1969 Rewind: Game Sixty

MINNESOTA 3, CALIFORNIA 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date: Wednesday, June 18.

Batting star:  Jim Kaat was 1-for-3 with a home run.

Pitching star:  Kaat pitched a complete game, giving up one run on eight hits and no walks and striking out five.

Opposition stars:  Sandy Alomar was 2-for-4.  Jim Fregosi was 2-for-4.  Jim McGlothlin pitched seven innings, giving up one run on two hits and two walks and striking out four.

The game:  The Angels had men on first and third with one out in the first inning, but Rick Reichardt hit into a double play to end the threat.  The Twins got a two-out double from Johnny Roseboro in the second but couldn't do anything with it.  California got a pair of one out singles in the fifth but again were thwarted by a double play, this one hit into by Jay Johnstone.

The Twins got on the board in the fifth when Kaat hit a two-out home run.  It looked like that might be the only run he would need, but the Angels tied it in the eighth.  With two out and none on Winston Llenas got an infield single, Lou Johnson got a pinch-hit single, and Alomar singled to bring home the tying run.  Aurelio Rodriguez flied out to end the inning, but the score was tied 1-1.

Hoyt Wilhelm came in to pitch the eighth.  Leo Cardenas greeted him with a single.  Kaat struck out, but Ted Uhlaender singled, sending pinch-runner Cesar Tovar to third.  A stolen base and an intentional walk to Tony Oliva loaded the bases.  Harmon Killebrew then came through with a two-run double to right-center to put the Twins up to stay.  California went down in order in the ninth.

WP:  Kaat (7-5).  LP:  Wilhelm (2-6).  S:  None.

Notes:  Charlie Manuel was in left in this game, with Killebrew at third and Rich Reese at first.  Frank Quilici pinch-ran for Killebrew in the eighth, so the defensive changes were a little different.  Tovar still went to left and Quilici to third, but Reese stayed at first.  Rick Renick went in to play shortstop for Cardenas, who had been removed when Tovar came in to pinch-run.  Renick played a total of forty-eight games at short in his career, forty of them in 1969.

Rod Carew was 0-for-4, dropping his average to .372.

It was Kaat's sixth complete game of the season and his third in his last five starts.  He also, of course, had two non-complete games in which he pitched eleven and twelve innings, respectively.  His ERA went down to 2.31, which was as low as it would be for the rest of the season.

Killebrew was quoted as saying the way to hit a knuckleball was to look for the seams and hit in-between them.  It must have worked in this game.

Record:  The Twins were 33-27, in second place in the American League West, a half-game behind Oakland.

Happy Birthday–November 30

Due to personal time constraints, this is a reprint from last year which has not been updated.

Mordecai Davidson (1845)
Frank Killen (1870)
Josh Billings (1891)
Firpo Marberry (1898)
Clyde Sukeforth (1901)
Steve Hamilton (1935)
Craig Swan (1950)
Juan Berenguer (1954)
Dave Engle (1956)
Steve Shields (1958)
Bob Tewksbury (1960)
Bo Jackson (1962)
Gary Wayne (1962)
Mark Lewis (1969)
Ray Durham (1971)
Matt Lawton (1971)
Shane Victorino (1980)
Rich Harden (1981)
Luis Valbuena (1985)

Mordecai Davidson was the owner of the Louisville Colonels in the late 1880s.  Under financial pressure, he tried to save money in a variety of ways, including fining players each time the team lost.  As a result, he is credited with inspiring the first baseball players' strike.  Nobody ever seems to name their kid "Mordecai" any more.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–November 30

1969 Rewind: Game Fifty-nine

CALIFORNIA 13, MINNESOTA 1 IN MINNESOTA

Batting star:  Rich Reese was 2-for-3 with a home run (his third) and a double.

Pitching star:  Bob Miller pitched two perfect innings, striking out one.

Opposition stars:  Andy Messersmith struck out nine in a complete game, giving up one run on three hits and two walks.  Bill Voss was 3-for-6 with a three-run homer and three runs.  Rick Reichardt was 2-for-4 with a home run (his sixth) and a walk, scoring twice and driving in three.  Jim Fregosi was 2-for-4 with a walk.  Sandy Alomar was 2-for-5 with two RBIs.  Aurelio Rodriguez was 1-for-4 with a triple and a walk, scoring three times.

The game:  The Angels drew two walks in the first inning but didn't score.  They made up for it.  They got on the board in the second when Rodriguez reached on an error and scored on Jim Spencer's triple.  They went up 3-0 in the third when Reichardt hit a two-run homer.   The Twins got on the board in the fourth when Reese led off the inning with a home run.  They had men on first and second with none out in the fifth, but failed to advance them, leaving the score 3-1.

It was all California from there.  In the sixth, a walk, a bunt, and an intentional walk put men on first and second.  A fly out made it first and third, and Billy Martin ordered an intentional walk to Spencer, moving the runner from first into scoring position and loading the bases, to bring up Messersmith.  The strategy didn't work.  Messersmith walked to force in a run, Sandy Alomar delivered a two-run single, and Voss hit a three-run homer, making the score 9-1.

They added two more in the seventh, as Jay Johnstone singled, Rodriguez tripled, and Joe Azcue doubles.  They topped it off with two more in the ninth, as Voss and Fregosi singled, Reichardt had an RBI single, and Johnstone contributed a sacrifice fly.

The last fifteen Twins were retired.

WP:  Messersmith (2-5).  LP:  Danny Morris (0-1).  S:  None.

Notes:  Cesar Tovar played second base in place of Rod Carew, who was used as a pinch-hitter.  It was again Nettles in left, Killebrew at third, and Reese at first.

Miller lowered his ERA to 2.51.

This was the only start Morris would make this season and was the last of his major league career.  Rick Renick pinch-hit for him in the third after he gave up three runs (two earned) on three hits and two walks.  He would make just one more major league appearance, on June 29.  He would stay in the Twins organization through 1972, but didn't get much accomplished at AAA and did not make it back to the majors.

Six of the runs California scored were charged to Al Worthington.  He came on in the sixth with men on first and second and one out.  He retired Azcue on a fly ball, but then came the rest of the inning detailed above.  He also pitched the seventh through the Azcue double, when he was relieved by Joe Grzenda.

This was outfielder Bill Voss' first year with the Angels and the year in which he got the most playing time of his career.  He had gotten brief trials with the White Sox, playing a total of twenty-six games from 1965-1967, before finally sticking for half the season in 1968.  He was traded to the Angels that off-season.  He played in 133 games in 1969, getting 349 at-bats.  He was not a home run hitter--the homer in this game was one of just two he would hit in 1969.  He had a career total of nineteen, and oddly got over half of them (ten) in one season, 1971.  He was in his first year with Milwaukee that season.  He was a man on the move in 1972, starting the year with the Brewers, moving to Oakland in June, and going to St. Louis in August.  He was traded to Cincinnati after the 1972 season, but he never played again.  His career major league numbers are .227/.298/.317 in 1177 at-bats.  The vast majority of his games were in right field, although he had a handful in center and left.  There was something about him that baseball people liked--when you read his biography at sabr.com, you keep seeing comments from his managers at the time about how they believed in him and thought it was just a matter of time before he starting hitting.  He hit well in AAA, batting .283/.347/.438, and he hit well in spring training, but he just could never hit in major league games that counted.  As of 2014, Bill Voss was an assistant pastor at Vineyard Christian Fellowship in Cottonwood, Arizona.

Record:  The Twins were 32-27, tied for first place in the American League West with Oakland.  Oakland actually led based on winning percentage, .544 to .542.

Happy Birthday–November 29

Tom Hughes (1878)
Irv Noren (1924)
Minnie Minoso (1925)
Vin Scully (1927)
George Thomas (1937)
Dick McAuliffe (1939)
Bill Freehan (1941)
Otto Velez (1950)
Mike Easler (1950)
Rick Anderson (1956)
Joe Price (1956)
Dennis Burtt (1957)
Howard Johnson (1960)
Bob Hamelin (1967)
Mariano Rivera (1969)
Brian Wolfe (1980)
Guillermo Quiroz (1981)
Craig Gentry (1983)

Continue reading Happy Birthday–November 29

The Best Hot Cocoa Mix

So what do you do with that leftover fancy cocoa powder you bought to make that delicious, Nutella-esque chocolate and peanut concoction? You make your own cocoa mix! And trust me, this is waaaaaaaay tastier than that stuff you buy at the grocery store.

Ingredients
1/2 cup (100 grams) granulated sugar
1 tablespoon (8 grams) cornstarch
3 ounces (85 grams) bittersweet chocolate, roughly chopped
1/2 cup (40 grams) Valrhona cocoa powder
1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/8 teaspoon fine sea salt

Combine all ingredients in a food processor and blend until thoroughly pulverized.

Before pulverization:

After pulverization:

To use (stovetop version): Heat one cup of milk in a saucepan over medium heat until it begins to steam. Add 3 tablespoons cocoa mix. Whisk over heat for another minute or two, until it begins to simmer and mix is completely dissolved. (Obviously you can make more than one cup at a time, depending on how many people you're serving.)

To use (microwave version): This mixes together better if you heat the cocoa mix with the milk rather than mixing it after the milk has been heated. Measure 3 tablespoons cocoa mix into one cup of milk but don't bother stirring it. Heat for 90 seconds and then stir vigorously. Then heat for 20 more seconds or until cocoa is at desired temperature. (Aside: my microwave is pretty wimpy, so you may want to reduce these times if you are using a more powerful model.)

Bonus tip--I store my cocoa mix in a container with the measurements noted on it to make life easy:

Recipe source: Smitten Kitchen