When the Game Changed: An Oral History of Baseball's True Golden Age: 1969--1979 by George Castle
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I really enjoyed this book a lot. Like a lot of older fans, I've gone from knowing pretty much all the players on all the teams in my youth, to being mystified as to who the 75 relievers on every team might be. This book concentrates on an era (1969-1979) well familiar to me, and beloved. From the stars of the era, to free agency, to the characters, to ten cent beer night and disco demolition, it's all stuff I love.
The layout of the book is very readable, with chapters punctuated with long boxed-off quotes from the participants such as Fergie Jenkins, Dusty Baker and Brooks Robinson among many many others. While the material was pleasantly familiar, I did learn a fair bit of stuff I hadn't known before. Who knew Dave KIngman could wrangle a 33-gallon beer keg? (4 other players together couldn't budge it.) or that John Candelaria enjoyed a 250 dollar hot dog in the dugout (including the fine.)
If you like baseball and like this era or want to know how the sport became what it is today, this book is for you.
View all my reviews
Ramblings about my dice baseball game and the fragile and neurotic personalities I assign to the players under my Goddess-hood.
Monday, November 11, 2019
Book Review : "When The Game Changed"
Saturday, November 9, 2019
1979 NL End of May Report
He wants a Clark bar. |
As noted in the preface to the AL report, I am re-replaying '79, it having been my first replay with the then-new cards and no tweaks. Now it's new cards, new boards, full rosters, trades, the works. Okay, let's get to the standings:
PIT 33-15 --- LAD 29-23 ---
NY 29-21 5 SD 27-26 2.5
MON 26-21 6.5 SFG 26-26 3
STL 25-25 9 CIN 23-26 4.5
PHI 23-27 11 HOU 23-31 7
CHC 20-28 13 ATL 18-33 10.5
By comparison, in my original replay, the eventual east champion Phillies were on top by smidgen over STL and PIT with NY and MON 5th and 6th with dismal starts. Torrid Cincinnati started off 35-11 and enjoyed an 8.5 game lead in the west over HOU and LA.
Leaders, with original leaders in parenthesis:
Feed meee! |
Losses: Denny-stl 2-7, Krukow-chi 2-7, Matula-atl 2-7, Shirley-sd 3-7
CG: Carlton-phi 8, Perry-sd 8, LaCoss-cin 7
SHO: Blue-sf 3, Vukovich-stl 3
Saves: Lockwood-ny 15, Tekulve-pit 13, Littell-stl 9, Sambito-hou 9, Sosa-mon 9 (Littell 8)
He's Mike Schmidt and you're not. |
RBI: Clark-sf 51, Horner-atl 49, Schmidt-phi 49, Parker-pit 43, Briggs-sd 41, Garvey-la 41 (Foster 45)
Runs: Clark-sf 42, Winfield-sd 42, Garvey-la 40, Rose-phi 40 (Lopes 39)
2B: Hernandez-stl 26, Parker-pit 24, Winfield-sd 18, Taveras-ny 17
3B: Taveras-ny 7, Briggs-sd 6, Cabell-hou 6
Steals: Cedeno-hou 18, Lopes-la 14, Moreno-pit 14, North-sf 13, Smith-sd 11 (North 22)
GIDP: Buckner-chi 9, Cabell-hou 9, Hendrick-stl 9, Montanez-ny 9
Errors: Foli-pit 11, Frias-atl 11, Landestoy-hou 11
Ream capsules:
"Boy, hit a couple dingers and everybody loses their minds!" |
Mets-elaneous: Whoa, Mets! They stunk like they should, the first time around, but this time they are--gasp!--contending, despite a run differential of minus 11. It's the bullpen, stupid! Skip Lockwood (4-1, 15 saves), and his pals Glynn and Allen have saved the team time and again. The relievers are a combined 13-6. Add to that the fact that the Metropolitans are a nifty 13-4 in 1-run games. Craig Swan (5-4) is really their only legit starting pitcher, though Tom Hausman somehow has managed a 5-0 log. Pete Falcone (1-5) seems to be the only Met in any kind of contact with reality. Though the team has slugged only 29 homers, they have gone doubles nutty with a crazy 109 already, led by Montanez with 16. (Montanez may be one reason they are over-achieving. I didn't do trades the first time, so they didn't have him at all. Moreover, he did most of his hitting in the final two months with Texas; here, the Mets are reaping the benefits.) Handsome young star Lee Mazzilli has just 4 homers, 3 of them in the season's early days, but has knocked in 39 runs and scored 36. The trade for Frank Taveras has worked out well, with Frank spraying gap hits all over the place. Can they keep this up? We'll see. What a story, if they can.
Expo-sitions: The Expos were the most disappointing team in my original replay, but are doing quite a lot better this time around despite a lackluster 13-14 mark in May. Larry Parrish boasts 15 doubles, 11 HR and 33 rbi. Ellis Valentine has chipped in with 32 rbi. Grizzled vet Tony Perez has scraped together just 7 rbi all season and has lost some of his playing time to Tony Solaita. The defense has been solid with a league-low 26 errors.
Try .357! |
Phil My Prescription: After a stunningly inept 6-16 April showing (and last place), the Quakers revamped the line-up and righted the ship in May, going 17-11. Lefty Carlton, who started the season 0-5, is up to 5-6 now and rolling. Tug McGraw was yanked from the closer's role and Ron Reed (5 saves) installed. Mike Schmidt strikes fear into opposing hurlers, and despite being intentionally walked with frequency, he still has 18 HR, 49 rbi. "Bull" Luzinski was about to lose his LF gig when he finally started hitting. Despite just a pair of homers, Greg has 15 doubles and 2 triples to go with 21 rbi. Considering his slow start, that'll do. Gary Maddox, moved from second to fifth in the order, has 36 ribbies and great hair. Pete Rose moved from lead-off to third and seems to be always on base in front of Schmidt. So...will the real Phillies please stand up?
Baby Bear's Porridge: Your Impartial Goddess is ever the lady, and so it tells you something that when I manage these Cubs I am given to fits of shouting "Score you dumb fuckers, score!" Ahem. The Cubbies have tallied just 174 runs, 32 fewer than anyone else. It's too bad, cos they are stingy with giving runs up allowing only 197. Dave Kingman bears some of the blame for the dearth of scoring at Wrigley, with 10 bombs and 27 rbi. Both marks lead the squad, but are pretty far below what was expected at this point. On the pitching rubber, Bruce Sutter does have 8 saves, but has not always been effective, as his 1-5 record would suggest.
Psst, chica....ask Tommy what he thinks about Dave Kingman. |
Pod fans are excited! |
Giants Gibberish: Stoppit, Jack Clark! The Giants right fielder capped off a crazy May with 3 HR, 2 doubles, a single, and 17 total bases in a 16-5 demolition of the Dodgers on the 29th. He knocked in a gaudy 30 runs during the month to up his total to a league-high 51. Can nothing stop him? Meanwhile, local head case Mike Ivie has slugged 10 bombs and knocked in 37, all the while not throwing the ball any more than he has to. Darrell Evans has pitched in with 20 xbh's. So what if no one has won more than 4 games except Vida Blue (6-4)? So what if the bullpen has just 4 saves? "Mediocrity is good enough for us!" crowed skipper Joe Altobelli.
Forget that and strap on your gear! |
Cosmic Astros: Poor JR Richard. He pitched 9 innings of no-hit shutout ball and got nothing. He was pinch hit for in the bottom of the 9th but a golden opportunity to score went a-glimmering and the game didn't end until Rafael Landestoy brought home the winner with a suicide squeeze in the 12th inning. That was on May 11th. Then on the 25th, he fanned 14 Padres but lost anyway. Nevertheless, the Spacemen put their horrid 6-17 April behind them and compiled a 17-14 May. Homers are scarce as hen's teeth, with just 13, 6 of them by Bob Watson. They've stolen 59 bases but been caught 27 times. Still, they are only 7 games out with 4 months to go. They could still get in this thing. "First we pass Atlanta, then we take Berlin!" shouted a confused Astro supporter.
"The rest of y'all need to stop blowing chunks." |
Hope you enjoyed. On to June!
Thursday, November 7, 2019
1979 Replay AL End of May Report
Hey fans. My friend Mike ("Get Mikey to try it!!") has convinced me that there is interest in this blog, so here we go. I am re-replaying the 1979 season. It was my first replay, with the then-current set of cards and I played it straight out of the box, no advanced stuff, no tweaks. Also, I used a 1980 schedule. Lo these nearly 40 years later, I am playing it again, but this time with the newest reissue of the cards, the newest boards, advanced options, and my Orsino Board (see top right.) I am curious to see how differently it may come out! Okay, on to AL end of May report, including standings, leaders, team capsules and some info about the original replay at the same point.
May was a great month for the Orioles and Brewers, not so great for the Twins or Yankees. Standings:
MIL 36-16 --- TEX 32-18 ---
BAL 31-21 5 KCR 30-21 2.5
BOS 29-20 5.5 CAL 29-22 3.5
NYY 29-22 6.5 MIN 25-25 7
DET 25-24 9.5 CHI 21-28 10.5
CLE 18-31 16.5 OAK 20-32 13
TOR 13-39 23 SEA 17-36 16.5
In my original replay at May's end, the Red Sox led the east at 30-16, 1.5 over the Brewers and 2.5 over NY. The Orioles were 5th, 20-28, 11 games out. Out west, the Royals were 30-16, 3.5 up on MIN and 4.5 up on TEX and CHI.
Leaders (with original replay leader in [parenthesis)
Wins: Caldwell-mil 10-1, Flanagan-bal 10-1, Frost-cal 8-3, Stanley-bos 8-3 (Frost, Splittorff 10-1)
Losses: Huffman-tor 0-8, Buskey-tor 1-8
CG: John-ny and Wise-cle 7
Saves: Marshall-min 15, Hrabosky-kc 14, Kern-tex 13, Gossage-ny 12, Lopez-det 11, Castro-mil 10 (Marshall 9) Not sure why I have way more saves this time.
HR: Lynn-bos 26, Singleton-bal 18, Jackson-ny 15, Thomas-mil 15 (Jackson, Lynn, Singleton 17 each)
RBI: Lynn-bos 57, Singleton-bal 53, Washington-chi 43, Brett-kc 42, Thomas-mil 42 (Lynn and Summers 57)
Runs: Lynn-bos 48, Baylor-cal 45, Gamble-tex 41 (Lynn 55)
2B: Lemon-chi 19, Cooper-mil 17, Rice-bos 17
3B: Brett-kc 6, Molitor-mil 5, Wilson-kc 5
Steals: Wilson-kc 31, Leflore-det 27, Dilone-oak 23, Henderson-oak 20 (Cruz 31)
Errors: Cruz-sea 11, Griffin-tor 11
GIDP: Ford-cal 17, Hobson-bos 11, 3 tied with 10
Team reports:
Beertown Babble: The Brew Crew turned in a fine 21-8 mark in May despite several injuries which shelved the likes of Larry Hisle and Ben Oglivie. Mike "Mister Warmth" Caldwell (10-1) and Jim Slaton (7-3) have given the Brewers a nice right-left combo at the top of their rotation which has yeilded a stingy 192 runs so far, second best in the loop. The Milwaukee club loves to face Toronto, drubbing the third-year Jays 7 times in 8 games.
Bird Doo: Following a lackluster 9-14 April, the birds exploded, going 22-7 in May and charging to the top of the heap in runs scored with 303, averaging a staggering 7.24 runs a game in May. "Somebody stop me!" they say. Lee May (4 rbi all season) landed on the DH junk heap in favor of Pat Kelly (12 HR, 32 rbi), Terry Crowley (11 runs, 8 rbi splitting time between Lonesome Junction and Baltimore) and Benny Ayala. Lefty hurler Mike Flanagan has gone 10-1 to lead the staff. Inconsistent museum piece Jim Palmer is a humble 2-4, but did win his last start. On the 25th at Detroit, light-hitting Mark Belanger slugged a 2-run inside the park home run!
Hub Hubbub: The Red Sox led the league in runs at the end of April, riding Fred Lynn's insane 19 HR, 39 rbi and .437 ba. Fred had a good but less crazy May, settling in at 26, 57 and .371 by month's end but the team fell all the way to 9th in runs. Lynn isn't getting enough help. Yaz is second on the club with 11 dingers, then Hobson with 8. Rice has just 7 but has 17 doubles and 36 rbi. Fisk has yet to get untracked with just 13 rbi despite staying healthy so far except for a rag arm. Human monument George Scott was felled by an urban renewal project and has been out since mid-month. Jerry Remy also missed time but is back. The Brohamer/Wolfe/Papi replacements weren't nearly the same.
Bronx Cheer: If only the Yanks could keep Ron Guidry (4-2) on the bump! He has been great when he's been able to go out there, but keeps having nagging injuries. Tommy John has 7 CG but is a modest 6-5. Looie Tiant (4-2) recently found himself the victim of an exploding cigar and will miss time. Goose Gossage (12 saves) nails down what can be nailed down but the Yanks were just 14-15 in the month. Reggie Jackson has 15 HR, 28 runs and 30 rbi, but is hitting just .253. Chris Chambliss has been the straw that stirs the Yankee drink, with 11 2B, 3 3B, 10 HR, 28 runs and a team-high 35 rbi. Injuries to him, Munson, Spencer, and Rivers have left the Bronx Bombers a little thin, but Chambliss and Rivers are due back to start June.
Tiger Tales: Detroit is one game above .500 despite a minus-41 run differential. "Too bad we can't get anyone out!" Jack Morris got some Blue Jays out at Toronto on the 28th with a no-hitter! Jack won 6-zip. He's 6-3. Retread Jack Billingham is a surprising 6-1 but it gets thin after that except for closer Aurelio Lopez (11 saves.) The offense has been a real group effort, led by John Wockenfuss (10 HR 24 rbi) and Alan Trammell (akso with 24 rbi.) The ballclub picked up journeyman flyhawk Champ Summers from the Reds on the 25th. he hit 6 HR for Cincy as a reserve, and has belted 2 homers since arriving in the Motor City. Skipper Les Moss likes his power potential.
Tribe Wampum: The Indians don't hit or pitch, and are ordinary defensively, therefore their 6th place standing is about right. Thunder Thornton started out hot but has sagged lately, coming up with 13 HR and 37 rbi altogether. Bobby Bonds, the big off-season acquisition, has just 5 HR, 26 runs, 24 rbi and 14 thefts. The Indians did please the home fans by turning 5 DP's against the Yankees on the 25th, but naturally they lost 2-0 anyway. The Memorial Day doubleheader between the two clubs on the 27th was played in 45 degree rain. Nice!
Jay Walking: Toronto followed up a nightmarish 3-19 April with an ordinarily awful 10-20 in May. Whee! The Jays' "attack" is the most anemic in the AL with just 194 runs scored, and a run differential of minus-111. Otto Velez (11 2B, 11 HR, 33 runs, 32 rbi) does what he can, and creaky old Rico Carty has chipped in with 30 rbi, but John Mayberry--beset with injuries in April--has just 5 HR and 16 ribbies. The pitching staff has been a real crapshoot. Short on talent to begin with, they have lost 5 different pitchers to injury already. Phil Huffman has been glowingly healthy, but awful at 0-8. Closer Tom Buskey is 1-8 (ouch!) with just 2 saves. In a recent game, he came in to protect a two-run lead, gave up immediate back to back homers and departed. It hasn't been pretty. However, on the 21st at home against Cleveland, big John Mayberry hit for the cycle.
Waltz Across Texas: The Rangers staff is downright miserly when it comes to giving up runs, with 9 shutouts and a league low (by 26) runs given up of 166. Every starter except Steve Comer (2-7) has been stellar, even the hallucinating Dock Ellis (6-2). Doc Medich came in from long relief to make a start and combined with ace closer Jim Kern (13 saves) for, you guessed it, a shutout. However, it hasn't been just pitching that has the Rangers atop the west. On the 19th they pounded out 24 hits in an 11-1 romp at Seattle. Big-hair Oscar Gamble has been the every day DH and has responded with 13 HR, 41 runs and 35 rbi. Buddy Bell has chipped in with 34 rbi. Ee-haw, they're riding high, hoss!
Royal Tidings: This is not your father's Royals pitching staff. They are striclty average and yet Gura is 6-3 and Splittorff is 7-2, not to mention the crazed "Mad Hungarian" Al Hrabosky with 14 saves already. It can't last, but this team may hit enough to make up for it. George Brett has 14-6-10 xbh's with 36 runs, 42 rbi and ,325. The club has stolen 78 bases in 96 tries, 16 more steals than runner-up Oakland, and 19 more attempts. On the 15th, Pete LaCock, son of game show emcee Peter Marshall, blasted a 2-run inside the park homer at Seattle as part of an 11-0 laugher.
Angel Food: In Anaheim, starters have to pitch until they drop, because the bullpen can't be trusted except for Mark Clear (6 saves.) As a result, Halo hurlers have notched a league-best 25 complete games. Frost is 8-3, Ryan a pedestrian 5-5 though he has 82 K's. The Angel bats are crazy good, though. They bombed 6 homers at the Kingdome (do I sense a pattern here) on the 31st in a 12-1 win. They swept that 3-game set by a combined tally of 29-5. Don Baylor has 13 HR and 36 rbi to go with a whopping 45 runs scored. Carney Lansford tops the team with 38 rbi, but Grich, Ford and Downing all have 33 or more rbi as well. Young Dickie Thon, finding himself at shortstop due to injuries to the first two Angel shortstops, broke up a no-hit bid with 2 out in the home 8th on the 20th. "I think I'll go on to have an injury-marred, frustrating career," he opined to reporters after the game.
Evil Twins: Jerry Koosman breezed his way to a no-hitter against the Blue Jays at Toronto on May 2nd, winning 11-0. That's the end of the good news for the Twinkies in May. After sprinting out to a 20-10 start, the Minnesotans sagged to 5-15 after that. Ken "It is the will of Landru" Landreaux and Roy Smalley, counted on to provide offense, largely fizzled in the month. The Twins lack power, with only 28 bombs so far, with nobody having more than 6. They don't run, either, with just 11 bags in 21 tries. Here's a weird tidbit: the Twins won it all in my original replay!
Pale Hosed: Rich Wortham, the poor man's Ross Baumgarten, fanned a gaudy 13 Angels on the 20th and was just 4 outs away from no-hit fame when bratty-ass Dickie Thon had to go and ruin it. But Rich won the game anyway, 6-0. The White Sox are a shocking 6-1 against powerful California, but 1-6 against Texas and 1-5 against weak sister Oakland. The Chisox have no bullpen, with their 7 saves spread among 4 no-name relievers. On the other side of the ball, Chet Lemon boasts 37 runs and 33 rbi, while Claudell Washington checks in with 15 doubles, 8 homers, and 43 rbi. The Sox hope that their hole at catcher is now filled with the acquisition of veteran Milt May from Detroit.
All A's: The double dose of speed at the top of the A's order--rookie Rickey Henderson with 20 steals and unheralded Miguel Dilone with 23--both decided to run with scissors and now a new plan must be drawn up. (And yes I know Henderson did not start the year with the team but I don't go by that.) Tony Armas (11 HR, 29 runs, 33 rbi) has been the big gun for Oakland. Weird stat: Jim Essian has 5 HR and just 6 rbi. "I don't want to overtax myself," he explained. The team was actually not-horrible in May, going 13-16. "So what if we've scored 196 runs and given up 334?" they ask.
Kingdome Dumbfuckery: Here they are, ladies and germs, the league's punching bag. The M's have given up 339 runs, more even than Oakland or Toronto. Mike Parrott (5-4) is okay but after that, ay yi yi. Add to that the fact that their pitchers seem to be made of glass. I even had to give minor league veteran Roy Branch 5 starts. He went 1-3. The team has only 4 saves, all by Shane Rawley. At the plate, Willie Horton has slowed since his torrid April, and checks in with still respectable numbers: 11 HR, 31 rbi. Rupe Jones got hot in May and soared to 39 rbi. "Staring at my bat helps a lot," he told assembled scribes. Second sacker Julio Cruz kicked two ground balls on the last day of the month to surge into the league lead in errors. Larry "Devil" Milbourne is right behind him with 10, despite being shelved with a sprained glove.
NL report soon.
Why is this man smiling? |
MIL 36-16 --- TEX 32-18 ---
BAL 31-21 5 KCR 30-21 2.5
BOS 29-20 5.5 CAL 29-22 3.5
NYY 29-22 6.5 MIN 25-25 7
DET 25-24 9.5 CHI 21-28 10.5
CLE 18-31 16.5 OAK 20-32 13
TOR 13-39 23 SEA 17-36 16.5
In my original replay at May's end, the Red Sox led the east at 30-16, 1.5 over the Brewers and 2.5 over NY. The Orioles were 5th, 20-28, 11 games out. Out west, the Royals were 30-16, 3.5 up on MIN and 4.5 up on TEX and CHI.
Leaders (with original replay leader in [parenthesis)
"Cos I'm better than you, it's the things that I do whoa whoa" |
Losses: Huffman-tor 0-8, Buskey-tor 1-8
CG: John-ny and Wise-cle 7
Saves: Marshall-min 15, Hrabosky-kc 14, Kern-tex 13, Gossage-ny 12, Lopez-det 11, Castro-mil 10 (Marshall 9) Not sure why I have way more saves this time.
HR: Lynn-bos 26, Singleton-bal 18, Jackson-ny 15, Thomas-mil 15 (Jackson, Lynn, Singleton 17 each)
RBI: Lynn-bos 57, Singleton-bal 53, Washington-chi 43, Brett-kc 42, Thomas-mil 42 (Lynn and Summers 57)
Runs: Lynn-bos 48, Baylor-cal 45, Gamble-tex 41 (Lynn 55)
2B: Lemon-chi 19, Cooper-mil 17, Rice-bos 17
3B: Brett-kc 6, Molitor-mil 5, Wilson-kc 5
things go better with coke! |
Errors: Cruz-sea 11, Griffin-tor 11
GIDP: Ford-cal 17, Hobson-bos 11, 3 tied with 10
Team reports:
Beertown Babble: The Brew Crew turned in a fine 21-8 mark in May despite several injuries which shelved the likes of Larry Hisle and Ben Oglivie. Mike "Mister Warmth" Caldwell (10-1) and Jim Slaton (7-3) have given the Brewers a nice right-left combo at the top of their rotation which has yeilded a stingy 192 runs so far, second best in the loop. The Milwaukee club loves to face Toronto, drubbing the third-year Jays 7 times in 8 games.
Bird Doo: Following a lackluster 9-14 April, the birds exploded, going 22-7 in May and charging to the top of the heap in runs scored with 303, averaging a staggering 7.24 runs a game in May. "Somebody stop me!" they say. Lee May (4 rbi all season) landed on the DH junk heap in favor of Pat Kelly (12 HR, 32 rbi), Terry Crowley (11 runs, 8 rbi splitting time between Lonesome Junction and Baltimore) and Benny Ayala. Lefty hurler Mike Flanagan has gone 10-1 to lead the staff. Inconsistent museum piece Jim Palmer is a humble 2-4, but did win his last start. On the 25th at Detroit, light-hitting Mark Belanger slugged a 2-run inside the park home run!
Hub Hubbub: The Red Sox led the league in runs at the end of April, riding Fred Lynn's insane 19 HR, 39 rbi and .437 ba. Fred had a good but less crazy May, settling in at 26, 57 and .371 by month's end but the team fell all the way to 9th in runs. Lynn isn't getting enough help. Yaz is second on the club with 11 dingers, then Hobson with 8. Rice has just 7 but has 17 doubles and 36 rbi. Fisk has yet to get untracked with just 13 rbi despite staying healthy so far except for a rag arm. Human monument George Scott was felled by an urban renewal project and has been out since mid-month. Jerry Remy also missed time but is back. The Brohamer/Wolfe/Papi replacements weren't nearly the same.
Bronx Cheer: If only the Yanks could keep Ron Guidry (4-2) on the bump! He has been great when he's been able to go out there, but keeps having nagging injuries. Tommy John has 7 CG but is a modest 6-5. Looie Tiant (4-2) recently found himself the victim of an exploding cigar and will miss time. Goose Gossage (12 saves) nails down what can be nailed down but the Yanks were just 14-15 in the month. Reggie Jackson has 15 HR, 28 runs and 30 rbi, but is hitting just .253. Chris Chambliss has been the straw that stirs the Yankee drink, with 11 2B, 3 3B, 10 HR, 28 runs and a team-high 35 rbi. Injuries to him, Munson, Spencer, and Rivers have left the Bronx Bombers a little thin, but Chambliss and Rivers are due back to start June.
Tiger Tales: Detroit is one game above .500 despite a minus-41 run differential. "Too bad we can't get anyone out!" Jack Morris got some Blue Jays out at Toronto on the 28th with a no-hitter! Jack won 6-zip. He's 6-3. Retread Jack Billingham is a surprising 6-1 but it gets thin after that except for closer Aurelio Lopez (11 saves.) The offense has been a real group effort, led by John Wockenfuss (10 HR 24 rbi) and Alan Trammell (akso with 24 rbi.) The ballclub picked up journeyman flyhawk Champ Summers from the Reds on the 25th. he hit 6 HR for Cincy as a reserve, and has belted 2 homers since arriving in the Motor City. Skipper Les Moss likes his power potential.
Tribe Wampum: The Indians don't hit or pitch, and are ordinary defensively, therefore their 6th place standing is about right. Thunder Thornton started out hot but has sagged lately, coming up with 13 HR and 37 rbi altogether. Bobby Bonds, the big off-season acquisition, has just 5 HR, 26 runs, 24 rbi and 14 thefts. The Indians did please the home fans by turning 5 DP's against the Yankees on the 25th, but naturally they lost 2-0 anyway. The Memorial Day doubleheader between the two clubs on the 27th was played in 45 degree rain. Nice!
He made Aunt Bee so proud! |
Waltz Across Texas: The Rangers staff is downright miserly when it comes to giving up runs, with 9 shutouts and a league low (by 26) runs given up of 166. Every starter except Steve Comer (2-7) has been stellar, even the hallucinating Dock Ellis (6-2). Doc Medich came in from long relief to make a start and combined with ace closer Jim Kern (13 saves) for, you guessed it, a shutout. However, it hasn't been just pitching that has the Rangers atop the west. On the 19th they pounded out 24 hits in an 11-1 romp at Seattle. Big-hair Oscar Gamble has been the every day DH and has responded with 13 HR, 41 runs and 35 rbi. Buddy Bell has chipped in with 34 rbi. Ee-haw, they're riding high, hoss!
Royal Tidings: This is not your father's Royals pitching staff. They are striclty average and yet Gura is 6-3 and Splittorff is 7-2, not to mention the crazed "Mad Hungarian" Al Hrabosky with 14 saves already. It can't last, but this team may hit enough to make up for it. George Brett has 14-6-10 xbh's with 36 runs, 42 rbi and ,325. The club has stolen 78 bases in 96 tries, 16 more steals than runner-up Oakland, and 19 more attempts. On the 15th, Pete LaCock, son of game show emcee Peter Marshall, blasted a 2-run inside the park homer at Seattle as part of an 11-0 laugher.
"Hi! Watch me ruin your chance at being remembered!" |
Evil Twins: Jerry Koosman breezed his way to a no-hitter against the Blue Jays at Toronto on May 2nd, winning 11-0. That's the end of the good news for the Twinkies in May. After sprinting out to a 20-10 start, the Minnesotans sagged to 5-15 after that. Ken "It is the will of Landru" Landreaux and Roy Smalley, counted on to provide offense, largely fizzled in the month. The Twins lack power, with only 28 bombs so far, with nobody having more than 6. They don't run, either, with just 11 bags in 21 tries. Here's a weird tidbit: the Twins won it all in my original replay!
Pale Hosed: Rich Wortham, the poor man's Ross Baumgarten, fanned a gaudy 13 Angels on the 20th and was just 4 outs away from no-hit fame when bratty-ass Dickie Thon had to go and ruin it. But Rich won the game anyway, 6-0. The White Sox are a shocking 6-1 against powerful California, but 1-6 against Texas and 1-5 against weak sister Oakland. The Chisox have no bullpen, with their 7 saves spread among 4 no-name relievers. On the other side of the ball, Chet Lemon boasts 37 runs and 33 rbi, while Claudell Washington checks in with 15 doubles, 8 homers, and 43 rbi. The Sox hope that their hole at catcher is now filled with the acquisition of veteran Milt May from Detroit.
All A's: The double dose of speed at the top of the A's order--rookie Rickey Henderson with 20 steals and unheralded Miguel Dilone with 23--both decided to run with scissors and now a new plan must be drawn up. (And yes I know Henderson did not start the year with the team but I don't go by that.) Tony Armas (11 HR, 29 runs, 33 rbi) has been the big gun for Oakland. Weird stat: Jim Essian has 5 HR and just 6 rbi. "I don't want to overtax myself," he explained. The team was actually not-horrible in May, going 13-16. "So what if we've scored 196 runs and given up 334?" they ask.
"Wanna see me throw one away?" |
NL report soon.
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