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This Week in Yankees History August 26th-Sept 1st
10 months ago  ::  Aug 28, 2012 - 3:49PM #11
BigGuy
Posts: 37,977

This Day in Yankees History: August 28th Birthday Boys Help Win 1977 World Series




It was good that the Yankees did not let you go, Gator.

Jim McIsaac - Getty ImagesMore photos »


It was good that the Yankees did not let you go, Gator.





On this day in New York Yankees history, three important assets of the 1977 World Series championship team were born within seven years of each other. Without the contributions of these players, the Yankees might not have broken their 15-year championship drought, and they were all born on the same day.


Outfielder Lou Piniella was the oldest of the three, as he was born on August 28, 1943 in in Tampa, Florida. It was a long road to the big leagues for Piniella, who was originally signed by the Cleveland Indians in '62. The new Washington Senators liked the .428 slugging percentage he put up in 70 games with the Class D Selma Cloverleafs, so they drafted him from the Indians that November. Piniella earned a promotion to Class A with the Peninsula Senators, where he impressed with a .310 batting average and .465 slugging percentage that season. He missed most of '64 with an injury and was traded to the Baltimore Orioles as a "player to be named later" in August. Piniella actually made his major league debut that September with the Orioles as a pinch-hitter and pinch-runner. It would be four years before he reached the major leagues again.


Piniella slugged .400 with AA Elmira in '65, but was traded again in Spring Training of '66, returning to the Indians in exchange for catcher Camilo Carreon. He spent three long years in Oregon with the AAA Portland affiliate, slowly improving to a .303/.336/.434 career triple slash in AAA. He broke through for a couple games with Cleveland in September '68, then was drafted by the Seattle Pilots in the '69 expansion draft. Piniella was set to make the club at the end of Spring Training, but he was traded for the third time right before the season started to another expansion team, the Kansas City Royals. He hit leadoff in their first game and notched the first Royal at bat, hit, and run in franchise history. Piniella went on to win American League Rookie of the Year in '69 by hitting .282/.325/.416. In '72, Piniella made the only All-Star appearance of his career when he led the league with 33 doubles. At the end of '73 though, he was traded for the fourth and thankfully final time, to the Yankees with pitcher Ken Wright for veteran starter Lindy McDaniel. "Sweet Lou" became a fan favorite, and he had a 116 OPS+ in his first year with New York, but he slumped badly in '75 to a sub-.200 batting average with no power in 74 games. Although his playing time was cut, he would soon flourish under manager Billy Martin. In 100 games in '76, he had a 111 OPS+ for the AL champions and hit .300 combined in the ALCS and World Series. Even better days were to come in the next season.


Star-divide


Righthanded starter Mike Torrez was the second of the trio born on August 28th, entering the world in 1946 in Topeka, Kansas. He was signed out of Topeka High School in '64 with a $20,000 bonus, but he struggled in his first professional season, pitching to a 4.79 ERA in 20 games with Class A Raleigh. Walks were his problem, and he vastly improved his ERA to 2.56 in '66 by cutting his BB/9 from 7.2 to 4.2 in 30 games between Raleigh and AA Arkansas. Like Piniella, he spent a couple seasons at the AAA level trying to impress the big club, and though it took awhile, he succeeded. Torrez pitched to a 3.29 ERA with Tulsa from '67-'68, earning September call-ups to the NL champions each year. A 2.84 ERA in five games as a 21-year-old helped tip the Cardinals off that Torrez might have some value going forward. He pitched decently, but not great over the next two seasons with the Cardinals before badly declining in '71. He was traded to the Montreal Expos at the June 15th deadline for prospect Bob Reynolds; he spent most of the year embarrassing himself in AAA Winnipeg with a 8.16 ERA.


Torrez turned his career around though, and he made the Expos rotation in '72 with a solid spring. In 101 games over the next three seasons, his ERA+ was again about league-average at 98, though he still had some control problems. Unsatisfied with his performance, general manager Jim Fanning dealt Torrez and young outfielder Ken Singleton to the Orioles for four-time 20-game winner Dave McNally, outfielder Rich Coggins, and minor league starter Bill Kirkpatrick. The deal was horrendous, as McNally retired in May, Coggins was released, and Kirkpatrick never made the big leagues. Meanwhile, Singleton became an MVP candidate in Baltimore and Torrez had his first 20-win season in '75 with a 115 ERA+. When the Orioles had a chance to acquire slugger Reggie Jackson from the Oakland Athletics in the off-season though, Torrez was on the move again. In the pitcher-friendly Colosseum, Torrez had his career year, throwing 266.1 innings with a 2.50 ERA and a 134 ERA+. He even cut his WHIP to a career-best 1.194. Would Oakland finally became a home for him? The answer came after four starts in April of '77, when the Yankees decided to bring him on board to help the starting rotation. He was unfortunately late reporting to his first start from Oakland, so manager Martin turned to a spot starter--a lanky lefthander with a mean slider making his second big league start.


The last of the three August 28th birthday boys is Ron Guidry, one of the top pitchers in Yankees history. Like Piniella and Torrez thuogh, he also faced a stressful climb to the big leagues from the game's lowest levels. Born in 1950 in Lafayette, Louisiana, he was acquired by the Yankees through the MLB Draft, a new system for acquiring amateurs that was not in place when Piniella and Torrez were young. Guidry was drafted in the third round of '71 from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, and he immediately found success with Rookie League Johnson City, striking out 11.7 per nine innings. A pair of good seasons with Class A Fort Lauderdale and Kinston followed (combined 3.45 ERA), and "Gator" earned a somewhat-delayed promotion to AA with West Haven in '74. The Yankees decided that Guidry's slender build (5'11", 161 lbs.) would lead to arm problems later in his life, so they sent him to the bullpen in AA. He struggled to a 5.26 ERA and 9.4 H/9, but was promoted to AAA Syracuse the next year anyway.


Guidry put up a K/9 of 11.0 at Syracuse in '75, earning his first big league appearances as he went back-and-forth from 'Cuse to New York in the latter half of the season. He made one start and pitched to a 3.45 ERA in 15.2 innings with the Yankees. Yet it was back to 'Cuse again in '76 as he was cut on the last day of Spring Training. A month of great pitching later, he returned to New York, only to make one appearance. That one appearance was a disaster--two singles, a triple, and a Carl Yastrzesmki home run to make a two-run deficit 8-2 in favor of the Boston Red Sox. Martin lost faith in Guidry from the one appearance, and the lefty sat in the bullpen for two months, unused, before needing to go back to Syracuse simply to get into games. Guidry was fuming and nearly quit baseball. He was tired of the distrust, and he had to worry about providing for a wife and child on the way in three months. Guidry actually packed up the car with his wife and headed back toward Louisiana, but his wife convinced him to turn around and give baseball one more try. He pitched to a 0.68 ERA in 22 games with Syracuse in '76, earning a few more appearances at the end of the year with the Yankees. The next year, he narrowly avoided being traded by George Steinbrenner in Spring Training because general manager Gabe Paul refused to part with him. It was a prudent decision.


Piniella played 103 games for the Yanks in '77 and he made the most of his appearances, half of which came as the DH. He hit a career-best .330/.365/.510 with 12 homers and a 138 OPS+. Guidry pitched well in relief in four of five games to begin the year, then made the spot start for Torrez when the righthander was late reporting from Oakland. The man who would soon be nicknamed "Louisiana Lightning" had his best performance yet--8.1 innings of shutout baseball with eight strikeouts at home against the expansion Seattle Mariners. Despite this effort, he returned to the bullpen until getting another start on May 17th, another strong 8.1 inning start. "Gator" forced himself into the regular rotation, and he finished the season with a 2.82 ERA and 140 ERA+ in 210.2 innings with 176 strikeouts. On his birthday, he threw a two-hit shutout against the Texas Rangers. Guidry's numbers exceeded those of everyone in the starting rotation, and he even got a seventh-place finish in the AL Cy Young voting. Torrez did not do well at first, but in the second half he got his command under control and pitched to a 2.81 ERA with a 1.073 WHIP. The Yankees won 100 games and the AL East division title.


In the playoffs, Piniella hit .333 with three doubles against the Kansas City Royals during the ALCS. Guidry beat the Royals with a complete game three-hitter in Game 2. Torrez lost Game 3 when he left the game in the sixth inning having surrendered five runs on eight hits, but he entered the decisive Game 5 in relief of Guidry after the southpaw gave up three runs on six hits in 2.1 innings. Torrez pitched shutout baseball for 5.1 innings, giving the Yankees a chance to overcome the two-run deficit with four runs combined in the eighth and ninth innings. New York won the game 5-3 and went back to the World Series, where they faced the Los Angeles Dodgers. "Sweet Lou" continued to hit in the Fall Classic with a .273 average. He went 2-for-3 with a first-inning RBI single in the Yankees' 5-3 victory in Game 3, the same game that Torrez pitched all nine innings at Dodger Stadium. Piniella then went 1-for-4 with a run and an RBI in the Yankees' 4-2 win in Game 4 as Guidry pitched a four-hitter to give the Yankees a 3-1 World Series lead. After losing Game 5, the Yankees returned to New York, and thanks to Reggie Jackson's three home runs, the starter Torrez was still on the mound in the ninth inning with an opportunity to close out New York's first World Series title since 1962. The tying run got to first base, but pinch-hitter Lee Lacy popped up a bunt that Torrez caught and the Yankees were champions, with Torrez finishing his second complete game of the World Series.


These three men were all born on the same day, and though '77 was the only year in which they were all teammates since Torrez soon departed for the Red Sox, it was an incredible season. Today, Piniella turns 69, Torrez turns 66, and Guidry turns 62. Happy birthday, guys.


"Never seen a payroll on a ring"              "Leave the gun,  take the cannoli "
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10 months ago  ::  Aug 29, 2012 - 8:40AM #12
FW57Clipper51
Posts: 9,417

1951 New York Yankees: Mickey Mantle hits HR off of Browns P Satchel Paige



August 29, 1951- The New York Yankees pick on the lowly St. Louis Browns for a 15-2 win at Sportsman's Park. Mickey Mantle has 4 RBIs including a 3-run HR in the 9th inning off of veteran hurler Satchel Paige. Browns starter Ned Garver (15-9) is the loser for the Browns.



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10 months ago  ::  Aug 30, 2012 - 9:45AM #13
BigGuy
Posts: 37,977

This Day in Yankees History: Ageless Wonders Tame Whippersnappers- August 30, 1986




After recovering from his famous surgery with the Dodgers, Tommy John pitched into his forties with the Yankees.

Darryl Norenberg-US PRESSWIRE - Presswire


After recovering from his famous surgery with the Dodgers, Tommy John pitched into his forties with the Yankees.




The New York Yankees of the 1980s won more games in the decade than any other team , but one of the reasons they were only able to parlay this success into two American League East division titles was their pitching. While the offense was quite potent and featured All-Stars like Don Mattingly and Dave Winfield, the pitching staff struggled to attract such great players in their prime. Curiously, the starting rotation became a haven for aged aces. Ron Guidry played into his late thirties on the Yankees, but he was rarely the oldest arm on the staff. Former Los Angeles Dodgers ace and medical guinea pig Tommy John was on the team early in the decade, then came back in '86 to pitch four more seasons in his mid-forties. Additionally, both famous knuckleballing Niekro brothers Phil and Joe spent time in the Yankees' rotation during their forties, although it was Joe who was on the team when John returned to the Yankees.


On August 30th of that season, these two veterans were part of an unusual feat. The Yankees played a doubleheader at the Kingdome with the Seattle Mariners. Yankee manager Lou Piniella tapped the 43-year-old John to start the first game, and the 41-year-old Niekro to start the second game. It was the first time since September 13, 1933, when the Chicago White Sox sent veterans Red Faber and "Sad Sam" Jones to the mound, that two pitchers in their forties started both ends of a doubleheader for one team.


Star-divide


The oddity was a testament to the lasting abilities of John and Niekro. John recovered from his famous surgery at age 31 to pitch in the big leagues for an incredible 13 more years thanks to a post-surgery change in his pitching motion recommended by doctor and teammate Mike Marshall as well as the relative easiness with which he could throw his soft sinker. He was Jamie Moyer-esque when Moyer was just a rookie with the Chicago Cubs. For Niekro, surviving in the big leagues was much simpler. When mastered, the knuckleball does not hurt the arm much at all, and knuckleballers like the Niekros, Hall of Famer Hoyt Wilhelm, and Boston Red Sox great Tim Wakefield were thus able to pitch deep into their forties.


John did everything he could to help the Yankees win the first game of the doubleheader, matching opposing starter Bill Swift's shutout baseball through seven innings. John allowed only six hits and a walk, but the 24-year-old Swift did not even give up a hit to the Yankees until there were two outs in the eighth, when shortstop Wayne Tolleson beat out an infield single up the middle. Tolleson stole second to grant future Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson a chance to give John the lead with a single of his own, but Henderson popped out to second base. Upon his return to the mound, DH John Moses singled up the middle to lead off the inning, moved to second on a sacrifice bunt, then scored on a single by third baseman Jim Presley. Although he now trailed 1-0, John struck out dangerous right field power threat Danny Tartabull to end the inning. When the Yankees put runners on second and third with two outs against Swift, Mariners closer Matt Young entered the game and retired pinch-hitter Ron Kittle on a lineout to second base. John's solid eight-inning complete game effort was wasted.


In the second game, the Yankees again inexplicably struggled to score against the Mariner pitching. Both Swift and the second game's starter, Mike Brown, carried ERAs over 6.00 into the day, but after Swift shut them out, Brown limited them to two runs on three hits in seven innings of work. One of those runs came in the fourth inning, courtesy of first baseman Don Mattingly's 25th home run of the season, a blast over the left-center field wall. Armed with the one-run lead that John was not granted though, Niekro pitched five shutout innings, working around four hits and four walks to pick up the win. Relievers Rod Scurry and Dave Righetti followed Niekro with four shutout innings of their own, and the Yankees split the doubleheader by taking the second game 3-0.


On that day, the two quadragenarians combined for 13 innings with just one earned run allowed, a 0.69 ERA. The Mariner hitters notched 12 hits and five walks, but the veterans stayed tough and worked out of several jams. That's great pitching, combined age of 84 or not.


"Never seen a payroll on a ring"              "Leave the gun,  take the cannoli "
Photobucket
10 months ago  ::  Aug 30, 2012 - 10:39AM #14
115by7and9in61
Posts: 3,644

Aug 30, 2012 -- 9:45AM, BigGuy wrote:


This Day in Yankees History: Ageless Wonders Tame Whippersnappers- August 30, 1986




After recovering from his famous surgery with the Dodgers, Tommy John pitched into his forties with the Yankees.

Darryl Norenberg-US PRESSWIRE - Presswire


After recovering from his famous surgery with the Dodgers, Tommy John pitched into his forties with the Yankees.




The New York Yankees of the 1980s won more games in the decade than any other team , but one of the reasons they were only able to parlay this success into two American League East division titles was their pitching. While the offense was quite potent and featured All-Stars like Don Mattingly and Dave Winfield, the pitching staff struggled to attract such great players in their prime. Curiously, the starting rotation became a haven for aged aces. Ron Guidry played into his late thirties on the Yankees, but he was rarely the oldest arm on the staff. Former Los Angeles Dodgers ace and medical guinea pig Tommy John was on the team early in the decade, then came back in '86 to pitch four more seasons in his mid-forties. Additionally, both famous knuckleballing Niekro brothers Phil and Joe spent time in the Yankees' rotation during their forties, although it was Joe who was on the team when John returned to the Yankees.


On August 30th of that season, these two veterans were part of an unusual feat. The Yankees played a doubleheader at the Kingdome with the Seattle Mariners. Yankee manager Lou Piniella tapped the 43-year-old John to start the first game, and the 41-year-old Niekro to start the second game. It was the first time since September 13, 1933, when the Chicago White Sox sent veterans Red Faber and "Sad Sam" Jones to the mound, that two pitchers in their forties started both ends of a doubleheader for one team.


Star-divide


The oddity was a testament to the lasting abilities of John and Niekro. John recovered from his famous surgery at age 31 to pitch in the big leagues for an incredible 13 more years thanks to a post-surgery change in his pitching motion recommended by doctor and teammate Mike Marshall as well as the relative easiness with which he could throw his soft sinker. He was Jamie Moyer-esque when Moyer was just a rookie with the Chicago Cubs. For Niekro, surviving in the big leagues was much simpler. When mastered, the knuckleball does not hurt the arm much at all, and knuckleballers like the Niekros, Hall of Famer Hoyt Wilhelm, and Boston Red Sox great Tim Wakefield were thus able to pitch deep into their forties.


John did everything he could to help the Yankees win the first game of the doubleheader, matching opposing starter Bill Swift's shutout baseball through seven innings. John allowed only six hits and a walk, but the 24-year-old Swift did not even give up a hit to the Yankees until there were two outs in the eighth, when shortstop Wayne Tolleson beat out an infield single up the middle. Tolleson stole second to grant future Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson a chance to give John the lead with a single of his own, but Henderson popped out to second base. Upon his return to the mound, DH John Moses singled up the middle to lead off the inning, moved to second on a sacrifice bunt, then scored on a single by third baseman Jim Presley. Although he now trailed 1-0, John struck out dangerous right field power threat Danny Tartabull to end the inning. When the Yankees put runners on second and third with two outs against Swift, Mariners closer Matt Young entered the game and retired pinch-hitter Ron Kittle on a lineout to second base. John's solid eight-inning complete game effort was wasted.


In the second game, the Yankees again inexplicably struggled to score against the Mariner pitching. Both Swift and the second game's starter, Mike Brown, carried ERAs over 6.00 into the day, but after Swift shut them out, Brown limited them to two runs on three hits in seven innings of work. One of those runs came in the fourth inning, courtesy of first baseman Don Mattingly's 25th home run of the season, a blast over the left-center field wall. Armed with the one-run lead that John was not granted though, Niekro pitched five shutout innings, working around four hits and four walks to pick up the win. Relievers Rod Scurry and Dave Righetti followed Niekro with four shutout innings of their own, and the Yankees split the doubleheader by taking the second game 3-0.


On that day, the two quadragenarians combined for 13 innings with just one earned run allowed, a 0.69 ERA. The Mariner hitters notched 12 hits and five walks, but the veterans stayed tough and worked out of several jams. That's great pitching, combined age of 84 or not.





great piece Big Guy, thank you very much...my how things have changed....couldn't help but think of the Juan Marichal v. Warren Spahn game

"...let it be known that as of this date in Major League Baseball history the one, truly honest single season home run record...61 in '61..."
9 months ago  ::  Aug 31, 2012 - 8:21AM #15
FW57Clipper51
Posts: 9,417

1931 New York Yankees: Ben Chapman and Lou Gehrig lead the Yankees over the Red Sox



August 30, 1931- At Fenway Park, OF Ben Chapman and 1B Lou Gehrig each have 4 hits and together total 9-RBIs as the New York Yankees roll over the Boston Red Sox by the score of 14-4. One of Gehrig's hits is a Home Run, his 37th of the 1931 AL season,  2 of Chapman's also leave the park. Hal Rhyne has 4 hits for the Boston Red Sox.



Yankees OF/3B Ben Chapman





Yankees 1B Lou Gehrig


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9 months ago  ::  Aug 31, 2012 - 9:03AM #16
FW57Clipper51
Posts: 9,417

1925 New York Yankees: Babe Ruth in hot water with Yankees Owner Jacob Ruppert and Manager Miller Huggins



August 31, 1925- Yankees slugger Babe Ruth meets with New York Yankees team owner Jacob Ruppert, he learns that the owner is 100% behind Yankees Manager Miller Huggins suspension and fining of Ruth. He announces that Ruth will remain suspend until he apologizes to Huggins, and until such time as Huggins decides to lift the player’s suspension. The $5,000 fine is the largest ever given by a MLB team to one of it’s own players, would stick.  It was later refunded to Babe Ruth in 1929 after Miller Huggins death in September, 1929.


Yankees Co-Owners Jacob Ruppert and Col. Huston (who was bought out by Ruppert in 1921), Manager Miller Huggins and OF Babe Ruth



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9 months ago  ::  Sep 01, 2012 - 1:00PM #17
FW57Clipper51
Posts: 9,417

1961  New York Yankees: Yankees edge Tigers at Yankee Stadium



September 1, 1961-The American League's biggest crowd of the 1961 season‚ 65‚566 fans‚ see lefty veteran starters Whitey Ford and Don Mossi duel at Yankee Stadium as a weekend battle for AL 1st place begins.  Ford goes 4 2/3 innings followed by fellow Yankees lefty relievers Bud Daley and closer Luis Arroyo. A two-out‚ 9th inning hits by Elston Howard‚ Yogi Berra‚ and Bill Skowron give the Yankees, a 1-0 win over the Tigers. Luis Arroyo picks up his 12th victory of the 1961 AL season. Mossi takes the complete game loss for the Tigers, he is now at 14-4.



Elston Howard, Bill Skowron, Luis Arroyo & Yogi Berra

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