WITH BROWNS IN THE RED, LASORDA TURNED DODGER BLUE
• Rick Hummel, The Post-Dispatch
• St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) • March 23, 2003
If it weren't for Bill Veeck's cash-flow problems 50 years ago, Tommy Lasorda might never have bled Dodger Blue but instead might have shed Browns brown, as unappealing as that sounds.
Before spring training in 1953, the last year the Browns existed, the Brooklyn Dodgers sold Lasorda, a 25-year-old, lefthanded pitcher, to the St. Louis Browns for $50,000.
The curveballing Lasorda was to be the fourth wheel on a staff that featured future New York Yankees Don Larsen and Bob Turley and veteran Gene Bearden.
Near the end of spring training, the Browns prepared to break camp to play the Pittsburgh Pirates in Arizona before coming north. On the train, Lasorda encountered Harry "The Cat" Brecheen, the Browns' pitching coach, who informed Lasorda he was going to be in the rotation.
Lasorda said thank you very much but when the train arrived in Arizona, "who's waiting for us but Bill Veeck (the Browns') owner. We go to our rooms, we change in the hotel and we're going to play the game and I get a call from (manager) Marty Marion who says, 'Come up to my room. I want to talk to you.'"
But also waiting for Lasorda in Marion's room was Veeck. The controversial, financially taxed owner told Lasorda he had been promised $2 million to move to Baltimore but that the New York Yankees had blocked the move at that point.
Veeck went on to tell Lasorda that he had no money and, in fact, owed $250,000. He hadn't paid the $50,000 for Lasorda or the $70,000 for shortstop Billy Hunter to the Dodgers, among other debts. "I've got to turn you back," said Veeck.
Lasorda said: "He didn't have to call me in and explain all that to me. But he liked me."
So, Lasorda returned to Vero Beach, Fla., and resumed bleeding Dodger Blue. "Charlie Gitto is the only person in captivity who has a picture of me in a St. Louis Browns uniform," Lasorda said of the popular St. Louis restaurant owner.
But, what if . . . ?
What if Lasorda had stayed with the Browns, who eventually were sold and moved to Baltimore the next year? Would he have become a famous Oriole and gone on to manage that team instead of fellow Hall of Famer Earl Weaver?
"Maybe he would have never come there," said Lasorda of the Beaumont High product.
"Imagine pitching in St. Louis . . . that would have been great," said Lasorda, who then ticked off the names of his teammates, even if they were so ever so briefly. "Roy Sievers. Don Lenhardt. You talk about some great guys. Dick Kokos. Clint Courtney. Babe Martin.
"Then there was Satchel Paige. Satchel Paige taught me not to worry."
Lasorda, 76, has just returned from viewing the Dodgers' baseball academy in Japan. He has spent considerable time in Japan in recent years helping to raise the quality of play.
"They call me the emperor," Lasorda said, proudly.
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Monday, June 28, 2010
Eddie Stankey: He can't hit, can't run, can't field. All He Does is Win.
His Giants manager Leo Durocher once summed up Stanky's talents: "He can't hit, can't run, can't field. He's no nice guy... all the little SOB can do is win."
One season, whenever he was the runner on third base, Stanky developed the habit of standing several feet back of the bag, in left field. If a fly ball was hit, he would time its arc, then take off running so as to step on third base just as the catch was being made. In this way he would be running towards home at full speed from the beginning of the play, making it almost impossible to throw him out.
This tactic was made illegal following the season.
Stanky was also (in)famous for what came to be called "the Stanky maneuver", where he would take advantage of his position on second base to distract opposing batters by jumping up and down and waving his arms behind the pitcher.
One season, whenever he was the runner on third base, Stanky developed the habit of standing several feet back of the bag, in left field. If a fly ball was hit, he would time its arc, then take off running so as to step on third base just as the catch was being made. In this way he would be running towards home at full speed from the beginning of the play, making it almost impossible to throw him out.
This tactic was made illegal following the season.
Stanky was also (in)famous for what came to be called "the Stanky maneuver", where he would take advantage of his position on second base to distract opposing batters by jumping up and down and waving his arms behind the pitcher.
DiMaggio Breaks Sisler's Record
1941 - In a doubleheader against the Washington Senators, New York's Joe DiMaggio tied and then broke the American League record of hitting safely in 41 consecutive games. DiMaggio doubled in four at-bats in the opener and singled in five at-bats in the nightcap to break the record set by George Sisler of the St. Louis Browns in 1922.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)