Results tagged ‘ Bowie Kuhn ’

Saying Goodbye for 2007

Before we plunge headlong into a new year, one that we hope is filled with health and prosperity for all in the baseball world, I feel it’s both appropriate and necessary to remember those figures we lost during the past 12 months. While there were seemingly fewer baseball deaths in 2007 than in recent years, the magnitude of those who passed away remained significant. Here is a roll call of some of the most memorable names of the fallen, including many who struck a personal chord with this writer.
Edson BahrEd BaileySteve Barber: I always thought that he had a great baseball name, particularly for a pitcher. When I was growing up with the game, Barber was just finishing up a long career. I remember him mostly as a middle reliever–like a lot of veteran pitchers of that era, that’s where he ended up–but it was as a hardballing starter that Barber created some lasting imagery on a number of different levels. For what it’s worth, I have the last three Topps cards issued during Barber’s career. They’re all interesting. The 1972 card is a posed shot, showing him at the end of what appears to be an exceedingly awkward delivery to the plate. It’s a very weird pose. Barber’s 1973 card artfully displays him in a game with the Angels, having just delivered a pitch to the plate, with his right leg perfectly straight and balanced against the ground, and his left arm tucked in toward his waist. The 1974 card is a headshot, and shows Barber with about as serious a look as I’ve ever seen on a ballplayer. Barber looks so businesslike that he appears borderline mean. Just like his fastball…

Rod BeckJim BeauchampLew BurdetteHank BauerClete BoyerTommy ByrneHerb Carneal, Ford Frick Award broadcaster… Don Chevrier, broadcaster… Mike Coolbaugh: The death of Coolbaugh, a minor league coach who died shortly after being hit by a foul line drive, has already escalated the push for baseline coaches to wear protective helmets on the field. In fact, the major leagues have adopted a new rule making it a requirement for base coaches to wear helmets in 2008. It’s unfortunate that it took such a horrid tragedy to create baseball legislation that was long overdue, but hopefully Coolbaugh’s legacy will prevent others from experiencing similar tragedy. If even one life is saved, or even one is spared major injury because of this new rule, Coolbaugh will not have died in vain…

Shag Crawford, umpire… Bing Devine, general manager… Charles Einstein, author… Art Fowler: Fowler is best remembered for filling a memorable role as Billy Martin’s designated pitching coach/drinking buddy. (My father used to refer to Fowler as “drinking buddy” so often that I thought it should have been his actual title.) Their relationship began in 1969 for the Denver Bears of the American Association. Martin decided to make use of the 45-year-old Fowler, who was still an active pitcher on the staff, as his pitching coach. The relationship soon turned into a friendship. Fowler worked for Martin during almost every one of his managerial stops in Minnesota, Detroit, Texas, New York, and Oakland. Critics of Fowler called him nothing more than Martin’s crony, while supporters pointed out that Fowler generally developed good relationships with his pitchers. According to many of his former pitchers, a typical Fowler visit to the mound would involve the following words of wisdom. “I don’t know what you’re doing wrong, but whatever it is, it’s sure [ticking] Billy off!”…

Josh HancockDavid Halberstam, author: While growing up, I had always assumed that Halberstam was just a sportswriter, largely because of two classic books he penned, the underrated Breaks of the Game (a chronicle of the NBA’s Portland Trailblazers in 1979) and The Summer of ’49 (which tracked the memorable pennant race between the Yankees and Red Sox). Then I learned that he was a wide-ranging author who just happened to dabble in writing about sports, which he obviously considered worthwhile fodder for his talents as an author. I think that’s a good indication that sports represents more than just the “toy department” of newspapers, as some news people have claimed over the years…

Mark Harris, author… Gomer Hodge: Hodge played only one season, collecting 83 at-bats for the dismal 1971 Indians. On a team with little appeal, Hodge stood out as a rare baseball personality. He sounded so much like actor Jim Nabors, who played “Gomer Pyle” on the old Andy Griffith Show, that friends and acquaintances called him Gomer. After collecting four hits in his first four at-bats, three of them as a pinch-hitter, Hodge declared in his best Nabors voice: “Golly, fellas, I’m hitting 4.000!” Although Hodge played only one season, he certainly left an impact. His down-home manner, his sense of humor, and his willingness to talk made him a favorite of teammates and media alike, a kind of folk hero in Cleveland…

Vern Hoscheit, coach and scout… Hal JeffcoatJoe KennedyGeorge Kiseda, writer… Bowie Kuhn, commissioner: In the hours after first learning of Kuhn’s death, I read several accounts that described the former commissioner as a pompous stuffed shirt who often seemed stiff and uncomfortable. Well, that was never my experience with Kuhn. I talked to him several times during my years at the Hall of Fame, including an interview that I conducted in front of an appreciative crowd in the Hall’s Bullpen Theater. The former commissioner struck me as thoughtful and well spoken, even charming at times. He took an interest in my work at the Hall of Fame, which is not always the case with guest speakers who come to Cooperstown. I once gave him a ride from the Otesaga Hotel to the Hall of Fame; he was gracious and open during our conversation, and grateful for having saved him from a long walk. After talking to Kuhn for awhile, it became obvious that he was both a fan of the game and a believer in old-school values. Those are two characteristics that rank highly with me. He was also knowledgeable about the Negro Leagues, having attended games at old Griffith Stadium in Washington. He had a real interest in preserving baseball history, which motivated him to donate his collection of papers from his days in baseball’s front office. Now there’s no question that Kuhn made plenty of mistakes during his reign as commissioner, but he wasn’t just a suit who held the office of commissioner while waiting for something better to come around. This was a man who had a genuine love for the game, and took pride in trying to defend some of its values…

Clem LabineJack LamabeJack Lang, writer… Max LanierNorm Larker Lou LimmerMarty MartinezOrlando McFarlaneStu Nahan, broadcaster… Don NottebartJoe NuxhallGene OliverPhil Rizzuto: “The Scooter” broke almost all of the rules of broadcasting. He often failed to follow the play, botched home run calls, interspersed his broadcasts with “Happy Birthdays” and personal notes, and sometimes even failed to take note that a no-hitter was in progress. Yet, none of that mattered. The Scooter was so personable, so charming, so completely entertaining that most Yankee fans loved listening to him, regardless of whether the Yankees were winning, tied, or being blown out. Because of “The Scooter,” Yankee broadcasts in the seventies and eighties transcended sports; they became a mix of situation comedy, talk show, and baseball. Thanks, Rizzuto…

Bill Robinson: Two things always come to mind when I think about Robinson. First, he was that rare example of a player who performed better in his thirties than he did in his twenties. After struggling to find himself as an outfielder-third baseman with both the Braves and Yankees, Robinson became a productive left fielder for the mid-1970s Phillies and the 1979 world champion Pirates. While most players reach their peak physically during their twenties, some need more time to adjust to the mental stress of playing at the highest level of professional baseball. That adjustment took several years for Robinson, who didn’t start to succeed until his age 30 season with the Phillies in 1973. Second, I’ll remember Robinson being prominently mentioned as a candidate to become the first black manager of the Mets, but never receiving that opportunity. Though a highly regarded hitting coach during the Mets’ successful run in the late eighties, Robinson found himself out of work and took a job serving as an analyst for Baseball Tonight in the early 1990s. I don’t know if Robinson was the victim of racism, or whether he simply interviewed poorly, but it seems that he had the smarts and toughness to be a good major league manager. Sadly, that chance never came…

Vern RuhleAl Salerno, umpire… Rollie StilesJohn VukovichMatthew Wasser, Yankees public relations assistant… Larry Whiteside, Spink Award writer.

Although the game goes on, as it always does, we lose a little piece of baseball’s heart with each of their passings.

Remembering Moe

The culture of baseball is a little less rich today. We lost one of the all-time colorful characters on Saturday when Moe Drabowsky died from bone marrow cancer at the age of 70. Drabowsky was a journeyman pitcher for much of the 1960s and early 1970s, but gained far more acclaim for his extraordinary abilities as a practical joker. In fact, Moe–and how can you not love the name Moe Drabowsky?–might have been the greatest prankster the game has ever known.

Let’s consider some of Drabowsky’s most comical stunts:

*Moe regularly ordered Chinese food from the bullpen phone, once placing a direct call to Hong Kong for some takeout. I doubt that Drabowsky’s orders were ever actually delivered to the bullpen, but the habit was reminiscent of a moment in Seinfeld when Elaine once ordered Chinese food and had it delivered to a janitor’s closet.

*Drabowsky wasn’t satisfied with giving hotfoots to teammates and other players; he once found a victim in Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. Laying out a trail of lighter fluid from the trainer’s room to the clubhouse, Drabowsky set the commissioner’s foot on fire. And by using the trail of lighter fluid, he made it more difficult for Kuhn to find out who had been the perpetrator.

*In a game between the Baltimore Orioles and Kansas City A’s, Drabowsky pulled off what is generally considered his most famous practical joke. With A’s pitcher Jim “Jumbo” Nash mowing down Drabowsky’s Orioles, the troublemaking right-hander called Kansas City’s bullpen, impersonated the voice of A’s manager Alvin Dark, and ordered reliever Lew Krausse to begin warming up. With Baltimore relievers howling in the bullpen, Nash became so unnerved at the site of warm-up activity that he lost his composure and began getting shelled by Orioles hitters.

*After the 1968 season, Drabowsky departed the Orioles when he was left unprotected in the expansion draft and was taken by the Kansas City Royals. Drabowsky exacted some “revenge” in 1969, when he sent the American League champion Orioles a six-foot-long boa constrictor during the World Series. Coincidentally or not, the Orioles went on to lose the Series in five games to the upstart New York Mets.

Such hijinx overshadowed Drabowsky’s pitching abilities, which were certainly respectable. At one time a highly touted young starter with the Chicago Cubs, Moe became an effective reliever for the Orioles during the mid-1960s. In Game One of the 1966 World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, he became downright Herculean. Relieving Dave McNally early in Game One, Drabowsky came on to pitch six and two-thirds innings of one-hit ball and set a World Series record for relievers by striking out 11 Los Angeles Dodgers. Buttressed by Drabowsky, the Orioles won Game One, setting the tone for a surprising four-game sweep of Los Angeles.

It was the hallmark moment in a career filled with hotfoots, six-foot snakes, and crank phone calls. Thanks, Moe, for making the game fun.

Amphetamines

Baseball’s newly revised testing program has created headlines on two fronts: enforcing tougher penalties for steroid users and including amphetamines, or “greenies,” on the list of banned substances. While the issue of steroid use has prompted hours of angry debate, the subject of greenies has received less attention from the general public.

The use of greenies in baseball is nothing new. Based on anecdotal accounts of former ballplayers, the use of amphetamines in the major leagues dates as far back as the 1960s and seventies. With that in mind, the following is an excerpt from my previously published book, A Baseball Dynasty: Charlie Finley’s Swinging A’s, that details the use of greenies by a onetime mainstay of the Oakland A’s’ rotation. The excerpt includes reactions from both the baseball establishment and the medical field, both of which condemned the use of the controversial pills.

[One of the contenders for a spot in Oakland's 1971 rotation caused a stir during spring training when he admitted to the use of "greenies," or legal pep pills. Right-hander Chuck Dobson, who had gained a favorable reputation for being talkative, humorous, and frank with the local media, admitted to reporters that he had used greenies several times during his career. The use of greenies by major league players had first been disclosed in Jim Bouton's controversial book, Ball Four, which had been released after the 1969 season. Such pep pills enabled players to overcome fatigue and muster more energy to play in games. "I don't see anything wrong in it," Dobson told A's beat writer Ron Bergman, while claiming that he had pitched a shutout in 1970 after taking a greenie. "A lot of guys use them, and I've used them."

Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who had tried to censor Bouton's book, did not agree with Dobson's opinion concerning the morality of amphetamines. Prior to spring training, Kuhn had warned players to comply with federal and state drug laws. Although greenies were not considered illegal drugs in and of themselves, they were supposed to be available through prescription only and were often obtained through illegal means. "If the commissioner says we can't use them anymore, then the next time someone asks me whether I use them, I'll say no, go around the corner and pop," Dobson told The Sporting News. Dobson had just stepped over the line from brutal honesty into sheer foolishness.

In the April, 1971 issue of Baseball Digest, two team doctors expressed concern over the use of pep pills. Dr. Joseph Finegold of the Pittsburgh Pirates and Dr. Jacob Suker of the Chicago Cubs suggested the possibility of a player suffering a heart attack on the playing field after ingesting pep pills. The article indicated that pep pills posed a special danger to older, overweight players who did not play on a regular basis. "Amphetamines and speed--there is no place for them," Dr. Suker told William Jauss of Baseball Digest. "They won't make a Billy Williams out of a 'Billy Nobody.' And they can be very dangerous and habit-forming." On March 9, Dobson revised his statements regarding the use of greenies. Dobson issued a press release that read as follows: "My recent statement in regard to taking a greenie was misunderstood and completely blown out of proportion. These are the facts: Yes, I did take a greenie last year prior to pitching a game after I'd had a bout with the flu. At that time, I was of the opinion it had been of help to me. Since it has been brought to my attention by medical authorities the harmful effects that greenies or any other drugs can have on an athlete, I want it known that I am strongly against anyone using drugs in any form." After Dobson released his revisionist statement, Commissioner Kuhn held a private conversation with the right-hander to discuss his use of greenies. Kuhn apparently accepted Dobson's new story, in which he claimed to have used greenies only one time during his major league career.]

Excerpt from A Baseball Dynasty: Charlie Finley’s Swingin’ A’s

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