Saturday, December 30, 2023

1958 Yankee of the Past: Earle Combs

WHEN COMBS CUT HIS FIRST TEETH
"Earle Combs, the best center fielder the Yankees ever had until Joseph Paul DiMaggio came swinging out of San Francisco, didn't have DiMaggio's arm or his power at the plate, but he, too, was a ball hawk and completed his 12-year hitch (1924-35) with a .325 average, same as DiMaggio.
Earle, recently appointed Kentucky State Banking Commissioner, once told of his first game as a professional. It was with  Louisville in 1922.
'I was so nervous,' he said, 'I could hardly see straight- and I muffed the first ball hit to me. Joe McCarthy never said a word to me when I went to the bench at the end of the inning, and he didn't say a word when, a couple of innings later, I booted a single into a couple of extra bases for the hitter. In the eighth inning, with the score tied and two on, a hitter singled to center. As I saw the ball coming to me, I said to myself:
' 'I'll stop this ball if it kills me.'
'It didn't kill me. But it went through me to the fence. As I chased it, I was tempted to keep right on going, climb the fence and not stop running until I got home. I couldn't do that, but my mind was made up. If McCarthy didn't fire me, I'd quit. Joe didn't say anything until we were in the clubhouse after the game. I guess he could tell how I felt by the way I looked. Then he said:
' 'Forget it. I told you today you were my center fielder. You still are.'
'Then he laughed and said: 'If I can stand it, I guess you can.'
'I think I can say that from that minute on, I was a ball player.' "

-Frank Graham in the New York-Journal American (Baseball Digest, September 1958)

Thursday, December 21, 2023

1958 Yankee of the Past: Babe Ruth

THE BABE COULD REALLY PITCH
Ruth Finished Record Series String With Swollen Hand
"Most everyone remembers Babe Ruth as a moon-faced, barrel-chested man who swished the biggest bat in the history of baseball. Few seem to remember that he was a great pitcher.
One of the pitching records he set still stands. He pitched, and won, the longest World Series game yet played, a 2-1 fourteen-inning contest over the Dodgers in 1916. That was his first appearance as a World Series pitcher, and he pitched scoreless ball after throwing a home run to Hi Myers in the first inning.
He was a southpaw with a good fast ball, a curve and control. Babe came up to the Red Sox as a pitcher and might have remained one if Ed Barrow, then manager at Boston but later the 'brain' of the Yankee organization, hadn't converted him into an outfielder. Barrow was a businessman and a fan. He knew that Pitcher Ruth's swats meant box office.
Barrow also admitted that he liked watching the big boy belt a ball out of the park. This he could try to do six, seven times a week. As a pitcher, Babe was restricted.
In the 1918 Series it was the Cubs versus the Red Sox. That was a war year, of course, and travel was difficult and attendance low. But in the opener at Chicago, Ruth outpitched Big Jim Vaughn and took a 1-0 victory before less than 20,000. With his 13 shutout frames in the 1916 Series, Babe now had a streak of 22 scoreless innings in that company.
Babe ran it to 29 scoreless innings- one more than Christy Mathewson- when he registered a 3-2 victory in the fourth game.
Even in those days, when Babe was merely a fine pitcher and not Mr. Baseball, the big guy did it the hard way. He wasn't in shape for that 3-2 triumph.
On the train from Chicago he got into a scuffle with a third-string pitcher and scraped the knuckles of his left hand against the steel wall of the car. Overnight, his middle finger was swollen to twice normal size. But even with this handicap, Ruth pitched shutout ball until the eighth inning, when his fabulous streak was ended with the Cubs scoring two runs.
At this point, Manager Barrow made a move that today seems incongruous. He relieved Ruth, placed him in left field, and called Bullet Joe Bush to do the pitching. Squeakingly, Bush prevailed and so ended the World Series.
That Ruth was a great pitcher can be verified by the records. It's only later that he was such a prodigious slugger that his pitching talents were unremembered.
He was only a kid when he was pitching those great World Series games. As he grew older- and he played until he was past 40- Babe reached the top and started downhill, as do all mortals.
He was 32 when he smacked those 60 homers in 1927. When he felt like it, and when he was at his peak, he was a very sure-handed and agile outfielder. His arm was strong and accurate. Babe was smart and he stole bases with neat slides.
As he grew older and his bay window increased, Ruth was no longer the agile outfielder. He rarely, if ever, threw to a wrong base, but his arm wasn't so terrifying to runners.
Once in a while he would play first base and usually he was so dexterous for a large person that he drew admiration.
He was all that could be asked for in a first baseman, even one who hit only 20 or 30 home runs a season.
But don't forget that he was first a pitcher. And a very, very good one."

-Francis Stann, The Washington Star (Baseball Digest, March 1958)

THE BABE'S HOMER ON AN INFIELD FLY!
Waite Hoyt Recalls It As "Funniest," Says Mantle Good, But Decries Comparisons
"There's a radio announcer who thinks Mickey Mantle couldn't carry Babe Ruth's bat. Of course, the radio announcer, whose name is Waite Hoyt, could be slightly prejudiced because he was Ruth's teammate on those great Yankee teams of the Golden Twenties.
Hoyt is a broadcaster for the Cincinnati Reds these days and is in great demand as an after-dinner speaker. The reason is obvious. Hoyt is a glib man with a great baseball background and, of course, he played with the legend known as Ruth.
'It amuses me,' he says, 'to hear people compare Mantle and Ruth. Why, in my estimation, Mantle isn't even a good outfielder. Ruth did everything well. He was a great hitter, a great fielder and a great leader.
'I note that a lot of stars like to duck exhibition games. Not Ruth. He loved to play ball and he played just as hard in the tank towns as he did before a packed house in Yankee Stadium.
'The Babe was a kind man, too. I remember when I came to the great Yankees as a pitcher, I took my cue from Babe. He never brushed off a fan. He had time for everybody and he'd sign autographs by the hour, literally. Lou Gehrig used to go center field to hide, but Babe liked to be the center of attention and he loved people.
'Mantle undoubtedly is a good ball player. In my mind, nobody can touch Ruth as a hitter, except perhaps Ted Williams. But Mantle can't compare with Ruth. Mickey hits them a mile? Ruth used to hit them two miles. Why, he's the only man I ever saw who got a home run on an infield fly.'
How was that again, Waite? Bucky Harris once told a story of how Ruth hit a towering infield fly for a triple. But a homer?
'Yes, a homer,' Waite insisted. We (the Yankees) were playing the Red Sox and there was a high wind coming in from left field. The left fielder, the third baseman, the shortstop and center fielder all raced for the pop fly. We thought the ball had been shot out of a cannon. The thing kept climbing and climbing while Ruth kept racing around the bags.
'Finally, the ball started to come down. I guess the Babe was already almost to third base by this time. In trying for the ball, everybody was jostling everybody else and the ball touched nobody while Babe scored. It was the funniest home run he ever hit in his career.'
Hoyt says that Babe Ruth did call his now-famous homer against Charlie Root, against the Chicago Cubs, in the 1932 World Series, and it was no accident.
'Why,' Waite continued, 'I saw him do it at least four times. We were in Boston at one time and Babe and Gehrig were all tied up in homers. The Boston fans were riding Babe, or at least one was. He was on Ruth all through the game. Well, Babe fanned the first two times and the loud-mouth got louder.
'The third time Ruth came up, he stepped out of the box, faced the fan. And pointed his bat to right field. Then he hit the next pitch for a home run. He rounded the bases, landed on home with both feet, took off his cap and made a sweeping, cavalier bow. He was a great showman with it all and I always felt it was stealing money just being allowed to play with him.'
Hoyt says there is one lamentable lack in modern ball players, and that is a failure to take a former hero as an idol.
'Ted Williams is the only one who asks questions about old-timers, 'Waite continued. 'He wants to know everything about Ruth, Gehrig and some of the other great hitters of the past. Maybe that's why he's a great hitter himself.'

-Bob Addie, the Washington Post (Baseball Digest, June 1958)

Monday, December 4, 2023

1957 Yankees of the Past Alumni Team

Former Yankees on 1957 Spring Training Rosters
MGR Chuck Dressen (Washington Senators)
CH Harry Craft (Kansas City Athletics)
CH Tommy Henrich (New York Giants)
CH Paul Schreiber (Boston Red Sox)
C Sherm Lollar (Chicago White Sox)
C Gus Triandos (Baltimore Orioles) 
C Clint Courtney (Washington Senators)
1B Vic Power (Kansas City Athletics) (2B)
1B Dale Long (Pittsburgh Pirates) (retroactive designated hitter) 
2B Jim Brideweser (Baltimore Orioles) (SS-3B)
2B Herb Plews (Washington Senators) (3B)
3B Jim Finigan (Detroit Tigers) (2B)
SS Jerry Snyder (Washington Senators)  
SS Willy Miranda (Baltimore Orioles) 
LF Gene Woodling (Cleveland Indians)  
CF Bill Virdon (Pittsburgh Pirates) 
RF Jackie Jensen (Boston Red Sox)
OF Bob Cerv (Kansas City Athletics) 
PH Eddie Robinson (Detroit Tigers) (1B)
PH Hank Sauer (New York Giants) (OF)
P Lew Burdette (Milwaukee Braves)
P Ruben Gomez (New York Giants)
P Gerry Staley (Chicago White Sox)
P Wally Burnette (Kansas City Athletics) 
P Bob Keegan (Chicago White Sox)
P Bob Porterfield (Boston Red Sox)
RP Tom Gorman (Kansas City Athletics)
RP Ellis Kinder (Chicago White Sox)
RP Bill Wight (Baltimore Orioles) 

1957 Yankee of the Past: Gene Woodling

"It was nothing new to Gene to don an Indian uniform when he was traded to the Tribe in 1955. He started in major league ball with Cleveland in '43.
Gene has won the batting crowns of the Ohio State League, Middle Atlantic League and Eastern League."

-1957 Topps No. 172

1957 Yankee of the Past: Bill Wight

"Bill has played on six of the eight American League clubs. The clever southpaw started in baseball in 1941 and moved up to Kansas City (American Association) in '47 where he won 17 games. He enjoyed two fine seasons with the White Sox, and in '54, he was the top pitcher in the Pacific Coast League with a 17-5 won-lost mark and a 1.93 ERA."

-1957 Topps No. 340

Friday, December 1, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Bob Wiesler

"When Bob broke into baseball with Independence in 1949, he immediately displayed major league ability. He topped the Kansas-Oklahoma-Missouri loop in strikeouts and was promoted to Joplin of the Western Association. That year he again led in strikeouts and also posted the lowest ERA. At Kansas City in '51, Bob topped the American Association in whiffs, making it three years in a row."

-1957 Topps No. 126

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Bill Virdon

"Joining the Pirates during the 1956 season, Bill became the top Pittsburgh hitter and was second in the National League in batting. No sophomore jinx for him, he outdid his great performance of 1955 when he was Rookie of the Year.
Originally in the Yankee chain, Bill was transferred to the Cardinals' farm system and led the International League in '54 with a thumping .333 batting mark. He was traded to the Pirates on May 17, 1956."

-1957 Topps No. 110

Sunday, November 26, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Gus Triandos

"Gus broke two of his own Oriole records last season, topping the modern Baltimore runs scored (47) and home run marks (12) set by him in 1955, with 21 round-trippers in '56.
Starting in baseball in '48 as a Yankee farmhand, Gus worked up through the minors until he played at Birmingham in '53, where his amazing .368 batting mark won him a ticket to New York. After two trials with the Yankees, he was traded to the Orioles."

-1957 Topps No. 156

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Bob Thurman

"Bob is a good man to have around, especially when he performs as he did last season. Finding himself in the company of the league's most feared sluggers, Bob joined the trend and became a terror at the plate.
Out of baseball for two years, he joined the Redlegs in 1955 and put on his 'hitting shoes' last year."

-1957 Topps No. 279

Thursday, November 23, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Gerry Staley

"Last season was Gerry's first full year as an American Leaguer. He proved he could handle the Junior Circuit 'tough guys' with ease when he posted a 4-1 record over Cleveland and beat the Yankees without a loss. Gerry started in baseball in 1941 with 22 wins at Boise, and for six years was a mainstay of the Cardinals."

-1957 Topps No. 227

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Jerry Snyder

"The Senator shortstop situation seems to be under control now that Jerry has taken over. Of the three shortstops Washington tried last year, Jerry placed highest in fielding and way ahead of the other two in hitting.
In his first season in Washington, he tied a major league record by participating in five double plays in one game while playing second base."

-1957 Topps No. 22

1957 Yankee of the Past: Hal W. Smith

"Being traded to the Athletics during the 1956 season was good luck for Hal. He improved his batting average by 13 points after joining the Kansas City crew. Although he played in less than half as many games with the A's as he did for the Orioles, he drove in more runs for Kansas City and scored almost as often.
After spending five years in the minors, Hal caught fire in '54 and led the American Association in batting to win a promotion to the Yankees."

-1957 Topps No. 41

Friday, November 17, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Lou Skizas

"An early-season trade brought Lou to the A's last year and he went on to lead the club's outfielders in hitting.
Originally in the Yankee chain, Lou started as an infielder but was switched to flychasing. He just missed the American Association batting crown in 1955 because he was 24 at-bats short of the number needed for the title."

-1957 Topps No. 83

1957 Yankee of the Past: Charlie Silvera

"Charlie will get his chance to play a complete season in 1957 after being a part-time operator with the Yankees for eight seasons.
A clever receiver who is expert at handling pitchers, he was traded to the Cubs during the off-season. He came to the majors after hitting .301 at Portland in 1948 and led the league's catchers in putouts and assists. Though not a slugger, Charlie is a fine clutch hitter."

-1957 Topps No. 255

Wednesday, November 8, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Hank Sauer

"Hank was voted the National League's Most Valuable Player in 1952. That was his greatest season as he led the loop in homers and RBIs.
Hank hits one of the longest balls in baseball."

-1957 Topps No. 197

1957 Yankee of the Past: Eddie Robinson

"Heavy-hitting Ed came to Detroit in an eight-man deal last December. He's been elected to the American League All-Star team four times and in two World Series has a handsome .348 batting mark."

-1957 Topps No. 238 


Wednesday, October 18, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Vic Power

"Vic finished the 1956 season with the highest Athletic batting mark (.309). He was a busy man last year, playing 76 games at first base and 47 at second, fielding both positions expertly.
Vic has been a favorite in Kansas City since he won the American Association batting title for Kansas City in 1953, before the city was in the majors."

-1957 Topps No. 167

1957 Yankee of the Past: Bob Porterfield

"Bob had tough sledding last season, seeing limited action with his new Boston teammates. 
He didn't have the chance to show the same brilliant form that made him the top hurler in the league with the Senators in 1953. That year he led the loop in wins (22), complete games (24) and shutouts (9). He was voted the 1953 Sporting News AL Pitcher of the Year.
This season will be Bob's 12th professional baseball campaign."

-1957 Topps No. 118

Sunday, October 15, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Herb Plews

"Right after Herb picked up his degree from the University of Illinois in 1950, he signed a Yankee contract. In 1954 he was high man in the Southern Association in triples and the following year at Denver he drew the attention of the Senators who got him in a trade with New York."

-1957 Topps No. 169

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Al Pilarcik

"Al becomes an Oriole this year, after playing part of the 1956 season with the Athletics. When Kansas City was looking for an outfielder, they turned to their Columbus farm and picked Pilarcik. At that time he was clubbing the ball at a .325 pace with 18 homers and 76 RBIs.
Al started his career in '48  at Independence [class-D Kansas-Oklahoma-Missouri League] with a neat .299 mark. The following season at Joplin [class-C Western Association] he hit .304 and turned on the speed to steal 33 bases."

-1957 Topps No. 311

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Jack Phillips

"Jack stepped into the Tiger lineup last season and did a fine job. In 1952, '53 and '54 he sharpened his batting eye with the Hollywood stars and in '54 was the Pacific Coast League's Most Valuable Player.
Although Jack joined the Yankee organization in 1943, he continued his education and received his diploma from Clarkson Tech (Potsdam, NY) in 1947."

-1957 Topps No. 307

1957 Yankee of the Past: Willy Miranda

"One of the finest fielders in baseball, Willy doesn't let many balls get by his shortstop station. He can move to both his right and his left with ease and is an expert at making the double play.
In 1955 he led American League shortstops in double plays. Although no slugger, he comes through in the clutch."

-1957 Topps No. 151

Thursday, September 14, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Jerry Lynch

"Hampered by injuries, Jerry saw only one month of active service with the Pirates last season. This year, he joins the muscle men from Cincinnati and is active as a pinch hitter.
Before coming to the majors, Jerry led the Piedmont League in batting, also topping the loop in hits, doubles, triples and runs batted in."

-1957 Topps No. 358

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Dale Long

"Dale is the homer king of the Pirate squad. Last season he belted eight circuit smashes- a feat never done before!
Starting in baseball in 1944, Dale split his time between the outfield and pitching. However, in 1950 when he led the Eastern League in homers and runs batted in, he knew he belonged in the lineup daily and dropped hurling. The Pirates once wanted to make Dale a lefty catcher!"

-1957 Topps No. 3

Sunday, August 20, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Ellis Kinder

"For ten years Ellis had been absolute murder against the White Sox, with a lifetime 20-8 record against them. This year Ellis will be with the White Sox- great news for Chicago batters!"

-1957 Topps No. 352

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Bob Keegan

"For the past two seasons, big Bob has been plagued by injuries. The former Bucknell University star has only been able to show flashes of the brilliance he showed in 1954 when he was among the best hurlers in the American League.
Before he was sidelined last June, he had led A.L. hurlers with the best ERA in the month of May.
Bob came to Chicago after leading the International League with 20 wins in '52."

-1957 Topps No. 99

Friday, August 4, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Dave Jolly

"During his four-year major league career, Dave holds winning margins over the Giants, Phillies, Redlegs and Cardinals. He's a clever hurler with a variety of 'stuff' that keeps his opponents guessing.
Dave started in 1946 at Mooresville and in '47 won 14 games. Advancing to Tulsa in '49, he posted 12 victories and graduated to Kansas City (American Association) in '52. His 6-1 mark won him his passport to the majors."

-1957 Topps No. 389

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Whitey Herzog

 
"After toiling in the minors for five years, Whitey made the big leagues last year and took over a Senators outfield berth. In addition to his regular chores, he pinch-hit 12 times, collecting six hits to tie for American League pinch hit honors.
In the minors, the fleet-footed flychaser topped the Sooner League in 1949 and '50 in defense. After playing on five clubs in the next two years, Whitey was called to military service, then came to Washington in a trade."

-1957 Topps No. 29

1957 Yankee of the Past: Tom Gorman

"A fine control hurler, Tom was second in games pitched last season. He has a knack for keeping the ball away from a hitter's power. He was runner-up in allowing the fewest bases on balls and one of the stingiest hurlers in giving up earned runs. Spending two thirds of his time as a reliever in 1956, he was called to action 39 times to put out 'fires.' "

-1957 Topps No. 87

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Ruben Gomez

"Ruben pitched two of the best games of his career last season. In July, he fashioned a classy 3-hitter against the Cardinals, and in August pitched a nifty 2-hit victory over Cincinnati.
A crafty workman, Ruben loves warm weather best and finds the hotter the day, the 'hotter' his fast ball and curve become.
Before coming to the Giants, he posted an impressive minor league record of 34-13."

-1957 Topps No. 58

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Hank Foiles

"Hank was such a sensation in high school that he was signed by the Yankees at the age of 18. It was no surprise to the Foiles family since Hank's dad was a star in the old Virginia League in 1911 and 1912.
Starting in Manchester in 1948, Hank was called up by Cincinnati for a trial in '53. After being sold to Cleveland, he went to Indianapolis where he hit a lusty .332 in 1954."

-1957 Topps No. 104

Friday, July 28, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Jim Finigan

"Jim comes to Detroit this season with Eddie Robinson and Jack Crimian for Ned Garver and Virgil Trucks by way of a big trade with Kansas City. 
Before becoming a rookie sensation with the A's in 1954, Jim compiled a fine .303 batting mark in four minor league seasons. In 1949 he led the Western Association in hits, triples and fielding. At Binghamton in '53, he was the top man in doubles and was promoted to the A's the following season."

-1957 Topps No. 248

1957 Yankee of the Past: Clint Courtney

"The 'Toy Bulldog' had another fine year in 1956. He posted the second highest Senator batting mark [.300] and became their No. 1 pinch hitter. Clint appeared in the pinch 34 times and in one contest he poked a homer to beat the Tigers.
Also a fine backstop, Clint led American League catchers in fielding in 1952."

-1957 Topps No. 51

1957 Yankee of the Past: Bob Cerv

"Bob is no stranger to Kansas City fans. Before either Bob or K.C. joined the majors, he was their star outfielder. In 1950 he hit .304 and the following season had a torrid .344 mark with 108 RBIs.
If Bob can repeat his fine performances this year, the A's feel they'll start moving up the American League ladder."

-1957 Topps No. 269

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Wally Burnette

"Joining Kansas City last July, Wally showed promise of becoming a real big league star. He had a winning record against the Red Sox and held his own against the Yankees and White Sox, splitting two decisions with each club.
Wally entered baseball with the Yankee chain after spending two years in military service and went to Binghamton in 1953 where he won 21 games. In the 1954 season, he played with Kansas City of the American Association, winning 12, and the following year had 15 wins at Denver."

-1957 Topps No. 13

Saturday, July 8, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Lew Burdette

"Lanky Lew was one of the top pitchers in the National League last season. He was also first in shutouts with six whitewash jobs. His favorite diet was the Cardinals, Redlegs and Pirates, pinning their ears 10 times in '56 without a single loss.
Lew started in baseball in the Yankee chain but was traded to the Braves in 1951."

-1957 Topps No. 208

Sunday, June 18, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Jim Brideweser

"Jim is known to be one of the surest fielders in the business. He can dig the tough shots out and make them look easy.
A University of Southern California graduate, Jim compiled a .310 mark at Binghamton in 1950 and was brought up to the majors after a fine year at San Francisco in 1952."

-1957 Topps No. 382

1957 Yankee of the Past: Lou Berberet

"Lou came to the Senators last season after toiling four years in the Yankee organization. He started in 1950 at Binghamton and batted .297 with 14 homers. After two years of military service, he traveled to Birmingham and hit .317 with 114 RBIs in '54 and was brought up to New York. In '55 at Toronto he clubbed 15 homers and saw action with the Yankees at the tail end of the season."

-1957 Topps No. 315

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

1957 Yankee Prospect of the Past: Dick Tettlebach

RICHARD MORLEY TETTLEBACH (OF)
Born June 29, 1929. Ht: 6-1, Wt: 180. Bats right, throws right.
Handicapped by back ailment last year, was sent back to Denver after spring trial and played in only 74 games, hitting .250, as against better than .300 in three of his four previous seasons, including .309 for Denver in '55. Secured by Washington from Yanks in Mickey McDermott deal a year ago.
German-English ancestry. Nickname: Tut. Home: Hamden, Conn. Married. One daughter.
Scouting report: "Hasn't been looking good at plate, probably because of ailing back. If he regains form, he could help several big league clubs, Washington included. Otherwise Triple A. Good fielder with average arm. Average runner."

-Baseball Digest, March 1957

1957 Yankee of the Past: Art Schult

ARTHUR WILLIAM SCHULT (OF)
Born June 20, 1928. Ht: 6-3, Wt: 210. Bats right, throws right.
Dropped by Yankee chain for inconsistency, big blond gets second chance through .306 in 144 games at Seattle (Pacific Coast League) in 1956, with 75 RBI's and 15 HR's. Hit .287, with 79 RBIs, for Seattle in '55. Signed by Yanks for Norfolk in '48, had brief trial with parent club in '53.
German descent. Home: Scarsdale, N.Y. Married. One son.
Scouting report: "Hits with authority and only weaknesses are slowness afoot and an inclination to forget to hustle at times. Would stick in outfield less richly endowed than Reds'."

-Baseball Digest, March 1957

Friday, April 28, 2023

1957 Yankee Propsect of the Past: Cal Neeman

CALVIN NEEMAN
Ht: 6-2, weight: 190. Born February 18, 1929. Bats right, throws right.
Drafted from Denver (AAA) where he hit .265 in first 32 games of '56 before finishing out year at Richmond (AAA) with .249 in 62 games. In Yankee chain since '49, his best year was '55, when he hit .294 in 111 games for Birmingham (AA) and led Southern Association catchers in chances. In '54 made Eastern League (A) All-Star team with Binghamton. Hit only five homers and only one triple last year.
German ancestry. Home: East St. Louis, Illinois. Married, one son.
Scouting Report: "Not impressive; Triple-A probably his peak. Average receiver with average arm."

-Baseball Digest, March 1957

"Cal stepped into the Cub lineup and was away to a fast start polling two early season homers. A bear for work, he even caught both ends of the first Chicago doubleheader.
As a student at Illinois Wesleyan College, Cal was a star baseball and basketball player. After coming to the Yankees' spring training camp in 1949 uninvited, he impressed NY scouts enough to sign a contract. In '54 he was elected to the Eastern League All-Star team."

-1957 Topps No. 353

1957 Yankee of the Past: Sherm Lollar

HE MADE UMP BALK
"A few years the White Sox were playing the Yankees and, after several scoreless innings, the Yanks filled the bases with none out. And the Yankees had Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra and Johnny Mize to bat. Sherman Lollar, the Chicago catcher, began to stride to the mound to talk to Pitcher Sandy Consuegra, who understood no English. But already at the mound were shortstop Chico Carrasquel, the interpreter whenever anyone wished to have words with Consuegra, and Second Baseman Nellie Fox, who merely had stepped up to pat Sandy on the back. So the plate umpire- the late Bill McGowan- stopped Lollar and said: 'You can't go out there, Sherm. You know the rules prohibit more than two players talking to the pitcher.' Lolllar handed the game ball to McGowan and drawled: 'That's dandy. You just to out there and tell Consuegra how to pitch to Mantle and Berra.' McGowan let Lollar confer with Sandy."

-David Condon, Chicago Tribune, Baseball Digest, August 1957

"Sherm got hot early last season and didn't cool off. He ended the year with his best major league batting mark and captured defensive honors for American League backstops. Getting into his first All-Star Game in 1956, Sherm came through with a pinch-hit safety.
This year he celebrates his 15th  year in baseball."

-1957 Topps No. 23

Friday, March 24, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Jackie Jensen

JACKIE JENSEN: FENWAY PARK SPECIAL
An Excerpt From The Book "The Boston Red Sox"
"After his Philadelphia Eagles had defeated the Chicago Cardinals in snowswept Shibe Park on a December Sunday in 1948, Earle (Greasy) Neale was receiving congratulations from his friends. After a bitter disappointment the previous year, Greasy's Eagles had finally won the National Football League championship.
One of his friends, with a whimsical turn of mind, said, 'Well, all you have to do now to complete the cycle, Greasy, is to ride the winner of the Kentucky Derby.
That was a remark, even at a victory celebration, which took a bit of explaining. It developed that the friend was struck with the unusualness of Neale's achievements. As a college football coach, he had gone to the Rose Bowl with Washington and Jefferson to play a scoreless with the University of California on January 1, 1922. As a professional baseball player, he had starred for the Cincinnati Reds when they defeated the Chicago White Sox in the 1919 World Series.
Thus, Neale participated in three of the biggest sports events of the nation- World Series, Rose Bowl and professional football championship. It was a unique distinction until Jack Eugene Jensen came along. From the same University of California, Jensen played fullback in a Rose Bowl game, losing to Northwestern, 20-14; was named All-America, has been in a World Series and the baseball All-Star Game. Furthermore, he married an Olympic diving champion, the pretty Zoe Ann Olsen. It looks as though Jackie has Neale topped.
Jensen was signed, at a $75,000 bonus, by Brick Laws of the Oakland club in 1949 and then sold to the Yankees. The tag on Jackie then was that he was then 'a few years away.' His baseball experience was limited but all scouting reports agreed that the husky blond had all the potential. The Yankees, with a wealth of outfield material, couldn't wait for the arrival of Jensen and traded him to Washington for Irv Noren. It is a safe bet you couldn't have traded Noren for Jensen a few years later.
It has taken time but Jensen now seems to be living up to the original scouting reports on his power. In his three seasons at Boston, Jensen has become a great run producer and home run threat. His right-handed hitting talents were lost in the wide open spaces of Washington's Griffith Stadium but he finds the left field wall of Fenway Park inviting.
General Manager Joe Cronin was looking for home runs when he traded Maury McDermott and Tom Umphlett to the Senators for Jensen. A right-handed batter who can stroke the left field wall has been one of the Red Sox objectives. Some players for whom they traded, notably Junior Stephens, delivered but many were flops. They were so anxious to hit the fence, they couldn't even hit the ball.
Jensen definitely is not in the flop category. In his first three years with the Red Sox, he hit 71 home runs and batted in 330 runs, tying for the American League's top RBI total in 1955 with 116. Any player who averages almost 25 home runs a year and 100-plus RBIs is a big shot, even in these days of rock'n roll baseball. That Jensen finds Fenway Park tailor-made there is no doubt, but he was showing power with the Senators, power it was obvious that would be more impressive in a ball park of less ample proportions than Griffith Stadium.
Not many first-flight football players have made the grade in baseball. Fordham's Frank Frisch was one, but the majority, going all the way back to Jim Thorpe, have found baseball too difficult. The explanation used to be that it was some mysterious ailment called 'football legs' but actually it was far simpler than that. Some football players, Frisch, Sam Chapman, Riggs Stephenson and Jensen, for instance, could play baseball and others couldn't. The percentage of first-flight football players who failed in baseball is no greater than that of basketball of ping-pong players.
Jensen, just 30, can have several productive years in baseball yet. It is probable that when he retires from athletics, more people will refer to him as 'Jackie Jensen, the ex-Red Sox slugger' then as Jackie Jensen 'the former All-America football player.'
For the second time in his baseball career, Jensen finds himself a member of a distinguished outfield trio, lining up with Ted Williams and Jim Piersall with the Red Sox. On Opening Day, 1951, he played in the Yankee outfield with Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle. It was Mickey's first major league game and it prompted one press box filbert to remark that the Yankee outfield 'had 17 years of major league experience, 16 of which belong to DiMaggio.' Even that was an oversimplification, for while it was the Yankee Clipper's 1,621st major league game and Mantle's first, it was only Jensen's 46th.
Jensen was sent down to the Yankee farm at Kansas City for part of that 1951 season and then shortly after the 1951 season was traded to Washington. It was with the Senators that Jackie got the chance to play every day, something he had been denied at New York. And he has been a regular ever since.
Whatever hangover from football Jensen bought into baseball, he didn't bring any 'football legs.' Jackie has good speed, both in the field and on the bases. He led the American League with 22 stolen bases in 1954, his first year with Boston.
One day at spring training at St. Petersburg in 1952, a photographer received a request from a national magazine to do a cover picture on Jackie and his wife and baby daughter, Jan. The picture was to be taken at the swimming pool of the Tides Hotel, out on the beach. Getting the time off from practice for Jensen took a bit of doing, for Manager Stengel was a stickler for punctuality at workouts.  And he had a reason to look with a jaundiced eye on any extracurricular picture-taking.
The day before a television crew had 'borrowed' Billy Martin to make some slides into second base. The Yankee infielder was only too happy to oblige since the film was for his old friend, Joe DiMaggio, who was launching himself as a television commentator that year, after retiring from baseball.
Martin entered into the project with enthusiasm and made several hair-raising slides. The only trouble was that after the last of these slides, he didn't get up. A broken ankle was the result and he spent most of the rest of the training season and part of the regular season on crutches.
When the reporter from the magazine asked to have Jensen excused for the purpose of poolside pictures with his wife and daughter, Casey fixed him with a cold eye.
'Y'know what happened to that boy (Martin) yesterday, doncha?' asked Stengel, then proceeded to answer his own question. 'Broke his leg, that's what he did. Now, supposin' this boy goes and drowns? Is your magazine gonna give me someone to play the outfield in place of him? That spaghetti ain't sendin' me no second baseman.'
Stengel's last remark was rather baffling, as so many of his remarks are, but it developed, under cross-examination, that the television show of DiMaggio's was being sponsored by a macaroni company.
The reporter knew Casey long enough to know that if you waited him out, he'd be reasonable, however much he might grumble in the beginning. Reluctantly, Casey gave his permission.
'I'll tell you what though,' said Casey in parting. 'I want to stand by the side of the pool while they're taking the pictures. And if you see my fella (Jensen) having any difficulty like drowin' or anything like that, I want you to help out. I ain't askin' you to dive in, cause the water's probably cold no matter what the Chamber of Commerce tells you. But I do think the least you could do if he's in trouble is holler for help.'
The permission was granted and the photogenic family made a lovely cover for the magazine. The only hitch was by the time it was used, Jensen had been traded to Washington.
Jensen is articulate and mixes well but reservedly with the press, although he is by no means a publicity seeker. He has a quiet sense of humor which he demonstrated one night in 1955 at Yankee Stadium. It was in mid-August and the Bronx ballpark was packed with 61,628 fans, many of them from New England. Ted Williams was in the batting cage and Jensen was standing outside, chatting with Arthur Daley, sports columnist of the New York Times and Pulitzer prize winner.
Williams belted three balls practically out of sight into the right field stands and as he left the batting cage, the packed house gave him a thunderous ovation. Jensen went into the cage while the cheers for Ted continued. 'See, Arthur,' said Jackie to Daley, 'they still remember me.'

Jensen was seriously considering quitting baseball after the 1953 season with Washington. He felt that he wasn't making good and that he should protect his wife and family, a son Jon having been born to go along with daughter Jan. Jackie felt that he could land a good job in Oakland, that baseball wasn't his dish of tea.
Then it was that he got a call from Cronin. Joe told him the Red Sox had traded for him and were expecting him to help the club. Jensen didn't react immediately and Cronin had to use all of his Irish blarney to sell him. Cronin pointed out that Fenway Park was made to order for him, that this was his chance to cash in on his potential. He even added that there was to be a $1,000 boost over his Washington salary.
Still Jensen wasn't convinced. He talked it over with his wife and she told him, 'If you quit, I don't think you'll be proud of it later.' The upstart was that Jensen agreed to the Boston terms.
When the 1954 season opened, and for a long time after that, Jensen wasn't so sure he'd made the right decision. He was slow getting started and found batting behind Williams a strain. Ted was on base so often, with walks and base hits, that Jackie constantly found himself under pressure.
A friendship sprung up between Ted and Jackie. Williams gave him tips on batting and suddenly Jensen exploded. Ted was no longer being walked intentionally to get at Jensen because Jensen had suddenly become dynamite.
When the season was over, he was voted the most valuable player on the Red Sox and he also won the Ted Williams trophy. His disappointments with the Yankees and Washington were forgotten. There was no talk of quitting that winter. The All-America had it made.
'Even business in the restaurant picked up,' says Jackie. He and Boots Erb, who had played in the backfield with him for California, operate a 200-capacity dining room in Oakland, the Bow and Bells. As is the case with any restaurant operated by a ball player, the cash registers clink in direct proportion to his batting average. And the registers have been singing a merry tune ever since Jackie decided to accept the Red Sox offer."

-Tom Meany, Baseball Digest, June 1957

"Jackie really caught fire last spring to become the RBI king of the Red Sox squad. In addition, he was the A.L. top triple belter and swiped 11 bases. It was nothing new to Jackie to steal bases since he was No. 1 in that department in the American League in '54 with 22 pilfers.
At the University of California, he was a great All-American football back."

-1957  Topps No. 220

Wednesday, March 1, 2023

1957 Yankee Scout of the Past: Bill Essick

MOUTH-TRAPPED
"Casey Stengel relates how the late Bill Essick, who managed the Vernon club in the Pacific Coast League in the early '20s and later became a Yankee scout, had an infallible method of determining whether or not his pitchers were in shape. He'd stir up nickel and dime wagers among them to promote sprints. When they had finished their dashes, Essick would question them about the race and want explanations. If they gasped for breath and couldn't complete a sentence, he knew they were out of shape and he'd run them- and run them- and run them."

-Sid Gray, New York Herald Tribune (Baseball Digest, August 1957)

Sunday, February 5, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Truck Hannah

STONES IN THEIR SHOES
Truck Hannah Discourses On Catchers' Tricks, Ruth's Conversion 
"Harry (Truck) Hannah, baseball's answer to the Rock of Gibraltar back in the days when he played a single-handed game of squat tag behind home plate for the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Angels, among others, dropped in the other day during the social hour.
After a saucer of cambric tea, the ex-Angel manager, catcher and one-man strong-arm squad retired to the bullpen to warm up a few touches. Clyde King, the new Hollywood field marshall, slid into the act while practicing base-stealing techniques and it was with a great deal of pleasure that I introduced him to Brother Hannah.
I explained that Truck was a scholar who believed in fair play, especially when it favored his team. I also felt duty bound to inform King that Hannah had long since retired from baseball and that it was no longer necessary to keep a sharp eye on him lest he steal the pants right off your hip pads. While on the field Truck was every other inch a gentleman, which is giving him a little of the best of it.
Among other things, Truck used to make a habit of squatting innocently behind the plate, reaching down and grabbing a handful dirt and assorted debris and pouring it inside the batter's shoes.
'I gave that up after a while,' confessed Truck. 'There got to be too many guys in the game from Arkansas and Oklahoma. I'd toss rocks and sand in their shoes, but since they hadn't worn any until they were at least old enough to vote, it sort of felt good to them to have something biting at the soles of their feet. It was just like being back home again and they got to hitting the ball a lot better than they did when there was nothing inside their shoes but feet.'
Hannah had a reputation in the diamond set for being able to tip a hitter's bat without the umpire ever suspecting he was tampering with the equipment of the man at the plate. Tipping the bat is the term used when the catcher knocks the stick out of alignment and prevents the hitter from getting an accurate swing at the ball. The penalty is an automatic trip to first base.
'I wouldn't dream of knowingly committing such an offense,' objected Truck. 'This would be unethical and I want no part of such practices. Of course, now and then, in my eagerness to catch the ball, I would reach out and my hand or glove would come in brief contact with the bat. This was probably due to the fact that I had large hands and the knuckles were a little stiff so that I could not bend my fingers and keep them out of the way. Hitters who misunderstood me used to get pretty put out by it all.
'I used to practice a form of distraction that was quite legal, however,' Truck went on. 'At least it was legal until Harry Williams, the Pacific Coast League president, issued a special ruling directed solely at me.
'In a tough situation with men on base and a rough guy at bat, I would pick up a handful of dirt and pebbles and just as the ball reached the plate I'd throw them at the hands and wrists of the batter. Didn't hurt him any, but the shock was enough to make him flinch and before he recovered he was walking back to the dugout wondering what happened.'
We got to talking about sharp-eyed coaches who could tell from the way a pitcher held the ball or through some mannerism he unwittingly committed precisely what his next pitch was going to be. By shouting a prearranged signal to the batter he could get set for whatever was being served him.
'Marty Krug, who was in the majors with the Red Sox and Cubs, was the best man at reading a pitcher's mind I ever saw,' Truck declared. 'There used to be a spitball pitcher named Harry Krause at Seattle who was a dazzler. Or he was until Marty finally nailed him. It turned out that he held the ball to his mouth on every pitch, but would only supply the saliva when the occasion suited him. Krug watched him closely and detected that every time the spitter was coming up Krause ducked his head ever so slightly. He was easy pickings after that.
'And speaking of getting to the pitchers, do you know why Babe Ruth left the mound and went to work as an outfielder?'
'I always thought it was because he was such a great hitter that they wanted him in the lineup every day,' I replied.
'He was a good hitter, all right, but was well on the road to becoming one of the all-time pitching greats. Pitched twenty-nine and two-thirds consecutive scoreless innings in World Series play, for one thing.
'But what actually sent him to the outfield is that suddenly the batters were getting to him. None of the men on his Boston Red Sox team could figure out why, since he had the same stuff that was virtually unhittable before.
'What happened was that a coach nailed him and the word got around. Every time he threw a curved ball he stuck his tongue out of the corner of his mouth. It was a dead giveaway and all the batters had to do was dig in and swing from the sacroiliac, for they knew exactly what was coming.'
The Bambino also stuck out his tongue when he swung a bat. But a fat lot of good that did the pitchers."

-Ned Cronin, Los Angeles Times (Baseball Digest, May 1957)

1957 Yankee of the Past: Nick Cullop

LOOK, MOM, NO FEET!
"Nick Cullop, the veteran minor league manager, tells this one about one of his five major league trials as a player.
'Back in the middle 1920's I hung on with the Yankees a while in the spring,' Nick says. 'We were going into St. Louis to play the Browns and a lot of folks from my home town, Weldon Springs, a little place about 35 miles from St. Louis, decided to come to one of the games and give me a present. They wrote Miller Huggins, the manager, about it and he started me that day.
'The first time up I doubled and slid into second. Then late in the game I was on base again, on second, and Bob Meusel singled and I slid into home to score.
'That night I went home with my mother and daddy to eat supper and I was struttin' pretty good after getting those hits. My mom, she knew nothin' about baseball, though; that was the first game she ever saw. I asked her how she liked it, if she didn't think I looked pretty good.
' 'You were all right, son,' she said, 'except for being so awkward, falling down those two times.' ' "

-Fred Russell, Nashville Banner (Baseball Digest, May 1957)

Saturday, January 21, 2023

1957 Yankee of the Past: Bobo Newsom

Bobo Newsom: "People will probably think I'm lying when I say this, but Lefty Grove never beat me and I guess we hooked up 18 or 20 times. Sometimes Lefty or myself left early and neither of us got the win or loss, but he never beat me. Look it up."

-Baseball Digest, May 1957

Bobo Newsom, winner of 211 big league games (1929-53): "I wouldn't let a boy throw a curve until he was at least 17. Throwing curves is the reason these kids come up with a lot of sore arms. When I broke into the big league, I didn't throw eight curves all year. You look at most of your great pitchers and you'll find they've generally been fast-ballers- which is the reason they had few sore arms."

-Baseball Digest, July 1957