Showing posts with label 1961. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1961. Show all posts

Thursday, June 5, 2014

RIP Don Zimmer 1931-2014

By now, those who follow the game of baseball know that Don Zimmer passed away yesterday. It is said that he died after "undergoing heart-valve surgery and then being diagnosed with fibrosis on his lungs."

There have been many articles that have since been written about him.

ESPN to MLB Network have quickly shown tributes to the baseball lifer.

Here's a guy who has been involved in some capacity with Major League Baseball from the time he suited up with the Brooklyn Dodgers and was named the starting shortstop on July 2, 1954 by Walter Alston in a game against the Phillies. Zimmer went 1-2 that day with a walk, scoring 2 runs. His lone hit was a triple in his first at bat.



He won his first World Series title with the Brooklyn Dodgers in that magical 1955 season. He followed the team to Los Angeles when they moved to the west coast. After six seasons in Dodgers blue, Zimmer was traded to the Cubs in 1960 and was named to his first and only All-Star team as a player in 1961.



He was left available in the 1961 expansion draft and was selected by the New York Mets. He appeared in 14 games for the Mets before being traded to the Reds. He returned to the Dodgers in a trade after the 1962 season, but his second stint in LA was short. After 22 games, he was traded off to the Washington Senators - the team that would go on to be the Rangers - where he finished his finished his playing career in 1965.

His lifetime numbers during this 12-season career include 1095 games played, a .235 average, 91 home runs, 352 rbi's, stole 45 bases and achieved an percentages of .290/.372/.662. Defensively, he appeared in 1000 games, committed 156 errors in 4019 chances (a .961 fielding percentage) with 2222 assists and 418 double plays. Primarily an infielder, he also spent time as a catcher (35 games) and an outfielder for 8.

But his career in baseball didn't end there. He spent the 1966 campaign in Japan, playing for the Toei Flyers, and returned to the US playing for two minor league clubs in 1967. It was after 1967 when he retired as a player and began his second career in baseball as a coach. After toiling in the minors as a minor league coach, he was hired by the Expos in 1971, thus beginning a coaching/managing career that would send him across the baseball map, from MontrĂ©al to San Diego, Boston, the Yankees, Cubs, back to the Yankees, Giants, Rockies, a third stint with the Yankees, and then finally the Devil Rays/Rays. In between coaching stints, he managed the Padres, Red Sox, Rangers, and Cubs, helming his clubs to a 885-858 record during his 13-season run as a manager.

That's all great, and he was still credited as being part of the Rays franchise in 2014, making this, if you count his minor league career (1949) year his 65th season in professional baseball. He was the last living member of the Brooklyn Dodgers to work in some capacity in the game.



But for the writer of this humble little blog, he will solely be remembered for the four seasons he took the reins as manager for the Chicago Cubs. From 1988 to 1991, Zim was the manager who guided the Cubs to a 265-258 record and led the team to the 1989 NL East title. For a 12-year-old, just learning the game, watching this club was fun. That 1989 team was special to me (I missed the 1984 version, and only three guys from that team were still around for the 1989 run). Even now, I could probably name a majority of the players on a team that included three future Hall of Famers, and countless (in my mind) All-Stars. Even now, the two guys who finished 1-2 in the NL Rookie of the Year race have become "Fan Favorites" (at least in the minds of The Topps Company).

It was Zimmer, affectionately known as Popeye here, that brought this team together, and although, in true Cubs fashion, they didn't get to the World Series, this team lives on in the hearts of Chicagoans everywhere.


I was sad when the Cubs let him go in 1991. But it looks like he went on to a fine career afterwards as a coach for all of those teams listed earlier.

When I saw the alert on my phone saying that Don Zimmer had died, a bit of my youth had died as well. He is to me what probably Gil Hodges was to some. Maybe Casey Stengel.

A baseball lifer, Zimmer was. And a man, who while not having the numbers for consideration as both a player and a manager, should be considered (in my opinion) for enshrinement into the Hall of Fame. Somehow, in some way, the man should be posthumously inducted into the Shrine in Cooperstown.

My condolences go out to the Zimmer family, the many organizations that welcomed Donald William Zimmer to their franchise, and to baseball fans everywhere.

God bless you, Don Zimmer. Thank you for being a part of my childhood.

Sincerely,

JayBee Anama

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Random Topps Card of the Day: 1961 Topps #51 Detroit Tigers Team Card

It's Retro Sunday!!! Thanks to the Topps Card Randomizer, introducing the Random Topps Card of the Day for Sunday, November 24, 2013:


  • Official Card Set Name and Card Number: 1961 Topps #51.
  • Team: 1960 Detroit Tigers.
  • Last Line of Statistics: 1960 stats: Managers: Jimmy Dykes (44-52); Billy Hitchcock;(1-0); Joe Gordon (26-31), 71-83, .461 PCT., 26 GB, Sixth Place American League.
  • Commentary: Hey, the Randomizer has picked another team card. And it's of a team that was so horrible the year prior that nobody would have picked them to win the AL the next. Well, the 1961 Tigers did not go on to win the American League pennant, but they sure made an improvement from the previous year. The Tigers finished in second place with a 101-61 record, 8 games behind the unstoppable Yankees, under new manager Bob Scheffing. Ironically, it was an 8 game losing streak at the beginning of September that may have eventually been the death of their chances of reaching the postseason. Anyway, the point of this card was to review the 1960 season. Basically, the card back lists the names of the team's batting leaders: Al Kaline (leader in average - .253 - and hits - 153) and Rocky Colavito (leader in home runs - 35 - and runs batted in - 153) and pitching leaders: Jim Bunning (leader in ERA - 2.79 - and strikeouts - 202). Below the leader stats is a list of all 14 of the Tigers pitchers with their records versus the other seven teams.
  • Lo-Hi Beckett value: $3.00-$8.00.


In case you're actually wondering, I don't own this card, but was able to get a crystal clean copy of the image from the from the Baseball Card Cyber Museum. So thank you Joe McAnally and the folks at the BCCM.

Well, it's back to normal on Monday. Tomorrow's card will be: 1999 Topps #24. Post will arrive at 1:00 PM CST. Come on back then to see what the Topps Card Randomizer gets us to look at then.

Sincerely,

JayBee Anama

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Random Topps Card of the Day: 1961 Topps #567 Danny Murtaugh NL All-Star Manager

It's Retro Sunday!!! Thanks to the Topps Card Randomizer, introducing the Random Topps Card of the Day for Sunday, October 14, 2012:


  • Official Card Set Name and Card Number: 1961 Topps #567.
  • Manager Name, team: Danny Murtaugh, All-Star Manager, National League.
  • Commentary: This technically wouldn't count as one of Murtaugh's regular MGR card as this card was part of the All-Star subset sponsored by Sporting News (his regular card is #138 in the 1961 Topps set).  Murtaugh inherited a team in 1957 that was 36-67 before taking it over.  He finished the year with a respectable 26-25 record.  Three years, and three winning records later, the Bucs beat the Yankees in the 1960 World Series.  And as the manager for the 1961 All-Star Game, the NL beat the AL in the first game (they played two back then) 5-4 in ten innings and went to a 1-all tie in the second game.  In fifteen years as the Pirates manager, his teams went 1115-950, won two World Series.  He passed away on December 2, 1976, after leading the Pirates to a 92-70 record.  
  • Lo-Hi Beckett value: $12.50-$30.00.
In case you're actually wondering, I don't own this card, but was able to get a crystal clean copy of the image from the from the Baseball Card Cyber Museum. So thank you Joe McAnally and the folks at the BCCM.

Well, it's back to normal on Monday. Tomorrow's card will be: 2010 Topps #482. Post will arrive at 1:00 PM CST. Come on back then to see what the Topps Card Randomizer gets us to look at then.

Sincerely,

JayBee Anama

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Random Topps Card of the Day: 1961 Topps #458 Willie Tasby

It's Retro Sunday!!! Thanks to the Topps Card Randomizer, introducing the Random Topps Card of the Day for Sunday, October 24, 2010:


  • Official Card Set Name and Card Number: 1961 Topps #458.
  • Player Name, position, team: Willy Tasby, outfielder, Washington Senators.
  • Major League Debut: September 9, 1958.
  • Last Line of Statistics: 1960 stats (Orioles-Red Sox): 144 G, 470 AB, 77 R, 126 H, 19 2B, 2 3B, 7 HR, 40 RBI, .263 ERA.
  • Any special information about player: Signed with the Browns as a Free Agent before the 1950 season. Selected by the Senators in the Expansion Draft #37th, 10/14/1960. Bats: right, Throws: right.
  • Any special information about this specific card: Tasby's third regular Topps card (total includes regular cards only). After a colorful start to the 1960's, Topps returned (thankfully) to a vertically oriented design for the 1961 campaign. It may have been a bit bland compared to what was named the "Set of the Decade" by Topps Magazine readers in 1991, but what was found in packs of 1961 Topps were cards filled with large pictures, headshots and poses alike, dominating the 2½ x 3½ piece of cardboard, with the only design element the rectangles that held the name, position, and team name of the player above. Willie Tasby made it to the big leagues when rosters expanded in September, 1958. He did well enough to impress the coaching staff that he won the centerfield position for the 1959 Orioles. He even was named to the first ever Topps All-Star Rookie team. Traded to Boston in June, 1960 (the bio on the back goes into full detail about the transaction that sent him to the Red Sox in exchange for Gene Stephens) he hit for a .281 average (108 hits), 7 hrs, 37 rbi. Tasby was exposed by the Red Sox in the AL expansion draft in December. The expansion teams, the Los Angeles Angels, and the Washington Senators (the original Senators moved to Minneapolis), were set to choose players from the eight existing American League teams only. And Tasby was selected as the 19th player for the new Senators. And it was with the Senators that he achieved career highs in home runs and rbi's (17 and 63 respectively). Below his statistics are cartoons depicting Tasby's minor league career (leading the Piedmont League with 27 home runs in 1954; hitting for a .322 average with AAA-Louisville in 1958), and his interests off the field ("Willie enjoys listening to modern jazz recordings. Solid.")
  • Lo-Hi Beckett value: $3.00-$8.00.
  • How many cards of this player do I own?: 0 cards.
In case you're actually wondering, I don't own this card, but was able to get a crystal clean copy of the image from the from the Baseball Card Cyber Museum. So thank you Joe McAnally and the folks at the BCCM. (You have to stop by and visit them now. They just announced that they are allowing more people to enter the museum at one time.)

Well, it's back to normal on Monday. Tomorrow's card will be: 1983 Topps #299. Post will arrive at 1:00 PM CST. Come on back then to see what the Topps Card Randomizer gets us to look at then.

Sincerely,

JayBee Anama

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Random Topps Card of the Day: 1961 Topps #404 Rogers Hornsby Baseball Thrills

It's Retro Sunday!!! Welcome to the first of what (hopefully) should be 52 Sundays when we will be featuring random Topps baseball cards from the years 1951-1975. Why 1975 as the cut-off???

Thanks to the Topps Card Randomizer, introducing the Random Topps Card of the Day for Sunday, January 3, 2010:


  • Official Card Set Name and Card Number: 1961 Topps #404.
  • Player Name, position, team: Rogers Hornsby, second baseman, St. Louis Cardinals.
  • Special: Baseball Thrills "Hornsby Tops N.L. with .424 Average."
  • Any special information about this specific card: The back of this card looks like it was taken from a newspaper. Baseball Thrills it's called, with a dateline of September 29, 1924. While it would be repetitive to read the headline, I can tell you that Hornsby, on this day, was "named the official winner of the National League batting crown, as he finished the season with a modern day record of .424." This would be the fifth year in a row that "Rajah" won the batting title (he would win his sixth in a row the following year, and one more in 1928). The .424 batting average would be the highest in his Hall of Fame career. The season was already over on the 29th, but the day before, the Redbirds played two games against the Cincinnati Reds, winning the first game 9-3, and losing the second by a score of 8-2. Even with taking the batting title that year, the Cardinals finished the season with an abysmal 65-89 record.
  • Lo-Hi Beckett value: $6.00-$12.00.
In case you're actually wondering, I don't own this card, but was able to get a crystal clean copy of the image from the Baseball Card Cyber Museum. So thank you Joe McAnally and the folks at the BCCM.

Well, it's back to normal on Monday. Tomorrow's card will be: 1987 Topps #397. Post will arrive at 1:00 PM CST. Come on back then to see what the Topps Card Randomizer gets us to look at then.

Sincerely,

JayBee Anama