World Series

July 19, 2007

1948 World Series: Highlight Reel and Mel Allen's Complete Call of Game 5

It was a classic matchup because of the greats (and the personalities) on the teams taking part: the Cleveland Indians, who won the AL flag in a one-game playoff against the Red Sox, and the Boston Braves, who featured the famous Spahn, Sain, and rain rotation.

Neither team had a great season, however, with the Indians going down to the wire and the Braves winning a mediocre NL with just 91 wins. But the Indians had maverick owner Bill Veeck and five future Hall-of-Famers: player-manager (and Major Leagle MVP) Lou Boudreau, Bob Feller, Bob Lemon, Satchel Paige, and Larry Doby. The Braves boasted Spahn, (AL Pitcher of the Year) Johnny Sain, Al Dark, and Eddie Stanky.

The Indians took the Series, 4 games to 2.

The highlight reel has an audio problem, but you can hear it if you turn your volume up to 11. The Game 5 call by Allen sounds terrific and is only a 23 MB download, if you want to keep it. Enjoy.



Mel Allen's call of Game 5.

June 19, 2007

A Rau Deal? Lasorda Doesn't Think So

The sitch: Game 4 of the 1977 World Series. Yankees are up, two games to one. Doug Rau, who's pitched well (14-8, 3.43) for the Dodgers all season but who has a sore left shoulder and has tossed only one inning in the last three weeks, is on the mound for L.A. Ron Guidry, who's in his first full season for the Yankees, is practically money in the bank (16-7, 2.82).

Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda has decided to start Rau, despite the obvious risks, in order to give staff ace Don Sutton a extra day of rest.

Bad decision. Rau makes it through the first inning without a problem, but in the top of the second Reggie Jackson doubles and Lou Piniella singles Jackson home. Then Chris Chambliss doubles, sending Piniella to third. Down a run, two men in scoring position, nobody out. Lasorda decides Rau's done enough for the day.

He goes out to the mound, and finds out that Rau doesn't agree. A heated discussion ensues. And we get to hear it, because Lasorda has allowed himself to be miked for the game. So he tones down his language. But not much. So if you have sensitive ears, click elsewhere.

Rick Rhoden, who has also had a fine season as a Dodgers starter, gets the call. He goes seven innings, retiring 17 of 19 batters and giving up only two hits and one earned run (Piniella and Chambliss both scored in the second, but those runs belonged to Rau).

If you want to delve more deeply into this incident, read Jeff Angus' fascinating post about it over at Management by Baseball.

May 03, 2007

Clendenon's Magical Moment

October 16, 1969. Fifth game of the World Series between the mighty Orioles and the Miracle Mets. Shea Stadium is, naturally, packed, with 57,397 fans wedged in, like a mighty bunch of exuberant sardines. The Mets are up 3-1 in the Series, but it's not over. The O's tagged Mets starter Jerry Koosman for three runs in the top of the third, and now, in the bottom of the sixth, the Mets still trail 3-0. Jones gets hit by a pitch -- the famous shoe polish play. Next up: Donn Clendenon, who's already slammed two homers in this World Series. Clendenon patiently works Orioles pitcher Dave McNally to a 2-2 count, then slams the next pitch for a homer off the auxiliary scoreboard in left field.

That was the charge the Mets needed. They went on to a 5-3 win to take the World Series. Koosman went nine innings and won his second game of the Series. And Clendenon, who was named World Series MVP, ended up setting a bunch of records for a five-game series: homers (3), total bases (15), and most extra bases on long hits (10). He also tied records for most extra-base hits, with 4, and most putouts in an inning (he played first base) with 3. Clendenon had started the year with the lowly expansion Montreal Expos, and ended it at the top. He was 34 years old, and didn't have much longer to go in his career, playing only a few hundred more games over the next few years.

But what a show he put on in Oct. 1969.

April 23, 2007

1960 World Series Video: Pirates top Yanks in a Thriller

In this great seven-game series, the Yankees outscored the Pirates, 55-27. Unfortunately for the Bombers, composite scores don't count, and the Pirates won when Bill Mazeroski hit the game-winning homer off Ralph Terry in the ninth inning of Game 7, breaking a 9-9 deadlock. New York's Bobby Richardson was named World Series MVP, the first time a member of the losing team received that honor.

Chuck Thompson was calling that game on the radio, and he choked in classic fashion, getting both names and the score wrong:

Well, a little while ago, when we said that this one, uh, in typical fashion, was going right down to the wire, little did we know! ... Art Ditmar throws ... There's a swing and a high fly ball going deep to left, this may do it! ... Back to the wall goes Berra, it is ... over the fence, home run, the Pirates win! ... (long pause for crowd noise) ... Ladies and gentleman, Bill Mazeroski has just hit a one-nothing pitch over the left field wall to win the 1960 World Series for the Pittsburgh Pirates by a score of ten to nothing! ... Once again, that final score, the World Champion Pittsburgh Pirates TEN, and the New York Yankees NINE!

Yogi Berra had a terse, but accurate, assessment of why the Yankees lost: "We made too many wrong mistakes."

This video, in color, covers all seven games in detail. It's hard to ignore the generic bat-hits-ball sound (a bunt gets the same "thwack!" as a 450-foot homer), but it's great to see Vern Law and Elroy Face and Dick Groat and Roberto Clemente and Harvey Haddix and Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra and Ralph Terry and, of course, old Casey Stengel in action.


April 15, 2007

The 1954 World Series: Giants Sweep Indians; Mays' Amazing Catch

1954wsprogram Below is a newsreel roundup of the 1954 World Series, in which the Giants, led by pinch-hitter par excellence Dusty Rhodes and steady veteran outfielder Don Mueller, swept the mighty Cleveland Indians, winners of a record-setting 111 games during the regular season. Except for Vic Wertz, who was robbed by Mays with that spectacular grab in the eighth inning of Game 1, none of the Indians could touch the Giants pitchers; the Indians batted .190 in the short series. They had punched out a .262 average during the regular season.


You can also listen to all of Game 1, thanks to the folks at the Internet Archives.

Mays_catch

April 09, 2007

Long 1952 World Series Video: Robinson, Mantle, Snider, Reese, Berra

Here's a rare treat: a full-length (31 minutes) recap of the 1952 World Series, in which the Yankees beat the Dodgers in seven games, thanks in large part to Billy Martin's game-saving catch in the final matchup. This was the Yankees fourth straight World Series title. Seeing all of these greats and Hall of Famers playing in one series is terrific; my favorite part, though, is watching Mickey Mantle run at full speed, before his legs went out. Man, he was fast.

March 03, 2007

Former Brooklyn Dodgers star pitcher Clem Labine dead at 80

Labine_1956ws Clem Labine, a long-time right-handed reliever for the Bums, the beloved "Boys of Summer," died yesterday in Florida. In the 1955 World Series, Labine got one win in relief and a save as the Dodgers beat the Yankees. But this was just one highlight in a long career that included 513 games pitched (38 were starts), two All-Star appearances, five World Series (including one with the L.A. Dodgers in 1959 and another with the Pirates in 1960), and the honor of being an Original Met.

Labine also notched two classic starts. In the 1951 playoff, he took the mound in Game 2  against the Giants and shut them out 10-0. And in Game 6 of the 1956 World Series, he blanked the Yankees 1-0 in 10 innings.

In The Boys of Summer, Roger Kahn wrote about Labine as an executive and designer for a men's clothing company after his baseball days ended. The company closed, and after that Labine became a banking executive before retiring. His son, Clem Jr. (know as Jay), stepped on a land mine while serving in Vietnam with the Marines, and lost a leg.

Labine_photoheadline

In Tales from the 1962 New York Mets, Janet Paskin tells the story about a spring training incident involving Labine -- who'd been almost officially relegated to a coaching position -- and catcher Joe Ginsberg. They came into the team hotel late one night after playing golf, and went into the dining room to find the only others in the joint were Casey and Edna Stengel.

Stengel, ever the gentleman, signalled to the waiter that he wanted to buy the two players a drink. They accepted, of course. But there was only one problem -- Stengel had a rule barring players from drinking in the hotel.

The following day there was a pre-practice meeting. "Something happened last night," said Stengel. "We had two ballplayers go in that dining room last night and they were drinking beer, and it's going to cost them $50 each. Okay, you two guys stand up."

Labine and Ginsberg stayed put, but eventually admitted their "guilt" to Stengel. But Labine was sure that Stengel had no idea who he'd played his little trick on.

RIP, Clem.

February 19, 2007

Listen to Don Larsen's perfect game

Monday, Oct. 8, 1956. Dodgers vs. Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Game 5 of the 1956 World Series. Sal Maglie is on the mound for the Dodgers. Don Larsen's pitching for the Yanks. Yankee Stadium is packed, from the first pitch to the final out. Maglie's performance is superb. Larsen's perfect game is unprecedented ... and remains, 50 years later, unmatched.

Larsen's cousin, Phillip Hoose, does an excellent job of describing the feat in his book, Perfect, Once Removed.

If you want to hear the game
as those listening back in '56 did, have at it.

Don Larsen's perfect game (mp3)

Larsen_headline

1956_ws_gm5_box

February 07, 2007

Game 6, 1986 World Series: The last 10 minutes

You've seen the Buckner play. You've seen other brief snippets. But here is the complete final 10 minutes of one of the greatest games in World Series history -- Mitchell, Carter, Knight, Wilson, Schiraldi, Stanley, McNamara, Davey Johnson ... and, of course, Vin Scully.

Note that no mention is made by the announcers of replacing Buckner with Dave Stapleton, nor was one made the entire game.

January 31, 2007

Howard Cosell sums it up: The Mets win the 1969 World Series!

Howard Cosell, introduced as "ABC's sports editor," narrates an ABC Evening News story on the Mets victory in the 1969 World Series. The video quality isn't great, but some terrific plays are shown, including the Cleon Jones "shoe polish" play. Also included: Mets fans going nuts and tearing up the field.

November 19, 2006

1959 World Series: White Sox vs. Dodgers

Click on the photo below to view a small segment of a public domain newswreel, detailing Game 3 of the 1959 World Series, Dodgers vs. White Sox in LA on Oct. 4. A World Series record crowd of 92,294 watched Don Drysdale beat Dick Donovan, 3-1, thanks to a bad-hop base hit by pinch-hitter Carl Furillo in the seventh inning. The Dodgers went on to beat the Go-Go Sox in six games. Time magazine has a writeup of the first three games of the series, from the Oct. 12, 1959 issue, in its archives.

1959_ws_la_chi_1  

November 02, 2006

Link-O-Rama

Lots of goodies piling up at Southpaw HQ.

Milwaukee_1957_ws_gm_4 An awesome vibrant shot of the stands and scoreboard during Game 4 of the 1957 World Series, Braves vs. Yankees in Milwaukee. Complete with fedora hats and the official Longines clock. Click through the thumbnail for a large-size version.

The Secret Lives of Baseball Card Writers [Slate]

"While the text was inescapably repetitive, the stuff I edited was certainly better than the 'Hector's hobbies are eating and sleeping' non sequiturs that made up the Topps backs of my youth. Today's cards top out at 400 characters (including spaces), or about 70 words, and usually take the shape of punchy feature articles."

Audio Portrait: The Negro Leagues [NPR]
"Jordana Gustafson presents a sound portrait of three retired Negro League baseball players: Carl Long, center field for the Birmingham Black Barons and the first African-American to play professional baseball in North Carolina; George 'Smoky' McFadden, pitcher for the Durham Eagles and Durham Rams; and Willie Bradshaw, pitcher for Eagles, the Rams and the Roxboro Colts."

Krazy George celebrates starting the Wave cheer 25 years ago [AP]
"Krazy George Henderson has spent the last quarter-century trying to persuade everyone that he debuted the 'Wave' during an Oakland Athletics' playoff game against the Yankees -- not those Washington football fans who claim the Huskies first performed the now famous cheer."


October 27, 2006

Perfect, Once Removed: An excerpt and interview with author Phillip Hoose

Perfectl Perfect, Once Removed is a wonderful little gem of a baseball memoir. Phillip Hoose, Don Larsen's second cousin, recalls what it was like to be a third grader -- a new arrival in Speedway, Indiana who loved baseball but struggled with the basics of the game. A boy who seized on his blood relationship with a New York Yankee to gain a sense of belonging, who thrilled that his cousin took notice of him and invited him and his family to see the Yankees play in Chicago and to meet the Yankees.

That Hoose's first baseball memories coincided with Larsen's tremendous feat, the perfect game in the 1956 World Series, make them that much stronger, and more meaningful. Though Perfect, Once Removed has many universal themes relating to baseball, and childhood, and the feeling of being an outsider, that specific connection to Larsen makes the book more than just a paean to the game. It's also history, experienced from a unique viewpoint.

I spoke to Hoose by phone earlier this week. An excerpt from the book follows the interview.

Jeff Merron: What inspired you to write this book. Was it the 50th anniversary of your cousin's perfect game?

Phillip Hoose: Part of it was the 50th anniversary, because I saw it as a chance to shine a bigger, brighter light on Larsen’s game, which I think is the greatest pitching performance in the history of baseball. And it didn’t seem to me that the Yankees were really doing much with it. Certainly the 40th anniversary had not occasioned a lot of fanfare, and I wanted to help make the case.

Another thing was that this was my 50th year in baseball as well. I never stopped playing either baseball or softball. So I wanted to write a valentine to baseball. It was a combination of those things.

JM: The connection to Don that you have is crucial, but that experience, your childhood experience of struggling to just field grounders and popups and become a decent player really struck a chord with me.

Hoose: Even great natural baseball players worry about those ground balls and those popups. The ball's hard and comes at you very fast. It’s a game where being big and strong are assets, but more than football and basketball you can overcome size deficiencies through work and discipline.

Baseball stops at the end of every play – you have a pause, and it’s more a set piece, and you can practice motions and events over and over and over. I’ve taken tens of thousands of ground balls and fly balls in my life, just practicing these things, to the point where they've become part of my muscle memory. So often what happens in a play is determined in the first fraction of a second – it depends on how quickly you recognize what’s going on, how quickly your muscles remember having seen the same pattern before.

JM: You had that one connection – Don is your first cousin once removed – and to me it seems that having some kind of connection makes a huge difference in a fan’s experience of the game. I’m thinking about the kids who come down on the field before the game and get to have their picture taken with a player, or getting to run the bases after a minor league game.

Hoose: I think you’re right. I attended a fair number of baseball games in Cuba, and played with the kids down there. In the Cuban National League, kids run the bases after the game. They think that the best players in the world are the local team’s players. They know them. They get to watch them lift weights between games of a doubleheader. They roll out these barbell sets on wheels and they actually work out, lifting weights between games.

My special connection through having a relative on the New York Yankees meant a huge amount to me. That he would take any interest in me at all, and of course when I actually got to meet the New York Yankees it was just so inspiring to me. And of course later on, when lightning struck with this immortal game, it had coattails for me, too, in my school. I got a popularity bump. People were willing to teach me how to play ball and to hang out with me in a way that they had not been before.

I didn’t have to do anything. He becomes world famous, and I get a little bump. Fine with me! I’ll take it.

JM: After 1956 you saw less of Don.

Hoose: I probably saw him four times after that, before I went to visit him last year for this book. I think we went to see him a couple more times in Chicago when he was with the Yankees. I remember we saw him play in Indianapolis. He got sent down to Triple A, and he was in Indianapolis to play the Indians. It was terrible – there weren’t many people there, and there were some really abrasive, abusive hecklers.

I remember we were sitting in front of them and my dad was getting madder and madder. They were just saying all kinds of garbage. I also remember we went to Cincinnati, when he was with the Giants, and it was a great game. I’ll never forget it. Mays hit two homers to left field. Low, hooking line drives that just clanged against the seats. And then they nursed a slim lead into the ninth inning and Don came out. He was basically their closer, (He pitched in the ’62 Series and actually won a game.) He must have thrown five or six pitches and he retired each batter on long fly balls – warning track fly balls to each field. And that was it.

We waited for him outside the players’ entrance and Mays got into a cab. I had an autograph book and I went running after the cab and I actually got in the cab with him. I was half-in, half-out, and he was startled. He scribbled his name in my autograph book and he kind of tossed it out to me, in the street.

I told Don about this last year and he said, before I told him the whole story,  “I’ll bet it was the worst looking signature you’ve ever seen.” I said, “Yes!” He said Mays’ signatures were always a mess.

JM: How did Don respond when he found out you were writing this book?

Hoose: At first he didn’t respond much at all. He’s probably seen a number of projects come his way over the years. But I think the main thing was when I asked if I could visit. I didn’t know if he would see me or not. He said yes, but then when I tried to nail him down on a date I thought he would slip off the hook, but he didn’t. I think this book really became a reality for him when it came out.

He’s been wonderful. He’s been to two events with me where he’s signed the book. He didn’t have to. He signed hundreds and hundreds of them. He read it, he liked it. He’s been great.

He did two signings, one in the Bronx and one in New Jersey,  and there may be more. He’s been tremendously generous. He’s just a great guy.

JM: What did he think of your story? The book is really about you.

Hoose: He didn’t know, and couldn’t have known, how much that meant to me. He remembered us going to Chicago to meet him and the players. It was something that he did for several of us in that family – he’d either leave tickets or send tickets to us. Sometimes he’d invite people to the Del Prado hotel, where the Yankees stayed.

We just got lucky in that the game got rained out. I was distraught, I thought the whole visit was blown, we weren’t going to get to see the Yankees play and so forth. But my dad called him and he agreed to meet us at the hotel. We spent the whole day with the Yankees. God, it was a great day. These gods were all around us.

JM: How much has Don kept up with his Yankee teammates?

Hoose: He’s close with Hank Bauer, and with Yogi because fantasy camps and autograph card shows bring them together. But you have to remember that a lot of those people have passed on. Don is gong to have a charity event in New York on Nov. 4, and I was asking him who’s going to be invited,  and in addition to everyone who’s pitched a perfect game, he’s gong to invite all the living members of the Yankees and Dodgers who played in his perfect game. There aren’t all that many.

JM: Have you had any response from the Yankees to your book?

Hoose: None whatsoever.

JM: Have you tried?

Hoose: Yes. My publisher has tried several times and not gotten anywhere. It’s been disappointing. They didn’t get behind the 50th anniversary of Don’s perfect game either. It strikes me – if I were the Yankees, and my employee had pitched the greatest game in the history of baseball against a lineup of immortals under such pressure, the fifth game of the 1956 World Series – I’d just think you’d have one heck of a party to celebrate something like that. But they didn’t.

Excerpt after the jump.

Continue reading "Perfect, Once Removed: An excerpt and interview with author Phillip Hoose" »

October 23, 2006

Tigers-Cardinals history: Mayo Smith's brilliant move

Mickey_stanley_1971 In talking to some folks who played or coached for him, I've heard that Mayo Smith, the manager of the great 1968 Tigers squad, wasn't the sharpest pencil in the drawer. (In fact, I've heard much worse from reliable sources, but we'll save that for another time.) In the 1968 Series, however, he made several brilliant moves, and a few years ago I ranked his coaching that October among the best in playoff history.

Getting ready for the World Series against the Cardinals, the Tigers had a problem: they had four outfielders who could hit, but a shortstop who hit .135. Smith's unconventional solution? He moved center fielder Mickey Stanley to shortstop, so he could play Willie Horton, Jim Northrup and Al Kaline in the World Series.

Smith had another big decision. Down 3 games to 2, he elected to start Denny McLain in Game 6 on two days' rest (McLain had only lasted two innings in his previous start), but that meant starting Mickey Lolich in Game 7 on two days' rest -- against Bob Gibson.

It all paid off. Stanley played errorless ball at short, Northrup had the key hit in Game 7 and Lolich beat Gibson, 4-1.

Stanley, 25, had played 424 major league games before the 1968 Series; only nine of those were at shortstop, all at the end of the 1968 season. So clearly Smith was planning ahead.

Bill Freehan talked to Baseball Digest about the decision:

Mayo_smith_1968 "What a dilemma the manager had. You've got a bonafide future Hall of Famer, an All-Star, and a great player who was out several weeks that season. Al was just corning back from a broken wrist.

"By the time Al got back, we were 14 or so games ahead. The outfield was Jim Northrup in right, Mickey Stanley in center, and Willie Horton in left.

"You had won the pennant with those guys. All of a sudden, here comes your Hall of Famer back. Which of those guys wants to sit down? None of them wanted to sit down. We had Gates Brown on the bench anyway.

"Mayo thought of Mickey Stanley, who was probably the best overall athlete. He went to Mickey and said, `Would you think about making this switch to shortstop?'  Mickey used to take ground balls at shortstop, just to have a little fun, on an everyday basis. A lot of guys do that, take ground balls out of position. What a dilemma for the manager. But the switch worked out."


October 13, 2006

Tommie Agee and Ron Swoboda: 1969 World Series Catches

Agee_catch MLB presents (circa 2002) a list of the Mets Ten Greatest Moments. Being a Mets fan, I might quibble with some of the choices, but they've done a pretty good job.  I'm just grateful that they have video of the two great catches made by Tommie Agee in Game 3 of the 1969 World Series.

I wrote a brief piece about Agee's performance for the New York Times Magazine in 2001, just a few months after Agee died.

XM Radio did a nice interview with Swoboda. He talks about making a pencil sketch of the glove he used to make his great Game 4 (which is rolled into the two Agee catches as a single "moment").

"I have my glove that I made the catch with in Game Four of the World Series. After a trip to Paris I got inspired to sketch a pencil drawing of it, and spent about three days working on the glove until I got it the way I wanted it. I think it's a pretty good rendering."

October 12, 2006

Was the 1964 World Series the greatest ever?

Allen Barra writes in American Heritage that the 1964 World Series, with pitted the St. Louis Cardinals vs. the New York Yankees, was the greatest ever. Actually, he doesn't make a terrific case for the Series itself being "great" (although it did go seven games and featured Bob Gibson, Curt Flood, Lou Brock, Mickey Mantle, and Whitey Ford, to name just a few). In a package I co-wrote for ESPN.com, we ranked the 1964 Series the 13th best in the first 100 years.

He does argue, also unconvincingly, that the 1964 World Series was "great" because many of those who participated would later be both outspoken and prolific:

The 1964 Yankees and Cardinals were a microcosm of the changes that were whirling in professional sports. Bouton and Flood, most notably, exemplified the new breed of articulate professional athletes who were skeptical of authority and unafraid to challenge traditions. In truth, it seems that nearly every member of the two teams had something to say. Bouton, Berra, Mantle, Ford, Kubek, Pepitone, Flood, McCarver, Gibson, and Uecker are credited with 22 books among them, which makes them the writingest teams ever to play in the World Series. Just as the year changed the nation, so its World Series changed American sports.

This is a tremendous logical leap. Some of the players would later be radically (for sports) outspoken (and that only applies to Bouton and Flood). Others wrote many books -- not any surprise, considering some were Hall of Famers, others broadcasters, and half of them Yankees. But I'll be darned if I can recall Berra, Mantle, Ford, Kubek, Pepitone, or McCarver writing anything that created anything more than a brief and minor ripple in baseball, much less sports in general. Berra's funny and his words are memorable for that reason, and have had some larger cultural impact, in a Jerry Seinfeld kind of way.

1964 World Series, cultural watershed? Not even close. Great series? Yes. But not the greatest by any stretch.

Subscribe Today!

---

Add to
Google

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in
Bloglines

Subscribe in
NewsGator Online

Add The
Southpaw to
Newsburst from CNET
News.com

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

AddThis Social Bookmark Button