|
|
|
Hal
Brown No-Hits Los Angeles
Spider
Fans Ecstatic, Second No-Hitter in Two Weeks
SAN
FRANCISCO (July 16) -- Spiders fans haven't had much to
cheer about this inaugural season. Their team is
51-84 and just 5.5 games out of the cellar. But
today Hal "Skinny" Brown gave the home crowd
something to cheer about, with a no-hitter against Los
Angeles, their fellow expansionists whom they trail by
13.5 games. Brown pulled a "Sphinx Mossi"
going 0-7 in his 8 previous starts. In short, he
was the least likely candidate to throw a no-no.
George Strickland spoiled the perfect game with a
leadoff walk in the sixth and drew another walk in the
eighth, but aside from that Skinny retired 27 out of 27
batters.
Brown began his career with Louisville in
1951, but was relegated mostly to the minor leagues and
occasionally mopup duty with the big club until last
season, when he started 17 games and pitched 143
innings, compiling a disappointing 3-17 record and 6.73
ERA. He was unprotected by the Colonels and picked
up by San Francisco in the 7th round of the expansion
draft.
Fresh off an invigorating 17-4 thrashing of
Washington the day before, 18,161 Seals Stadium faithful
roared their approval and stormed the field as Cal
Abrams bounced to Rocky Bridges for the final out, and
rookie catcher Elston Howard rushed out to lift
"Skinny" into the air. It was the fourth
no-hitter in UL history, and the second this
month. St. Louis' Sam Zoldak tossed a no-no
against Washington on August 2.
Tonight's
Special: Ding Dongs & Taters
A
quick look at the United Leaguers who light the lamp
most often
by Lance
Mueller
(Aug.
16) – Hodges, Kiner, Musial, Zernial…glance at the
year end homerun totals for the United League and
chances are you’ll see one of those four names near
the top. It’s no coincidence those four mashers are
also atop the UL career leader board for homers. But
when it comes to round trippers it’s not just about
how many, it’s also about how often. A study of this
season’s players with 15 or more homers to date – as
well as the career numbers of players with 90+ HRs –
turned up some interesting Homeruns per At Bats stats.
Below are the players who fall into one or both of the
above categories. Next to their names is the number of
at bats between homeruns, in parenthesis is their
current homer total. And for all of you who took a pass
on trading for Bobby Thomson, you might not like what
you see.
| 1955
(thru Aug. 15) |
|
CAREER |
|
|
AB/HR |
HR |
|
|
AB/HR |
HR |
|
Ralph
Kiner |
11.7 |
33 |
|
Ralph
Kiner |
13.6 |
181 |
|
Bobby
Thomson |
13.8 |
19 |
|
Gil
Hodges |
15.0 |
170 |
|
Gus
Zernial |
14.3 |
25 |
|
Duke
Snider |
15.5 |
108 |
|
Stan
Musial |
14.7 |
29 |
|
Stan
Musial |
16.1 |
151 |
|
Dick
Gernert |
16.2 |
15 |
|
Bobby
Thomson |
17.9 |
97 |
|
Willie
Mays |
16.3 |
24 |
|
Gus
Zernial |
18.1 |
137 |
|
Vic
Wertz |
16.9 |
22 |
|
Roy
Campanella |
18.2 |
131 |
|
Jackie
Jensen |
16.9 |
26 |
|
Vic
Wertz |
19.7 |
126 |
|
Roy
Campanella |
17.0 |
23 |
|
Jackie
Jensen |
22.2 |
121 |
|
Duke
Snider |
17.6 |
20 |
|
Yogi
Berra |
22.3 |
103 |
|
Gil
Hodges |
18.1 |
22 |
|
Larry
Doby |
23.2 |
94 |
|
Dick
Kokos |
19.4 |
19 |
|
Mickey
Mantle |
23.3 |
106 |
|
Eddie
Mathews |
19.7 |
20 |
|
Vern
Stephens |
23.6 |
94 |
|
Mickey
Mantle |
20.4 |
20 |
|
Willie
Mays |
24.3 |
100 |
|
Gene
Woodling |
21.6 |
18 |
|
Jackie
Robinson |
25.5 |
96 |
|
Willie
Jones |
23.9 |
18 |
|
Willie
Jones |
26.9 |
90 |
|
Irv
Noren |
25.2 |
17 |
|
|
|
|
|
Bill
Skowron |
26.6 |
16 |
|
|
|
|
|
Jackie
Robinson |
29.7 |
15 |
|
|
|
|
Gorman
Pitcher of Week, Month, Year?
Cy Young Race Down to
the Wire
BROOKLYN
(Sept. 1) -- Tom Gorman (24-7, 3.01) solidified his Cy
Young bid with his best month of the year. The
30-year-old northpaw was 5-0 in August, with two
no-decisions and a 2.26 ERA. He threw a five-hit
shutout against Boston on Aug. 26, his fourth of the
year, and leads the league in wins and complete games
(21). Gorman is a strong candidate for this year's
Cy Young Award, but has some stiff competition, led by
Carl Erskine, Herm Wehmeier, and Whitey Ford.
|
CY YOUNG CANDIDATES |
August |
|
|
W-L |
ERA |
GS |
CG |
IP |
K |
R/9 |
WHIP |
W-L |
ERA |
GS |
IP |
|
Tom
Gorman, BRO |
24-7 |
3.01 |
35 |
21 |
284.1 |
129 |
11.0 |
1.19 |
5-0 |
2.26 |
7 |
59.2 |
|
Carl
Erskine, WAS |
22-8 |
2.51 |
34 |
16 |
290.1 |
158 |
9.9 |
1.06 |
2-3 |
2.69 |
7 |
63.2 |
|
Herm
Wehmeier, LOU |
20-4 |
2.57 |
30 |
12 |
249.0 |
131 |
9.0 |
0.97 |
2-1 |
1.80 |
6 |
50.0 |
|
Whitey
Ford, CHI |
20-3 |
2.71 |
28 |
11 |
219.1 |
230 |
10.3 |
1.14 |
4-1 |
5.36 |
6 |
45.1 |
Hacker Throws Second Shutout
WASHINGTON
(Sept. 1) -- Rookie Warren Hacker threw a two-hit
shutout against Los Angeles on Aug. 27, his second
shutout of the year. Hacker had a rough month but
is still 10-9, 3.31 for the season. The win
snapped a three-game losing streak. The Monuments
are 6.5 games behind with 19 games to play.
More New York
Injuries: Robinson, Loes
NEW
YORK (Sept. 1) -- The Gothams lost Mike Fornieles to a
career-ending injury on May 22, Larry Doby for nine
weeks and Bob Friend for five weeks, and the injury bug
continued into late summer. This time with a
twist. On Aug. 30, in a 6-2 win at Fenway Park, two
Gothams got hurt on the same day. Jackie Robinson
(.276-15-56) hurt his arm in the second inning, throwing
out Jim Gilliam. And then in the eighth, pitcher
Billy Loes (11-15, 4.52) left the game with pain in his
bicep. Both players will miss the final month of
the season. Robinson, who was diagnosed with bone
chips in his shoulder, has been prone to injury in his
United League career and will turn 37 in the off-season,
leading to retirement speculation. Loes ruptured a
bicep tendon, and at 25, remains one of the keystones of
the Gothams staff.
Musial, With Fresh Contract, Wins Batter of Month
|
|
|
|
|
CONTRACT
RENEWALS PREVIEW by
Glen Reed
|
|

BROOKLYN
SUPERBAS
87-47 -- 10-4
|
The
worst wounds are self-inflicted, which makes the
failure to account for all my expiring contracts
all the more painful. The mid-season trade for
expirees Frank Thomas, Bobby Brown, and Farmer
Moore put me one over the edge, knocking me into a
deficit contract situation. In the final analysis,
it came down to two of Moore, Brissie, and Dorish,
with the latter two getting the nod because of
their better ratings, despite their advanced age
and salary requirements. All my other decisions
were fairly easy--core players Minoso, Hodges,
Runnels, and Burdette populate the '55 contract
tote board.
|
|

WASHINGTON
MONUMENTS
81-54 6.5
9-6
|
There
was a great deal of discussion about whom Kaplan
would bring back from his talented and deep pool
of expirees, but that conversation lands well
wide of the mark. That's because the single most
important returnee for the Mons won't come off
this list, but the disabled list in the form of
one Stu Miller. Let the record show that Kaplan is
3-0 versus the field when Captain Stu-bing is at
the helm, and 0-2 without him (no, I'm decidedly
not counting my proverbial chickens before they
hatch, it just makes for a better story that way).
As for contract renewals, it's a slam dunk that
such valuable players as the Silver Fox, McDougald,
Frankie Smith, Don Larsen, and the great Larry
Jansen will all be back for another shot at
greatness. Now, there was some speculation that
the aging Jansen would be let go, but with the
biggest cash horde in the league and the
opportunity to put together perhaps the greatest
rotation the UL will ever see with Miller and
Erskine, and Jansen pitching out of the three
hole, there's little doubting Kaplan's intentions.
|
|

LOUISVILLE
COLONELS
74-61
13.5 9-6
|
Nowhere
does the wheel of talent turn as in the
Bluegrass
State
. Surrender the two best prospects in the
expansion draft, and go on to your first winning
season on the circuit. Trade a HoF CF, and bring
in the best young lefty in the business. And don't
worry, there's always Kaline blossoming in the
minors. Need a backup receiver? Trade a top-20
prospect. So
why should the current round of contract renewals
be any different? Renew an
HoF
second-sacker and wave good-bye to a four-star
pitching prospect. Just another day at the office
beside the
Ohio River
. Certainly the weight of all those years of high
draft picks has begun to tell, because no team
outside of the nation's capitol boasts more raw
talent--two-piece or by the bucket, these Colonels
are finger lickin' good, so to speak.
Long-suffering GM Mark Allen looks to present his
boys time and again in coming years as legitimate
contenders for King Kaplan's throne.
|
|

ST. LOUIS
MAROONS
71-62
15.5 7-8
|
So often the
bridesmaid, the Dark Reds try to regroup after a
year in which they played more like Molly Maid.
The core remains intact, with management rewarding
St. Louis' favorite son, Stan the Man, with a
whopping $11 million a year for the next five
years. Musial will complete the contract, and
likely his career, at the age of 38 in a uni the
color of maroon and cream and in the only city in
which he's ever played pro ball. Management's
easiest decision was re-upping Cy Young winner
Billy Pierce, among the game's very best pitchers.
But
the upcoming re-entry draft has significance for
another reason, as GM Timothy J. Smith has a real
challenge restoring the Dark Red luster. Outside
of Piercey, the starters are old (four will be 34
or older at the start of the '56 campaign) or
have been victims of cruel downgrades--witness
Vern Law. What's worse, St. Louis loses three
young, if unspectacular, pitchers this contract
round. Is there a remedy for a staff that's gone
from second to fourth and an offense that tumbled
all the way from first to seventh? It's not clear.
But what is certain is that young Timmy has been
able to pound the pavement and turn up whatever
piece he needs time and again in his run of a
first and three seconds. That magical chain broke
in spectacular fashion with the Gromek trade, but
already this season Smith's been back at it,
snapping up a highly coveted young lefty-hitting
infielder for not much.
|
|

CHICAGO
COLTS
71-63 16 6-9
|
Nowhere
than in GM Lance Meuller's fashionable La Brea
penthouse apartment do the contract decisions get
any easier. "Mr. Colt" Ernie Banks and
the "Chairman of the Board" are up for
renewal. There was much hand-wringing--and a
half-hearted last-minute trade attempt--over
whether or not to re-sign one-time All-Star Bobby
Thomson, but frankly, it was never in doubt. The
"Staten Island Scot" hits for power, has
a discerning eye at the plate, and can play half
the positions in the park. Players of that ilk
simply cannot be jettisoned, and certainly not
when cash is no obstacle. And indeed, Lancey sits
firmly atop one of the biggest war chests in the
league, even after springing for a new stop on the
el-train across from Wrigley.
|
|

NEW
YORK
GOTHAMS
66-69
21.5 7-7
|
Kudos
to Gothams owner Don Carrington, who radically
improved his performance as general manager and
talent evaluator over 1954. Only LOU lost more
talent in the expansion and contract derby of '54,
as Carrington renewed only a single player--the
dearly departed Mike Fornieles. Carrington's
abilities as a coach have never been in doubt--he
guided the Gothams to their best record ever in
his first year at the helm. Perhaps only Kaplan
gets more out of his lineup. This year, Don was
careful to salt away his best players, including
the highly regarded Bob Friend, the most likely
candidate to replace Forny in the rotation, if not
the hearts of Gotham faithful.
|
|

LOS ANGELES
OUTLAWS
64-70 23
8-7
|
If
Chicago has it best, Outlaw owner Christopher
McCreight has it worst of all. He is faced with
the option of renewing not one but two $7.5
million men. One is former Superba and Maroon Roy
Campanella. Campy's all but assured of his fourth
turn on the UL All-Star team, and his well-timed
MVP drive means a certain renewal that will push
him into the rarified salary air above $10 million
per annum. The other biggie is Don Newcombe,
acquired in a pre-season trade with Mueller's
prancing ponies. The deal looks an astute salary
dump for Lancie, and the least productive of
McCreight's considerable moves. That's because
Newk struggled mightily--both before and after the
deal--and now finds himself laboring at AAA
Dallas. It's not inconceivable that Newk's
mediocre ratings, massive salary, and poor track
record (his career ERA is in excess of 5 in almost
a thousand innings of work) mean the career of
this 1949 and '50 Brooklyn Dodger All-Star could
be at an end at the age of 28. If so, it would
rate as one of the most spectacular flame-outs in
UL history.
It's another tough call between Erv
Palica and a second former Colt, Bobby Avilla. The
30-year-old swarthy second-sacker looks a likely
second choice to Palica, who's gone a
mind-boggling 16-8 for the first-year franchise
with the Skoal Bandit for a mascot. Palica's
ratings are actually one tick better than
Newcombe's, but that's where the similarities
end--Palica earns our vote for being younger,
cheaper, and having a better ERA and win pct. To
reject Avila would be to leave McCreight with
nothing to show for Pesky, Seminick, and Jones.
It'll take considerable fortitude to make the
call, but the bet here is that LA's founding
owner, who established so much credibility quickly
by thoroughly dominating the expansion draft, will
let Avila walk and not throw good money after bad.
|
|

BOSTON
BEACONS
62-73 25.5
8-7
|
Money,
so they say, is the root of all evil today. What's
evil, as GM C. Benson Qualls can attest, is an
investment of upwards of $25 million in big-name
hurlers with no rate of return. Spahn, Lopat, and
Lemon--first-, third-, and fifth-round picks in
the all-important initial draft--have been nothing
short of spectacular disappointments and account
for the Beacons' inability to peek above .500 so
far in their brief history. And Fred Hutchinson,
brought over in a bid to make a pennant run
through an expansion-depleted field, was
absolutely destroyed by talent downgrades,
effectively ending his
Boston
career before it ever started. There is a beacon
of hope amid the gloom in Beantown--the pitching
purge clears the way for Qualls to bring up his
terrific trio of AAA starters – Jackson, Brewer,
and Portocarrero – all rated as top-20
prospects. Add to that other solid young pitchers
in Worthington and Hillman, and the brilliant
young closer Leo Kiely--who's managed to compile a
whopping 80 career saves despite never playing for
a winning team (and all before his twenty-fifth
birthday) and Qualls may just have the makings of
a pitching staff worthy enough to match his
sensational offense.
|
|
SAN FRANCISCO
SPIDERS
51-84
36.5 6-9
|
The
bulk of the young Arachnids' 1955 contract
expirees will be renewed . . . by Brooklyn. New GM
John Nellis offloaded Brown, Thomas, and
Moore--all of whom were up for renewal this
year--in exchange for players and picks. This all in
the name of weaving his own roster web, rather
than tread the rough ground left him by founding
owner Mark (not-so) Cooley. For Nellis, the
renewals he was left with added up to a case of
addition by subtraction--the waiving of Ned Garver
lops $4.5 million off the payroll and considerable
dead weight off the rotation. Garver--about whom
it was once said, "you can't spell 'boned'
without 'Ned'"--broke the hearts of no less
than three UL GMs, and was the object of scorn and
ridicule heading into the expansion draft, when he
was inexplicably taken seventh overall by previous
Spider management.
|
|

DETROIT
SOUND
45-89 42 4-11
|
It's
fashionable now to call Reconstruction the second
Civil War. Somehow this strikes me as a media
conceit, but it's relevant for our purposes
because it gives you some idea how difficult the
task facing new GM Sean Holloway in unmaking years
of not-so-benign neglect. Brooklyn and Louisville
were the worst two teams in the league in 1951 and
only now have they staked an enduring claim to the
top half of the table. Perhaps you could argue
that expansion has thinned the field, making
Holloway's job easier, that the revitalization of
this moribund franchise won't be the biggest
comeback since some guy named Lazarus. You could
argue that, but I think you'd be wrong. Look at
the Sound's company below the mid-line--the
expansion teams bring a significant edge in prospects
and/or picks, while Boston features a dynamite
young offense and pitching prospects to match.
Still and all, you can't count out the
multi-lingual international financier with a ream
of advanced degrees and a penchant for blockbuster
trades (I refer you to the Barry Bonds/Vladi
Guerrero mega-deal of a league past, or future, I
suppose).
|
|
|
|
September
1, 1955
|
|
NEXT
SIM
|
|
Wed 2/18
(to Sep 9,
contract
renewals due)
Rosters Due: 12pm PT
|
|
UPCOMING
SIMS
|
|
Sat 2/21
(to Sep 16)
Wed 2/25
(to Sep 23,
end of season)
Mon 3/8
(Drafts begin)
|
|
| |
|
|
BATTER
of the MONTH
|
| APR |
Minnie
Minoso, BRO |
| MAY |
Ralph
Kiner, DET |
| JUN |
Minnie
Minoso, BRO (2) |
| JUL |
Willie
Mays, WAS |
| AUG |
Stan
Musial, STL |
| PITCHER
of the MONTH |
| APR |
Carl
Erskine, WAS |
| MAY |
Johnny
Antonelli, LOU |
| JUN |
Whitey
Ford, CHI |
| JUL |
Carl
Erskine, WAS |
| AUG |
Tom
Gorman, BRO |
| PLAYER
of
the WEEK |
| 4/11 |
Dick
Kokos, STL |
| 4/18 |
Willie
Jones, LA |
| 4/25 |
Minnie
Minoso, BRO |
| 5/2 |
Jim
Busby, NYG |
| 5/9 |
Roy
Campanella, LA |
| 5/16 |
Ralph
Kiner, DET |
| 5/23 |
Stan
Musial, STL |
| 5/30 |
Dave
Koslo, WAS |
| 6/6 |
Minnie
Minoso, BRO (2) |
| 6/13 |
Jim
Finigan, CHI |
| 6/20 |
Eddie
Mathews, BOS |
| 6/27 |
Eddie
Mathews, BOS (2) |
| 7/4 |
Joe
Adcock, WAS |
| 7/11 |
Sid
Gordon, LOU |
| 7/18 |
Willie
Mays, WAS |
| 7/25 |
Warren
Hacker, WAS |
| 8/1 |
Roy
Campanella, LA (2) |
| 8/8 |
Gene
Woodling, BRO |
| 8/15 |
Joe
Ginsberg, WAS |
| 8/22 |
Hal
Brown, LA |
| 8/29 |
Tom
Gorman, BRO |
|
|
LEAGUE
LEADERS
|
|
|
| Minnie
Minoso, BRO |
.348 |
| Gene
Woodling, BRO |
.344 |
| Roy
Campanella, LA |
.339 |
| Gene
Hermanski, LA |
.327 |
| Jim
Gilliam, BOS |
.323 |
| Stan
Musial, STL |
.320 |
| Willie
Mays, WAS |
.315 |
| Nellie
Fox, LOU |
.315 |
| *Mickey
Mantle, BOS |
.314 |
| Hank
Thompson, WAS |
.311 |
|
HOME
RUNS |
| Ralph
Kiner, DET |
35 |
| Willie
Mays, WAS |
33 |
| Stan
Musial, STL |
31 |
| Roy
Campanella, LA |
27 |
| Jackie
Jensen, LOU |
27 |
| Gus
Zernial, CHI |
26 |
| Gil
Hodges, BRO |
24 |
| Duke
Snider, WAS |
24 |
| Mickey
Mantle, BOS |
23 |
| Vic
Wertz, SF |
23 |
|
RBI |
| Roy
Campanella, LA |
112 |
| Ralph
Kiner, DET |
104 |
| Stan
Musial, STL |
99 |
| Sid
Gordon, LOU |
96 |
| Willie
Mays, WAS |
95 |
| Irv
Noren, NYG |
93 |
| Mickey
Mantle, BOS |
92 |
| Eddie
Mathews, BOS |
88 |
| *Willie
Jones, LA |
84 |
| Minnie
Minoso, BRO |
82 |
|
OPS |
| Roy
Campanella, LA |
1040 |
| Willie
Mays, WAS |
1021 |
| Gene
Woodling, BRO |
983 |
| Ralph
Kiner, DET |
983 |
| Stan
Musial, STL |
978 |
| Minnie
Minoso, BRO |
975 |
| Mickey
Mantle, BOS |
954 |
| Eddie
Mathews, BOS |
917 |
| Hank
Thompson, WAS |
904 |
| Jackie
Jensen, LOU |
885 |
|
EARNED
RUN AVERAGE
|
| Stu
Miller, WAS |
2.49 |
| Carl
Erskine, WAS |
2.51 |
| Herm
Wehmeier, LOU |
2.57 |
| Whitey
Ford, CHI |
2.71 |
| Tom
Gorman, BRO |
3.01 |
| Dave
Koslo, WAS |
3.13 |
| Johnny
Antonelli, LOU |
3.19 |
| *Warren
Hacker, WAS |
3.31 |
| *Bob
Friend, NYG |
3.40 |
| Sam
Zoldak, STL |
3.44 |
|
WINS
|
| Tom
Gorman, BRO |
24 |
| Carl
Erskine, WAS |
22 |
| Whitey
Ford, CHI |
20 |
| Herm
Wehmeier, LOU |
20 |
| Lew
Burdette, BRO |
18 |
| Sam
Zoldak, STL |
17 |
| Harvey
Haddix, BOS |
16 |
| Irv
Palica, LA |
16 |
| Gene
Conley, BRO |
15 |
| Dave
Koslo, WAS |
15 |
|
STRIKEOUTS |
| Billy
Pierce, STL |
305 |
| Johnny
Antonelli, LOU |
256 |
| Whitey
Ford, CHI |
230 |
| Sam
Jones, LOU |
199 |
| Bob
Friend, NYG |
190 |
| Bubba
Church, NYG |
180 |
| Ted
Gray, DET |
165 |
| Harvey
Haddix, BOS |
165 |
| Carl
Erskine, WAS |
158 |
| Lew
Burdette, BRO |
146 |
|
RATIO |
| Herm
Wehmeier, LOU |
9.0 |
| Lew
Burdette, BRO |
9.8 |
| Carl
Erskine, WAS |
9.9 |
| Dave
Koslo, WAS |
10.0 |
| Bob
Porterfield, DET |
10.3 |
| Whitey
Ford, CHI |
10.3 |
| Billy
Pierce, STL |
10.4 |
| Stu
Miller, WAS |
10.5 |
| Jim
Hearn, NYG |
10.5 |
| Sam
Zoldak, STL |
10.6 |
|
RUNS |
| BROOKLYN |
728 |
| BOSTON |
707 |
| WASHINGTON |
682 |
| LOS
ANGELES |
672 |
| CHICAGO |
665 |
| LOUISVILLE |
641 |
| ST.
LOUIS |
601 |
| NEW
YORK |
597 |
| SAN
FRANCISCO |
583 |
| DETROIT |
499 |
|
RUNS
ALLOWED |
| WASHINGTON |
505 |
| BROOKLYN |
544 |
| LOUISVILLE |
588 |
| ST.
LOUIS |
589 |
| NEW
YORK |
630 |
| CHICAGO |
648 |
| DETROIT |
673 |
| SAN
FRANCISCO |
702 |
| BOSTON |
748 |
| LOS
ANGELES |
748 |
|
MILESTONES |
|
Minnie
Minoso, BRO
800th hit (Aug. 30)
Stan Musial, STL
500th RBI (Aug. 26)
Richie Ashburn, BRO
200th SB (Aug. 23)
Billy Pierce, STL
90th win (Aug. 18)
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