the Year, while Pirate RHP Mike Dunne (13-6/3.03 ERA) finished second. Santiago closed out his career as a Corsair, playing six games in 2005 before being released. Dunne was steady in ‘88, then traded to Seattle in 1989, battled a host of injuries, and 1992 was his last MLB hurrah. 
  • 2004 - The league released the Pirates schedule, and it featured a trio of road trips that were long overdue. For the first time in team history, the Buccos were scheduled for a series against Boston at Fenway Park, which opened its gates in 1912; their last trip to Beantown was in 1903 for the World Series at the Huntington Grounds. They were also slated at Yankee Stadium, a field that Pittsburgh hadn’t visited since the 1960 Fall Classic. In a final reunion, they matched up with the relocated Washington Nationals (formerly the Montreal Expos) at RFK Stadium, the first time the Bucs played in DC since the 1925 World Series against the Senators in 1925 at Griffith Stadium. 
  • 2014 - C Russell Martin and LHP Francisco Liriano became the first two Pirate free agents ever to be tendered qualifying offers ($15.3M) to retain their services. Both, as expected, rejected the offer. Russ did well, signing with Toronto for $82M over five years while Frankie eventually came to terms with the Bucs on a three-year/$39M deal when he found the grass wasn’t always greener...

Sunday, November 3, 2024

11/3: Deacon Wins '60 Cy, Jesse - Aki, JT Signs, Player Shuffles; Japanese Tour, DC Bets, Rules Tweaked, Waner #2; RIP Matty & Mike, HBD Meow, Homer, Ed, John, Harry & Jim

  • 1856 - RHP Jim McCormick was born in Thornliebank, Scotland. He ripped off eight consecutive 20+ win seasons (including years with 45, 40, 36 & 31 wins) before he closed out his career with the Alleghenys in 1887 following a trade with the White Stockings that sent George Van Haltren and $2,000 to Chicago. He was sadly over the hill when he got here, posting a 13-23/4.30 line, the first time in his decade of MLB that his ERA was north of 2.80, though he still ended his career with 265 victories. He retired after the year at the age of 30 to become a businessman. As a rookie for the NL Indianapolis Blues, he became the first native Scot to get into a big league game in 1878. McCormick was one of the forgotten dominators of the deadball era; Baseball Reference compares his career to that of Pittsburgh ace Pud Galvin among early mound stars. 
  • 1866 - RHP Harry Staley was born in Jacksonville, Illinois. Staley pitched in Pittsburgh from 1888-91, tossing for the Alleghenys, Burghers and Pirates. His overall Steel City record was 51-58 with a 3.21 ERA. He was a workmanlike pitcher, and one who knew his way around the batter’s box. On June 1st, 1893, Staley (then a Boston Beaneater) had nine runs batted in, hitting two three-run homers off Louisville’s Billy Rhines. It set the record for most RBIs in a game by a pitcher, equaled by Atlanta Braves pitcher Tony Cloninger in 1966.
  • 1871 - P (no one noticed which hand he used) Fred “John” Hayner was born in Janesville, Wisconsin. As a Chicago prepster in 1890, 18-year-old Fred had an in-game tryout with the floundering Pittsburgh Alleghenys, in town to play the Colts at West Side Park. Fred fizzled as he tossed four innings and was lit up for nine runs (six earned) and that was the extent of his big league career. He eventually ended up a sports writer for the Chicago Daily News, and in 1901, along with George Rice, began using the name “Cubs” for the Chicago ball club, supposedly because of the team’s youth. It was officially adopted a few years later and is still Chicago’s by-line. So if you ever want to win a free beer by betting that a Pittsburgh pitcher had a big hand in naming the Cubs... 
  • 1883 - 3B James “Ed” (middle name Edgar) Lennox was born in Camden, New Jersey. After a four year MLB career, Ed played for the Pittsburgh Rebels from 1914-15, batting .311. While a Rebel in 1914, Lennox hit for the cycle to become the only Federal League player to pull off that feat. He also swatted pinch-hit home runs in consecutive games the same season, a deed that was unmatched until Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers repeated it in 2016. 
Homer Summa - James Elder Post Card
  • 1898 - OF Homer Summa was born in Gentry, Missouri. He began a 10-year MLB career in 1920 with the Pirates, going 7-for-22 (.318) in 10 games. He later served as a platoon outfielder with a lifetime BA of .302, playing for the Cleveland Indians before closing out his run with two years in Philadelphia with the A’s. His parents were a little over optimistic when they named him Homer; he only hit 18 round-trippers during his decade of playing in the big leagues. 
  • 1917 - RHP Len “Meow” Gilmore was born in Fairview Park, Indiana. Gilmore pitched 11 minor league seasons between 1938-52 for nine teams, going 128–94/3.66 in 332 outings after starting out at Indiana State Teachers College. The Bucs gave him his MLB taste when he started the second game of a twinbill against the Philadelphia Phillies at Shibe Park on the last day of the 1944 season. Gilmore allowed seven earned runs on 13 hits, with no walks or strikeouts in eight innings of work, but more importantly, got to add the title of major league pitcher to his resume. Following his days on the slab, Gilmore worked for the Oklahoma City Fire Department, retiring as a captain. Per “Indiana-born MLB Players,” Len got his nickname from a West Coast service station franchise named Gilmore that had a lion as its logo. Somehow its tagline “Roar with Gilmore” morphed into a meow. He did use all nine of his lives, thought, surviving to the ripe ol’ age of 93. 
  • 1934 - Dizzy Dean, with a 30-7 record, was selected as the NL Most Valuable Player, with  Pirates outfielder Paul Waner finishing a distant second despite a .362/14/90 slash. It was part of a six-year run (1932-37) that saw Big Poison earn MVP votes five times, including three Top Five finishes. 
  • 1945 - P/OF Elmer “Mike” Smith passed away at age 77 and was buried at Union Dale Cemetery in the North Side. He was born in old Allegheny City and spent half his career (1892-97, 1901) in Pittsburgh. Smith started out with the Reds, where he was a pitcher known for his heater, but by the time he became a Pirate in ‘92, his pitching arm was shot. No diff; Pittsburgh wanted him as an outfielder, using him in just 17 games on the hill (he’d only toss once more as a Pirate afterward) but spending 124 contests in the pasture. It was a good positional switch; Elmer could hit, and finished with a .325 BA/.415 OBP during his Bucco years. Mike played for four teams in his 14-year career, but kept his permanent home on the North Side on 510 Madison Avenue. After leaving baseball in 1906, Smith worked as an inspector for the Pittsburgh Bureau of Highways. 
Mike Smith - Ars Longa Art Card
  • 1954 - The rules committee, meeting in New York City, was busy: After the absence of a dozen years, the sac fly was restored, laminated bats were approved, a ban was placed on leaving gloves and other equipment on the field between innings and a move to reinstate the spitter was beaten back. 
  • 1960 - Vern Law, who finished 20-9 with 18 complete games and a 3.08 ERA, was voted the Cy Young Award winner, easily outdistancing runner-up Warren Spahn. It was a year of big wins to remember for The Deacon - he was an All-Star, earning the victory for one of the two Midsummer Classics in ‘60, and was also the winning pitcher for two of the Bucs’ World Series victories. 
  • 1971 - PA senators Hugh Scott and Richard Schweiker, winners of a bet made on the 1971 Fall Classic between them and Maryland senators Charles Mathias Jr. and J. Glenn Beall, Jr., rode elephants in front of the Capitol. The losers toted peanuts for snacks and shovels to clean the street behind the paraders. 
  • 1982 - 1B Jason Thompson agreed to a five-year/$5.5M contract with the Pirates ($200K/year in bonuses, $1.2M deferred). The 28-year-old followed with three seasons in which he failed to hit .260 or 20 HR, and was traded to Montreal after the 1985 campaign for a minor league player. The change of scenery didn’t help and the Expos released him in June after 30 games while the Pittsburgh/Montreal FOs ate the final year of his deal as he couldn’t catch on with anyone else. 
  • 1979 - An MLB All Star team embarked on an 18-day tour of Japan. The squad was split into NL & AL sides, with seven of the nine scheduled exhibitions being between the leagues with two more games against All Star Japanese nines. The World Champ Bucs were well represented, with Dave Parker, Bill Madlock, John Candelaria, Jim Bibby and Bert Blyleven on board along with former Pirate Craig Reynolds and Chuck Tanner serving as one of skipper Tommy LaSorda’s coaches. It was the largest contingent of MLB players to take a foreign trip. 
Jesse Chavez - 2009 Topps Heritage Rookie
  • 2009 - The Pirates sent RHP Jesse Chavez to Tampa Bay for 2B Akinori Iwamura, who at $4.85M became the Pirates’ highest paid player. Iwamura was gimpy, out of shape and benched in June with a .172 average. Iwamura was replaced rather handily by Neil Walker, a converted minor league 3B/C, then released in mid-September. After 10 games with Oakland, Aki was out of MLB. Jesse is still around and tossed for the Atlanta Braves from 2022-24 (he’s a free agent now) while Neil played for Miami and the Phils before retiring after the 2020 campaign. 
  • 2011 - Matty Alou passed away in Santo Domingo at the age of 72 of diabetes complications. He was the middle man of one of the top MLB brother acts, between Felipe and Jesus. He came to the Bucs in 1965 from the Giants, and under the tutelage of Harry “The Hat” Walker and the prodding of Roberto Clemente, he turned into one of the great slap hitters of the era. In his first year as a Pirate, he led the NL with a .342 average as his hermano Felipe came in second at .327, the only time in baseball history that brothers finished 1-2 for the batting title. He hit .338 in 1967 (third in the NL), .332 in 1968 (second in the circuit) and .331 in 1969, leading the league with 231 hits and 41 doubles. He made two All-Star teams during that span, before being dealt to the Cards. In a 15-year big league career, his BA was .307. Following the 1974 season, he played three years in Japan and managed in the Dominican Winter League. In 2007, the Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame inducted Matty. 
  • 2016 - RHP Neftali Feliz, OF Matt Joyce, RHP Ivan Nova, LHP Zach Phillips, UT Sean Rodriguez and RHP Ryan Vogelsong were non-tendered by the Bucs after the season and became free agents, along with LHP Kelvin Marte, RHP Justin Masterson and OF Danny Ortiz, who were let go a few days later. Only Nova remained with Pittsburgh by signing a three-year/$26M deal, although Clint Hurdle’s security blanket, S-Rod, would return to the fold via trade in August. 
  • 2017 - There wasn’t much contract churn for the Pirates after the season. They exercised their team option on CF Andrew McCutchen and bought out the options on C Chris Stewart (younger torch-bearer C Elias Diaz was out of options) and LHP Wade LeBlanc (who was outrighted to Indy and faced a crowded field of lefty relievers) while 1B/OF John Jaso and RHP Joaquin Benoit had already declared for free agency. Cutch was the only starter in the mix and the other losses were expected. Andrew’s 2018 contract of $14.75M was the largest single-year deal that the Pirates have ever been entirely committed to; AJ Burnett’s contract for $16.5M from 2012-13 was primarily paid for by the NYY. The club tendered their small though costly arb-eligible gang of RHP Gerrit Cole, SS Jordy Mercer, RHP Felipe Rivero and RHP George Kontos. Jordy & Felipe were the only ones of the option/arb posse to make it through the season with the Pirates.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

11/2: Housekeeping Shuffle; Redman Back, AVS - POTY, '79 FA Jockeying, Pops Comeback, Alley Goes, Bragan Hired, Preacher & Rube Rule 5, Friend Night, Early AS, AA Forms; HBD Orlando, Gary & Frenchy

  • 1866 - Utilityman Frank “Frenchy” Genins was born in St. Louis, Missouri. Frank’s biggest workload in a three-year big league career came with the 1895 Pirates. He played all the infield & outfield spots (in fact, he was the only other Bucco to play the OF that year other than the starting trio of Patsy Donovan, Jake Starzel and Mike Smith), hitting .250 in 73 games. Genins may not have dented very many major league lineups, but he played his way through much of the midwest in the minors from 1887-1909, with his latter years spent as a player/manager. 
  • 1881 - The American Association was founded. The initial members were the Brooklyn Atlantics (replaced by the Baltimore Orioles), Cincinnati Red Stockings, Louisville Cardinals, Philadelphia Athletics, Pittsburgh Alleghenys, and St. Louis Brown Stockings. The AA was considered a major league organization, though the Alleghenys bolted to the NL after the 1886 campaign and the league folded after the 1891 season. Denny McKnight, the Alleghenys owner, was elected its first president, with his term running from 1882-85. 
  • 1927 - Although the first All-Star Game wouldn’t be played until 1933, that didn’t stop papers from picking a squad of its own, usually combining leagues. The Brooklyn Eagle’s Hall of Fame baseball writer Thomas Holmes released his 1927 lineup which featured 3B Pie Traynor and OF Paul Waner on the first team. Lloyd Waner was named to the second team. 
  • 1942 - The Pirates selected LHP Wally “Preacher” Hebert and RHP Ed “Rube” Albosta in the Rule 5 draft. Preacher toiled for nine minor league seasons (he was picked from San Diego of the PCL) following three MLB years (1931-33) with the St. Louis Browns. He was strong here with a line of 10-11/2.98 in 184 innings for the 1943 club, but despite his numbers and a Pittsburgh contract offer, the 35-year-old retired in the off season. Albosta missed three years due to WWII, not taking the hill for the Bucs until 1946. Plucked from International League Montreal, Albosta went 0-6/6.13 in 17 outings (six starts and 11 relief calls), and that was the end of his MLB tour that started in 1941 with the Brooklyn Dodgers, where he went 0-2 in his two prior big league starts. He finished with two years in the PCL and two more in the Central League before retiring. 
Wally Hebert - 1943 photo via Out Of The Ballpark
  • 1951 - Bob Friend had a night honoring him in hometown of Lafayette, Indiana, and left with more gifts from his homies that he needed help getting them home. He was recognized at his former HS for breaking into the majors, and paid it back. He stayed for the Penn State-Purdue football game and said “Tell my Pennsylvania friends to pardon me, but I’ll have to be rooting for the Boilermakers.” He chose right; Purdue easily handled the Nittany Lions, 28-0. 
  • 1955 - Bobby Bragan was named the new Bucco field manager, signing a one-year deal to replace Fred Haney. The fiery Bragan didn’t last long, getting the ax in early August of 1957 after compiling a 102-155 record. His spot was taken by Danny Murtaugh, making the first of his four Pirates managerial stints. Bobby went on to manage the Cleveland Indians (1958) and Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1963-66), compiling an overall 443-478 record. 
  • 1956 - IF Gary Hargis was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He was drafted out of high school (Cabrillo HS, California) in 1974 in the second round by the Bucs. His MLB resume is slim; as a September call up, he made it into one game for the 1979 Buccos as a pinch runner, earning a $250 World Series share for his effort. Hargis was injury-plagued on the farm, and he was moved to the OF in 1980 because his arm wasn't considered MLB caliber for short and they were priming him for a utility role. He got married in ‘81 and that was his last pro season. 
  • 1966 - OF/1B Orlando Merced was born in Hato Rey, Puerto Rico. Merced played from 1990-96 for the Bucs with a .283 BA, coming in second in the Rookie of the Year voting in 1991. After a solid 13-year MLB career (he played for seven teams w/.278 lifetime BA), he now operates the Orlando Merced Baseball Center. 
  • 1973 - Two-time All-Star Gene Alley, 32, announced his retirement. In 1966-67, he was at the top of his game both with the glove (he and Maz set the DP record in ‘66 w/215 twin killings) and with the bat (.293 BA during those two years), but an arm injury suffered in ‘68 followed by a bum knee brought him back to earth. He never hit above .250 afterward and was a bench player in his final year. His Bucco career spanned 1963-73 and he hit .254 over that time. 
Gene Alley - 1971 Pirate Picture Pack
  • 1978 - Willie Stargell was named the United Press’ “Comeback Player of the Year” after hitting .295/28 HR/97 RBI. He was coming off a 1977 campaign in which he only got into 63 games, going on the DL twice with a bum elbow, and ending his streak of 15 straight seasons with 20> homers. He ran away in the vote from pitchers Vida Blue (SF), Gaylord Perry (SD) and Jim Bouton (ATL). 
  • 1979 - In MLB’s Free Agent Re-Entry Draft, the Bucs’ Bruce Kison was claimed by the Indians and Rennie Stennett by the Mets after the Pirates signed Grant Jackson to a new contract the day before to keep him out of the process. The Bucs claimed bidding rights on Dave Goltz of the Twins, John Curtis of San Francisco, Nolan Ryan of California, Milt May of the White Sox, Al Hrabosky of KC, Don Stanhouse of Baltimore and Rick Wise of Cleveland. The purpose of the draft was to lessen the financial impact of free agency for the bidders; FA’s could only sign with a team that selected them. The clubs could only select a limited number of players, and there was also a limit to the number of teams that could select a single player. But there was a loophole for the lesser-sought players and the champagne guys: unless selected by three or more teams, they were available to all. The draft lasted from 1976-80 when a new agreement that eliminated the re-entry procedure went into effect after the ‘81 strike. Thanks to the three-team rule, Kison signed with the Angels and Stennett with the Giants as both could negotiate league-wide. The Bucs inked none of their selections, although they did eventually land ex-Pirate May once again in a 1983 trade. Since they couldn’t sign any of the big name arms, they instead inked Andy Hassler to a six-year, $750 K contract. He lasted until June, when he was sold to the California Angels. 
  • 1988 - Andy Van Slyke joined some pretty good company in Ralph Kiner (1950), Dick Groat (1960), Roberto Clemente (1966) and Dave Parker (1978) as Bucs who won The Sporting News NL Player of the Year Award (Barry Bonds would take the award in 1990 and ‘91). The 28-year-old hit .288 w/25 homers, 101 runs, 100 RBI, and 30 stolen bases. Teammates Bobby Bonilla and Mike LaValliere, along with AVS, were named to the TSN All-Star team. And in a very good day for Bucco awardees, Jim Leyland and Dodger skipper Tommy LaSorda tied each other in first place votes for NL Manager of the Year (the first time TSN had a tie for that honor) in a race that was decided by a gnat’s eyelash by overall points in Jim's favor. Leyland and LaSorda earned four first-place votes each while the Mets Davey Johnson came in with three. Leyland was the third Pirates field general to win the award, along with Danny Murtaugh (1960, 1970) and Billy Meyer (1948). 
Mark Redman - 2005 Topps Total
  • 2005 - LHP Mark Redman exercised his $4.95M player option for the 2006 season. Acquired as part of the Jason Kendall deal, he went 5-15/4.90 in 2005 for the Bucs. He didn’t make it to camp, though, as the Bucs swapped him to Kansas City for RHP Jonah Bayliss a month later. 
  • 2015 - The Pirates had eight free agents after the season: pitchers Antonio Bastardo, Joe Blanton, AJ Burnett, JA Happ & Joakim Soria, 1B Corey Hart, UT Sean Rodriguez, and 3B Aramis Ramirez. S-Rod was the only one of the gang that the team re-signed as AJ and A-Ram retired while the others found new homes as part of the winter marketplace. Bastardo had a homecoming when the Pirates traded to get him back at the 2016 deadline. Rodiguez left the flock after ‘16, but not for long; the Pirates got him back on the roster later in the next campaign. Several other bubble guys were released soon afterward: RHP Radhames Liz, LHP Jeremy Bleich, OF John Bowker, C Wilkin Castillo, RHP Brad Lincoln, RHP Blake Wood and 1B/OF Andrew Lambo. 
  • 2023 - The Bucs wasted little time housekeeping after the WS. First, RHP Cody Bolton's contract was sold to Seattle after slashing 1-0/6.33 in 16 outings during the 25-year-old’s rookie campaign. Claimed off waivers: INF Vinny Capra, 27, by Milwaukee. Vinny went 3-for-18 (.167 BA) as a Bucco depth guy. 1B/OF Alfonso Rivas by Cleveland; the 26-year-old hit .237 with three homers in his 40-game Pirates audition; The Padres claimed IF Tucupita Marcano even though the 24-year-old wasn't expected to be ready for the season as he had ACL surgery in August. He hit .233 in 75 games last year before being injured. Waived: RHP Yerry De Los Santos, 25, who was 1-4-3/4.14 during the 2022-23 campaigns in 48 outings, is now with the NYY. OF Miguel Andujar, 28, (.250/4/18 in 40 games), is currently with Oakland and LHP Angel Perdomo, 29, (3-2/3.72 in 30 outings) is in the Atlanta system. Angel missed the end of the season with an elbow injury.

Friday, November 1, 2024

11/1: Miceli Dealt, Ben Picked, Robby ROTY, Pops & Arriba AS's, Roberto, Maz & Alley - GG's, '20 Moves; HBD Eddie, Gary, Miguel, Howie, Larry, Clarence, Earl, Ham & Mike

  • 1872 - C Mike Hopkins was born in Glasgow, Scotland. He’s one of only eight native Scotsmen to play MLB, and for him it was just for one game. His family crossed the pond and took up residence in Chartiers (now Carnegie); his dad was a miner and Mike became a railroader. He also played semi-pro ball for Chartiers and his neighbor, Honus Wagner, talked the team into taking him on a road trip in 1902, a year when the Pirates were waltzing away with the pennant. He got into a blowout game at Cincinnati’s Palace of the Fans and went 2-for-2. That was his career; he was married with a child on the way and had a regular day job, so a baseball gig didn’t ring his bell. Mike worked on the RR into the 1940s, played a little sandlot ball, and raised nine children who gave him and the missus 18 grandchildren and two great-grandkids before he passed away at the age of 79. 
  • 1884 - PH Robert Hamilton “Ham” Hyatt was born in Buncombe County, North Carolina. Nominally a 1B/OF but used mainly as a pinch-hitter, Hyatt played for the Bucs from 1910-11, went to the minors for a season and returned from 1912-14, hitting .267 for Pittsburgh. Ham spent a couple of more years in the show and finished off his career with a PCL stint. 
  • 1892 - C Earl Blackburn was born in Leesville, Ohio. Earl played for parts of five big league seasons, batting .262, but you can be excused if you missed him in Pittsburgh. He played one game as a 19-year old in 1912, but never made it to bat before moving on to the Cincinnati Reds, Boston Braves and Chicago Cubs. Blackburn then put in one more season with Kansas City in the American Association before spending 1920 with Bethlehem of the Bethlehem Steel League, an industrial league that raided MLB players, before his horsehide trail turns cold. 
  • 1894 - RF Clarence Berger was born in East Cleveland, Ohio. His MLB resume consists of six games for the 1914 Pirates with a 1-for-13 batting line after a late September call up from the Richmond Colts, from which the Bucs had bought Berger’s contract for $2,500. He was released the following year before camp broke, played the season in the minors and got on with his life’s work. 
Larry French - 1934 Goudey
  • 1907 - LHP Larry French was born in Visalia, California. He started his 14-year career in Pittsburgh (1929-34) and had a line of 87-83-9/3.50, winning 15 or more games four times with the Pirates. French won 197 games before he hung ‘em up and was an All-Star for the Cubs in 1940. He’s still noted for his 1933 “Soap Game.” With the Bucs up 8-0 in the ninth, French ducked out of the bullpen to get to the hot water first. But the pesky Boston Braves tied the game, and French was summoned to the mound with soap still dripping down his face. It didn’t hurt his performance; he tossed 1-2/3 squeaky-clean innings and got the win in 10 frames. 
  • 1934 - OF Howie Goss was born in Wewoka, Oklahoma. Howie spent nine years in the minors before the Bucs called him up in 1962 after he put together a .299/27/100 slash line in the PCL. In 89 games (25 starts) Goss hit .243. As the 1963 camp broke, Goss was traded to the Colt .45s for OF Manny Mota. Goss became Houston's regular CF’er, but hit only .209 in what was his last MLB year. Manny spent six seasons as a Pirate with a .297 BA and went on to become an all-time great as a pinch hitter with the Los Angeles Dodgers. 
  • 1945 - OF/3B Ben Guintini was the Pirates selection in the Rule 5 draft. He had hit .283 for the San Francisco Seals in the PCL, but went 0-for-3 as a Buc in 1946 and returned to the Seals, closing out his MLB career with three more games with Philadelphia in 1949, never managing to collect a big league hit. Ben did have a long career in the minors, playing 1,000+ games and once hitting 32 homers. He became a Cadillac salesman after he retired. 
  • 1948 - The Pirates hosted the annual farm directors conference at the Hotel Schenley in Oakland, across the street from Forbes Field. Apparently there wasn’t much on the minor league agenda; the meeting lasted just one day with an evening banquet following. The Pittsburgh hosts were Pirates GM Roy Hamey, Farm Director Ray Kennedy and Assistant Director Fred Hering. 
Miguel Dilone - 1977 Topps
  • 1954 - OF Miguel Dilone was born in Santiago, Dominican Republic. He played parts of five seasons for Pittsburgh, from 1974-77 and again in 1983, but mustered just 75 PA and a .145 BA over that span and was utilized primarily as a pinch runner, finishing with 23 swipes as a Bucco and 267 lifetime steals. Dilone carved out a 12-year MLB career and had a .265 lifetime BA while playing for seven teams. The speedster was known in the Dominican as the "Saeta Cibaeña" (the Cibao Dart; Cibao is the region where Santiago is located) because of his baserunning chops. He lost an eye in 2009 to a foul ball while he was on the field, distracted while helping coach young players. 
  • 1956 - 1B/OF Gary Redus was born in Tanner, Alabama. He was a minor league phenom who hit .462 while playing 68 games for the Pioneer League Billings Mustangs’ in 1978, setting a record for pro baseball that still stands, across all levels and all leagues. Redus played off the bench as a platoon bat for five years (1988-92) and was on three division-winning teams as a Pirate, hitting .255 in 398 Buc games. His biggest day as a Buc was on August 25th, 1989 when he hit for the cycle in a 12–3 victory over the Reds. Redus retired from playing in 1994, coached baseball for six years at Calhoun Community College in Tanner, Alabama, and was an outfield instructor for Pittsburgh and Houston before retiring for good. 
  • 1964 - 1B Eddie Williams was born in Shreveport, Louisiana. Williams had put in eight MLB years (and another in Japan) playing baseball’s corners when the Pirates added him to their bench at the 1997 deadline, where the 1983 first-rounder (4th overall) hit .247. He got a cup of coffee with San Diego after that and finished his career in Mexico, Korea and the indie leagues. 
  • 1967 - 2B Bill Mazeroski, RF Roberto Clemente and SS Gene Alley were named to The Sporting News 1967 NL Gold Glove Team. It was Maz’s eighth GG, Roberto’s seventh and Alley’s second. It would be the last one for the infielders while Clemente still had four more to collect. 
Roberto Clemente - 2022 graphic/MLB
  • 1972 - Willie Stargell and Roberto Clemente were selected as members of The Sporting News NL All Star team, as selected by the players. Another honor was bestowed on the Bucs when club president Dan Galbreath was selected as the Variety Club’s Sportsman of the Year and was recognized with other awardees at the VC’s annual dinner on November 26th. Dan’s family owned both the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Darby Dan stables and produced champions from both. 
  • 1978 - RHP Don Robinson was announced as The Sporting News’ Rookie Pitcher of the Year. Used almost solely as a starter, he put together a 14-6/3.47 line and came in third in the NL Rookie of the Year poll as well as finishing among the Top Ten vote getters for the Cy Young Award. Robby finished strong, going 9-1 in 13 starts from August onward with five complete games. 
  • 1996 - The Pirates traded RHP Dan Miceli to the Detroit Tigers for RHP Clint Sodowsky. Miceli started out as Pirate and in four years went 8-15-24/5.41. The Bucs gave him nine starts in ‘96 (his only year that he was used as a starter), and he spent the rest of his 14-year career primarily as a set-up guy. Sodowsky went 2-2/3.62 (his FIP was 4.67 and WHIP 1.6) in his only Bucco campaign and he was out of the bigs after tossing three games in 1999 for the Cards. 
  • 2020 - After making a boatload of player moves two days before, the Bucs finalized their 40-man roster by removing CF Anthony Alford, RHP Jameson Taillon, IF Phil Evans, RHP Michael Feliz and RHP Clay Holmes from the IL and protecting them on the roster. They had to jettison a couple of more guys to clear space: The Pirates turned down RHP Chris Archer’s $11M option for 2021, making him a FA, RHP Nick Burdi was removed from the IL and DFA'ed after he had his second Tommy John surgery in mid-October while RHP Dovy Neverauskas was waived.