1965 Rewind: Game One Hundred Thirty-five

MINNESOTA 5, DETROIT 2 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Wednesday, September 1.

Batting stars:  Tony Oliva was 3-for-4 with two doubles, scoring once and driving in one.  Jimmie Hall was 1-for-4 with a walk and a stolen base (his seventh), scoring twice.  Don Mincher was 0-for-1 with three walks and a run.

Pitching stars:  Jim Perry pitched eight innings, giving up two runs on ten hits and two walks with three strikeouts.  Al Worthington pitched a perfect inning with one strikeout.

Opposition stars:  Ray Oyler was 1-for-4 with a two-run homer, his fifth.  Don Wert was 3-for-5 with a double.  Norm Cash was 2-for-4 with a double and a walk.

The game:  Oliva made a successful return to the starting lineup, delivering an RBI double in a three-run first inning.  Earl Battey also singled in a run in that inning.  Oyler's two-run homer in the second made it 3-2, but a run-scoring double play gave the Twins an insurance run in the third.  The Tigers threatened in the third and fourth, putting two men on in both innings, but Perry settled down after that, allowing only three hits in innings five through eight.  The Twins made it 5-2 with a sacrifice fly in the sixth.  Mickey Stanley doubled to lead off the ninth, but Worthington came in to retire the next three batters.

Of note:  Zoilo Versalles was 1-for-4 with a double and a walk.  Bob Allison was 0-for-3 with a walk and a run.

Record:  The Twins went to 85-50.  Chicago did not play, so the Twins lead went to eight games.

Notes:  Oliva hit like he had never left the lineup, raising his average to .314...In a low-hitting era, Ray Oyler was the ultimate good field-no hit shortstop.  In six major league seasons, he hit over .200 only once (.207 in 1967).  His career high in OPS was .559 in 1965, which he achieved by hitting five home runs in 194 at-bats.  In 1968 he hit just .135, prompting the Tigers to move Mickey Stanley from the outfield to shortstop for the World Series.  1967 was the only year in which he was truly a regular, but he appeared in over half of his team's games in four of his six seasons and in 71 games in a fifth season.  He was with the Tigers from 1965-68, went to Seattle in the expansion draft in 1969, and finished his major league career with California in 1970, although he played in AAA for two more seasons.  His career numbers are ,175/.258/.251 in 1,265 at-bats.  His .175 average is the lowest of any player with over 1000 at-bats since the dead ball era.  He was, however, considered an excellent defender.

Happy Birthday–February 18

Ray Ryan (1883)
George Mogridge (1889)
Sherry Smith (1891)
Jake Kline (1895)
Huck Betts (1897)
Joe Gordon (1915)
Herm Wehmeier (1927)
Frank House (1930)
Manny Mota (1938)
Dal Maxvill (1939)
Bob Miller (1939)
Jerry Morales (1949)
John Mayberry (1949)
Bruce Kison (1950)
Marc Hill (1952)
Rafael Ramirez (1958)
Kevin Tapani (1964)
John Valentin (1967)
Shawn Estes (1973)
Jamey Carroll (1974)
Chad Moeller (1975)
Alex Rios (1981)

Ray Ryan was involved in minor league baseball for six decades.  He had one baseball card, a part of the T206 tobacco series.  This is the series that produced the famous Honus Wagner card.

Jake Kline was the baseball coach at Notre Dame from 1934-1975.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–February 18

1965 Rewind: Game One Hundred Thirty-four

DETROIT 7, MINNESOTA 6 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Tuesday, August 31.

Batting stars:  Zoilo Versalles was 3-for-4 with three doubles and a walk, scoring twice.  Bob Allison was 2-for-4 with a home run (his twenty-first) and three RBIs.  Don Mincher was 2-for-4 with a triple and a walk, driving in two.

Pitching star:  Johnny Klippstein pitched 2.1 scoreless innings, giving up two hits and a walk with one strikeout.

Opposition stars:  Bill Freehan was 4-for-5 with a home run (his ninth) and a stolen base (his second), driving in three.  Norm Cash was 1-for-5 with a three-run homer (his twentieth) and two runs.  Jerry Lumpe was 4-for-5 with a run and an RBI.

The game:  The Twins again let one get away at the end.  Allison had an RBI single in a two-run first that put the Twins ahead 2-0.  It was 2-1 after four, but Cash hit a three-run homer in the fifth to give the Tigers a 4-2 lead.  The Twins responded in the bottom of the fifth, as Mincher hit a two-run triple in a three-run inning that gave the Twins a 5-4 advantage.  It was tied 5-5 when Allison hit a home run in the seventh that put the Twins up 6-5.  In the ninth, however, an error and Freehan's two-run homer off Mel Nelson put the Tigers in the lead for good at 7-6.  The Twins got a one-out single in the ninth from Earl Battey but could do nothing with it.

Of note:  Joe Nossek was 0-for-4 with a walk and two runs.  Rich Rollins was 2-for-5 with a run.  Battey was 1-for-5 with an RBI.  Mudcat Grant started and pitched well for four innings, but his line was 4.1 innings and four runs on eight hits and one walk with three strikeouts.

Record:  The Twins dropped to 84-50.  The White Sox dropped a doubleheader to Baltimore, so the Twins lead moved to 7.5 games.

Notes:  Nossek played center field in place of Jimmie Hall...The Twins used six pitchers in the game, a high number for this era.  Grant, Dave Boswell, Dick Stigman, Klippstein, Bill Pleis, and Nelson all pitched...Klippstein had a tremendous year for the Twins, going 9-3, 2.24, 1.18 WHIP in 76.1 innings (56 appearances).  He was near the end of a long career, one which started with the Cubs in 1950.  He never pitched well as a starter, despite which he was allowed to make 161 career starts.  In that role, he was 42-77, 4.85, 1.55 WHIP.  As a reliever he was 59-41, 65 saves, 3.69, 1.40 WHIP, which isn't awesome but is significantly better.  He turned a corner when he went to Philadelphia in 1963 at age 35:  from 1963-66, he was 17-15, 2.37, 1.28.  One thing that helped was that he improved his control:  his walks per nine innings had consistently been in fours and fives, but dropped to the threes after that.

 

Happy Birthday–February 17

Pat Pieper (1886)
Nemo Leibold (1892)
Wally Pipp (1893)
Ed Brandt (1905)
Red Barber (1908)
Rod Dedeaux (1914)
Roger Craig (1930)
Cliff Gustafson (1931)
Dick Bosman (1944)
Dave Roberts (1951)
Jamie Easterly (1953)
Mike Hart (1958)
Michael Jordan (1963)
Scott Williamson (1976)
Cody Ransom (1976)
Juan Padilla (1977)
Josh Willingham (1979)

Pat Pieper was the public address announcer for the Chicago Cubs from 1916-1974.  For the first sixteen of those years, he made the announcements with a megaphone.

Rod Dedeaux and Cliff Gustafson were highly successful college baseball coaches, Dedeaux with USC and Gustafson with Texas.

Already known as a basketball star, Michael Jordan played one year of minor league baseball for AA Birmingham in the White Sox organization before returning to the less-challenging sport.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–February 17

1965 Rewind: Game One Hundred Thirty-Three

MINNESOTA 3, DETROIT 2 IN MINNESOTA (11 INNINGS)

Date:  Monday, August 30.

Batting stars:  Don Mincher was 2-for-4 with a walk, scoring once and driving in one.  Jimmie Hall was 1-for-1 with a walk.  Sandy Valdespino was 1-for-2 with an RBI.

Pitching stars:  Jim Kaat struck out six in six innings, giving up two runs on six hits and a walk.  Al Worthington struck out six in three shutout innings, giving up three hits.  Johnny Klippstein pitched two perfect innings with one strikeout.

Opposition stars:  Hank Aguirre pitched 6.1 innings, allowing two runs (one earned) one two hits and five walks with four strikeouts.  Willie Horton was 3-for-4 with two RBIs.  Bill Freehan was 3-for-4.

The game:  Horton singled in a run in the first to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead.  The Twins tied in on Mincher's RBI single in the sixth.  Each team scored once in the seventh to leave the score tied 2-2.  The Tigers got a pair of two-out singles in the ninth and the Twins left two on in the tenth, but there was no more scoring until the eleventh.  Mincher led off with a single and was pinch-run for by Mudcat Grant, who was bunted to second.  Jerry Kindall grounded out, but Valdespino delivered a two-out single to right to end the game.

Of note:  Zoilo Versalles was 1-for-5 with an RBI.  Joe Nossek was 0-for-3 with a run.  Rich Rollins was 0-for-5.  Earl Battey was 0-for-4 with a walk.

Record:  The Twins went to 84-49.  Chicago was idle, so the Twins' lead over the White Sox increased to seven games.

Notes:  Nossek started in place of Hall.  Andy Kosco started in right...The first five batters in the Twins' starting lineup went a combined 1-for-21 with two walks...Battey threw out three attempted base stealers--Horton (twice) and Bill Freehan.  Horton had his personal best in base stealing in 1965 with five, but was caught nine times.  He was 20-for-58 in stealing bases for his career.  Freehan stole four bases in 1965, one shy of his career best.  For his career, he was 24-for-45 in stolen bases.  The Tigers did have one successful stolen base in this game.  It was by Jim Northrup, his only steal of the season.  His career high was seven, and his career totals are 39-for-77.

Happy Birthday–February 16

Alex Ferguson (1897)
Parnell Woods (1912)
Creepy Crespi (1918)
Atsushi Aramaki (1926)
Bobby Darwin (1943)
Terry Crowley (1947)
Bob Didier (1949)
Glenn Abbott (1951)
Jerry Hairston (1952)
Barry Foote (1952)
Bill Pecota (1960)
Eric Bullock (1960)
Dwayne Henry (1962)
Jerome Bettis (1972)
Eric Byrnes (1976)
Tommy Milone (1987)

Parnell Woods was an infielder in the Negro Leagues for fourteen years.  He later became the business manager for the Harlem Globetrotters.

Atsushi Aramaki was a dominant pitcher in Japan in the 1950s and is a member of the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame.

Better known as an NFL running back, Jerome Bettis is a part-owner of the Altoona Curve and the State College Spikes.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–February 16