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Thursday, June 01, 2006

Pickoff Moves

Today's Birthdays

Dean Chance LAA,CAL b. 1941, played 1961-1966, All-Star: 1964, 1967. A Top 100 Angel, he was the Angels' only Cy Young winner prior to Bartolo Colón. He earned his Cy Young the hard way back in 1964, when they had only one award throughout baseball rather than one per league as they do now, and his competition included Sandy Koufax. In his 1964 season, gave up 14 hits all year to the Yankees; according to Robert Goldman's Once They Were Angels, Mickey Mantle was once overheard by Chance's teammate Albie Pearson to say, "When Chance pitches, I want to go hide." After hitting the only home run off Chance the Yanks would get all year, Chance glared at Mickey Mantle; Mantle, who had started smiling as he trotted round the bases, went back into a somber mood. "He knew he had cheated the hangman," wrote Goldman. He was that dominant.

Derek Lowe LAN b. 1973, played 2005, All-Star: 2000, 2002. An at times brilliant groundball specialist, he had three outstanding years in 1999, 2000, and 2001; now he's just a guy collecting a paycheck based on those performances and his 2004 postseason heroism, while providing occaisional off-field column-inches for Ron Fineman. Also known as the man who was saved from a series-ending loss to the Yankees (and eternal damnation in Boston) in Game 4 of the 2004 ALCS by the stolen base of yesterday's birthday boy, pinch-runner Dave Roberts. In fairness, he was also on the mound for (and won) Game 7 in that ALCS, and three-hit the mighty Cards lineup through seven strong innings in the concluding Game 4 of the 2004 World Series. Paul DePodesta hopefully learned a lesson about paying guys based on their postseason exploits, but then, he's got a lot of time to think about a lot of things, now doesn't he?

Ken McMullen CAL,LAN b. 1942, played 1962-1964, 1970-1975. Signed by the Dodgers for $60,000 in 1960 and coming up in 1962, McMullin could play the corner infield positions but never really hit well enough to justify playing time as a starter. Traded with Frank Howard and others to the Washington Senators for Claude Osteen, John Kennedy and cash in what probably ranks as one of the worst trades of the 1960's Dodgers; Howard would go on to some of the greatest years of his 16-year career with the Senators, and so would McMullin, hitting 18 home runs his first year at RFK, then a slightly-hitter-friendly park. From 1964 through 1970, in which latter year presumptive hero-to-be Billy Grabarkewitz took the job, the Dodgers had seven different third basemen, while McMullen was posting solid if unspectacular numbers for the Senators. A mobile third baseman, he led his Washington teams in total chances three straight years; he also led the team in errors in 1967 with 18, and was consistently in double digits.

Eventually traded to the Angels, he played for California for two and three quarters seasons or so, and then found himself as part of another idiotic trade; this time, the Angels sent Andy Messersmith to the Dodgers for a handful of nothing, including Bobby Valentine and Billy Grabarkewitz. Eventually, he got Wally Pipp'ed by Ron Cey; he retired two years later after bouncing around Oakland and Milwaukee.

Otto Miller BRO b. 1889, played 1910-1922, d. 1962-03-29. Somewhere between a reserve and a starter, Otto Miller caught about half the Brooklyn Robins' games from 1910 to 1922. He's most famous as one of the men on the wrong end of the only unassisted triple play in World Series history, in the fifth inning of Game 5 of the 1920 Series.

Ray Moore BRO b. 1926, played 1952-1953, d. 1995-03-02

Chuck Templeton BRO b. 1932, played 1955-1956, d. 1997-10-09

Ty Tyson BRO b. 1892, played 1928, d. 1953-08-16

Roster Notes


Comments:
I like your Ken McMullen "got Wally Pipp'ed by Ron Cey" comment. I dispute your assertion that the Frank Howard, Ken McMullen, and others trade for Claude Osteen and John Kennedy was bad for the Dodgers. Without that trade the Dodgers would not have won the N.L. pennant in 1965 and 1966. The last time I looked the Washington Senators with Frank Howard were next to last (3 games ahead of Cleveland in 1971) in the American League.
 
Richard -

I also remember Chance from his days with the Twins after he left the Angels. He had a kind of symmetry - he was as inept as a hitter as was proficient as a pitcher.

IIRC - of all baseball players with more career ABs than Chance, none of them have a lower career batting average than good old Dean.
 
I stand by my characterization of the Osteen trade as a disaster; he forced the Dodgers into an endless carousel at third base. Not only that, for the years that the Dodgers held onto Osteen, they got 146.1 win shares out of him; during that time, Howard alone was worth 202.6 win shares, mostly accruing to the Senators, and generally at a time when the Dodgers couldn't buy a hit. While he averaged an OPS+ of 156.8 from 1965 through 1971, it wasn't until Dick Allen that they got anywhere near as much value as Howard offensively. It was just a huge, huge mistake.
 
Claude Osteen saved the Dodgers bacon in the 1965 World Series with his shutout victory against the Twins in Game 3. If the Dodgers had not won that game they would have been down three games to none.

I was a Frank Howard fan. His home run off of Whitey Ford in Game 4 of the 1963 World Series went right over my head. The facts are that by 1965-66 the Dodgers were better off with Sweet Lou Johnson in left field than with Hondo. This is not an argument about Winshares. I am arguing in favor of two N.L. pennants and one World Championship that were the fruits of this trade. This trade was a "mistake" that I would like to see made again. We are not talking Frank Robinson for Milt Pappas here!

Yes indeed, the Dodgers had a revolving door at third base after Junior Gilliam retired that was not solved until the Penguin migrated to L.A. More teams than not have a problem decade of "who's on third" or at some other position. Most long suffering fans can identify with that.
 
Ah, the "flags fly forever" argument. The Dodgers also got skunked in the 1966 World Series, and spent three years in the wilderness thereafter realizing the entire team was built on the fulcrum of Sandy Koufax's elbow -- and the game was changing. Pitchers dueling it out in 1-0 complete game contests was about to become a thing of the past as the strike zone got rejiggered yet again. There's all kinds of moves Koufax's early retirement ended up creating; the Dodgers would have had better teams in the latter part of the 60's had they kept Howard.
 
WHAAAAT????!!! Are we watching the same Derek Lowe? "Just collecting a paycheck?" I wish all the Dodger pitchers were just collecting a paycheck then! I mean, maybe his ERA doesn't compare favorably to the beloved Angel's pitchers, oh wait, maybe it does, BY A HUGE DISPARITY!
 
Derek Lowe, 2005: 35 starts, 28 home runs. He's earned the skepticism.
 
I remember some Hall of Famers who gave up their fair share of homers, a guy named Don Sutton and another named Fergie Jenkins, come to mind. He had a bad year last year, he was going through an ugly divorce. What has he done lately? What did he do in 2004? How you can say that he is not earning his paycheck this year is incomprehensible.
 

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