1969 Rewind: Game Eighty-six

MINNESOTA 11, SEATTLE 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Saturday, July 12.

Batting stars:  Rich Reese was 3-for-4 with a home run (his eighth) and a walk, scoring twice and driving in four.  Tony Oliva was 3-for-4 with a double and three runs.  Jim Perry was 2-for-4 with two RBIs.

Pitching star:  Jim Perry pitched a complete game, giving up one run on five hits and two walks and striking out three.

Opposition star:  Tommy Davis was 2-for-4.

The game:  Seattle scored in the first inning, as Steve Hovley singled, went to second on a ground out, and scored on Davis' single.  It was all Minnesota from there.  Reese homered in the second inning, tying it at 1-1.  The Twins took the lead in the third.  Perry led off with a single, and was still on first with two out.  Then, however, Oliva singled, Harmon Killebrew walked, and Reese delivered a two-run single to give the Twins a 3-1 lead.

The Twins took control in the fifth.  Graig Nettles singled and Oliva doubled.  A wild pitch brought home Nettles.  Walks to Killebrew and Reese loaded the bases.  Johnny Roseboro hit a sacrifice fly, and a walk to Leo Cardenas re-loaded the bases.  Perry delivered a two-run single and Ted Uhlaender followed with an RBI single.  The score was 8-1 and the game was decided.

The Twins weren't done, though.  RBI doubles by Frank Quilici and Cardenas made it 10-1 through six.  In the eighth, Charlie Manuel had a single-plus-error and scored on Reese's single to make it 11-1.  The Pilots had only three hits after the first inning, all singles.

WP:  Perry (8-4).  LP:  Marty Pattin (7-8).  S:  None.

Notes:  Uhlaender was back in center as Nettles, making his first start since July 1, was in left.  Cesar Tovar was at second base in place of Rod Carew, who perhaps had National Guard duties.

Oliva raised his average to .336.  Reese raised his average to .330.

Marty Pattin would not win another game all season, finishing 7-12, 5.62 in 34 games, 27 of them starts.  He went on to have some pretty good years, though, posting ERAs under 3.40 for three consecutive season (1970-1972) and making the all-star team in 1971.  He was with Boston from 1972-1973, but after a down year in 1973 he was traded to Kansas City.  He had several fairly successful years there, mostly as a reliever.  In seven seasons with the Royals, he went 43-39, 3.48, 1.23 WHIP in 825.2 innings (244 games, 63 starts).  He was still effective in his last year, 1980, when he was thirty-seven.  He went 4-0, 3.64, 1.35 WHIP that season.  It is unclear whether he simply retired or could not find a contract to his liking, but there's no real reason to think he couldn't have pitched a couple more seasons.  He was the head baseball coach at the University of Kansas from 1982-1986.  Marty Pattin passed away on October 3, 2018.

Record:  The Twins were 51-36, in first place in the American League West, 3.5 games ahead of Oakland.  The Twins had won three in a row, eight out of nine, and twelve out of fourteen.

Happy Birthday–December 26

Morgan Bulkeley (1837)
Dad A (1922)
Stu Miller (1927)
Al Jackson (1935)
Wayne Causey (1936)
Ray Sadecki (1940)
Carlton Fisk (1947)
Chris Chambliss (1948)
Dave Rader (1948)
Mario Mendoza (1950)
Ozzie Smith (1954)
Mike Sodders (1958)
Storm Davis (1961)
Jeff King (1964)
Esteban Beltre (1967)
Omar Infante (1981)
Yohan Pino (1983)

Morgan Bulkeley was the first president of the National League.

Mike Sodders was a first-round draft choice for the Twins in 1981. A star third baseman at Arizona State, he never could adjust to wooden bats, never hit, and never made the major leagues.

Dad A has been a Twins fan ever since the team started, and was a baseball fan before that. He coached, he ran the public address system, and he was on the board of the local baseball association. One of the many gifts he has given me is a love of baseball. His health is not the best any more, as one would expect at age ninety-six, but we are glad to have him around for at least one more birthday.  May he have more to come.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–December 26

1969 Rewind: Game Eighty-five

MINNESOTA 9, SEATTLE 3 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Friday, July 11.

Batting stars:  Harmon Killebrew was 3-for-4 with two home runs (his twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh) and a double, scoring three times and driving in four.  Rich Reese was 3-for-4 with a triple and a double.  Ted Uhlaender was 2-for-3 with a two-run homer (his third), a walk, and a hit-by-pitch.

Pitching star:  Tom Hall, making his first appearance in a month and his first start in a month plus a week, pitched a complete game, giving up three runs on four hits and four walks and striking out four.

Opposition stars:  Tommy Davis was 2-for-3 with a double and a walk, scoring twice.  John O'Donoghue pitched 2.1 scoreless innings, giving up one hit and striking out two.

The game:  With two out and none on in the first, Tony Oliva walked and Killebrew followed with a two-run homer, putting the Twins up 2-0.  The Pilots put men on first and third with none out in the second, but could only score one on a double play.  In the second, Cesar Tovar was hit by a pitch and Uhlaender hit a two-out two-run homer to give the Twins a 4-1 lead.

Seattle loaded the bases with none out in the fourth.  A wild pitch brough home one run but left men on first and third, as Don Mincher did not advance from first for some reason.  It cost the Pilots, as Jerry McNertney hit into a double play.  It scored a run, but it took Seattle out of a possible big inning and left the Twins ahead 4-3.

The Twins took control of the game in the fifth.  It again happened with two out and none on.   Rod Carew singled, Oliva tripled, Killebrew doubled, and Reese had an RBI single.  It all resulted in three runs, giving the Twins a 7-3 lead.  The Twins added two more in the eighth, as Killebrew homered, Reese tripled, and Johnny Roseboro singled.  The Pilots did not get a hit after the fourth inning.

WP:  Hall (4-4).  LP:  Gene Brabender (7-6).  S:  None.

Notes:  Tovar was again in center with Uhlaender in left.  Frank Quilici replaced Killebrew at third base in the ninth.

Carew was 1-for-5 and was batting .353.  Oliva was 1-for-3 with a walk and was batting .351.  Reese raised his average to .321.

I understand that we're looking back fifty years later, and a lot has changed in the way we see things in those years.  Still, it seems inexcusable that Hall would pitch a complete game in this situation.  Coming back from an injury.  His first appearance in a month.  His first start since June 4.  A blowout game.  Again, I know Men Were Men back then, but didn't it occur to anyone that having Hall throw a complete game, especially when there was no reason for him to, might not be the smartest idea?  Apparently not, or if it did Billy Martin overruled them.  There's a difference between being "tough" and being stupid.

This game featured the major league debut of twenty-two-year-old Seattle reliever Dick Baney.  He was greeted by the Killebrew home run, the Reese triple, and the Roseboro single, not exactly the way you want to make your major league debut.  He did settle down and retire the side with no further runs, although he left the bases loaded.  He made three more appearances, two of them against the Twins, then went back down to AAA, getting a September call-up.  He did quite well in that September call-up, including winning his only start against the Twins.  He had not pitched particularly well in AAA, and he would continue to not pitch well there through 1972.  It was starting to look like 1969 would be his only big league experience, but in 1973, when he was twenty-six and in the Cincinnati organization, he went 8-4, 3.39 in AAA and got a September call-up.  He pitched well out of the Reds bullpen, but in 1974 found himself back in Indianapolis at the start of the season.  He got back to the majors in early June and stayed the rest of the season, although he did not do much to justify that.  He pitched in Indianapolis again in 1975, popped up in something called the Inter-American Baseball League in 1979, then was done.  He posed nude for Playgirl in 1977, which probably got him more publicity than anything he'd done on a ball field.  In his major league career, he was 4-1, 4.28, 3 saves, 1.42 WHIP in 90.1 innings (42 games, 3 starts).  His AAA numbers are 42-34, 4.27, 1.42 WHIP, so it's hard to argue he deserved more of a chance.  He appears to have had a successful career as a real estate investor and a property manager and was living in Tustin, California at last report.

Record:  The Twins were 50-35, in first place, in the American League West, 3.5 games ahead of Oakland.

Happy Birthday–December 25

Pud Galvin (1856)
Barry McCormick (1874)
Walter Holke (1892)
Lloyd Brown (1904)
Ben Chapman (1908)
Jo-Jo Moore (1908)
Ned Garver (1925)
Nellie Fox (1927)
Gene Lamont (1946)
Manny Trillo (1950)
Luis Quintana (1951)
Jeff Little (1954)
Wallace Johnson (1956)
Charlie Lea (1956)
Rickey Henderson (1958)
Rich Renteria (1961)
Marty Pevey (1962)

There have been 25 major league players with the first name “Jesus”, including ex-Twins Jesus Vega and Jesus “Bombo” Rivera and one whose birthday is today, Manny Trillo.  There have been no major league players with the last name “Christ", although there have been two minor leaguers with that last name:  John Christ, who was in the Cleveland organization from 1999-2001, and Mike Christ, who was in the Seattle organization from 1984-1988.  There have been 21 players whose first name was “Christian” (honorable mention to Cristian Guzman), 18 players whose middle name was “Christian” (including ex-Twins Marcus Jensen, David Lamb, and Kevin Maas), and two players whose last name was “Christian”.  We would be remiss if we did not also mention 1980s journeyman catcher Steve Christmas, as well as Matt Holliday.

The staff of Happy Birthday would like to wish everyone a very merry and blessed Christmas.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–December 25