Showing posts with label leon wagner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leon wagner. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

#541- Cleveland Indians/Indians Team Records



OK, so here’s the poop for anyone who cares. I had to split for a bit and sometimes when I do that I pre-write the posts and post-date them so they go up on Blogger about once a day. Somehow I screwed that up and then completely lost this one which stinks since it is so damn long. So this one will probably come up around mid-May which will be a pretty big gap. Oh well. It couldn’t have happened to a more fitting post. The 1973 Cleveland Indians were not too crazily different from their other recent teams, except of course in the line-up. In fact, outside of Chris Chambliss not one position in ’73 was filled by the same regular guy as it was in ’71. That’s a lot of turnover and though the Tribe had some interesting young guys – Chambliss, Buddy Bell, Charlie Spikes, Dick Tidrow – come along during that span, the team also had to put up with the near constant raids by the Yankees that already claimed the team’s best slugger in Graig Nettles and would also soon claim Tidrow and Chambliss. It was also Ken Aspromonte’s second year managing and depending on who you asked Ken was either just a low-key guy or a manager who turned control of the team over to his ace Gaylord Perry and Perry’s goon, John Ellis. Either way, between the turnover, the lack of real authority, and the uneven performances the team never got any real traction and finished with yet another losing record. Things needed to change and in about a year they would with an historical appointment that worked, at least for a while. Here the team looks a bit bleached out posing at home and I don’t believe I’ve ever seen a guy in a windbreaker with the coaches before. Oscar Gamble and his afro are easy to spot as is pretty much everyone else. And this will be a split post so nothing on the checklist until the next one.


That was some team in ’54 and it’s pretty crazy how after all those wins it went down so fast to the Giants. Blame Willy Mays I guess. Here we go on the bio’s:

Leon “Daddy Wags” Wagner was covered on the Angels team post.

Carl Lind, first real name Henry, was a New Orleans guy through and through. He went to Tulane after high school where he played ball through ’25 – he was team captain in ’23 – and from the school photos of him appeared to have either also played hoops or run track. He was admitted to the school’s hall of fame in 1980 but there is no associated bio out there. Carl signed with Peoria in ’26 and in the B league that year hit .292 while playing shortstop. He then spent most of ’27 in A ball at Denver where he upped his average to .331 before playing a couple games in Double A and then being sold to the Indians for a September call-up. He only hit .135 in his few games but did nice work at second base and so was given the starting gig there in ’28. He did a nice job, leading the AL in at bats while hitting .294 and scoring 102 runs with 42 doubles. He returned to that role in ’29 and started off the season swimmingly defensively and after an April set against Detroit in which he recorded eight double plays was on a record pace for that statistic. But offensively he was in trouble and took until the end of May to get his average above .200. He’d contracted malaria in winter ball and it was surmised that his health was pretty bad for a bit. He spent the summer of ’29 on the DL and finished the year at .240 in 225 at bats. In ’30 it was more of the same except the Tribe sent him down much earlier, ending his career up top with a .272 average in 256 games. He finished out the year in A ball where he hit .307 and in ’31 hit only .226 in a season split between A and Double A. He hit .264 in A ball in ’32, his last regular season. For a short while he seems to have worked locally in the New Orleans area as a college hoops referee and may or may not have later coached at that level. Info on him pretty much dries up then and even baseball-reference has a tough time, indicating he died in both 1946 and 2001.

Earl Averill grew up in Snohomish, Washington where he played local rec ball until he had to leave school and work at age 15 in about 1917. He got re-involved with local ball around 1920 and was good enough that people in his hometown paid for him to go to Seattle for a tryout with a team loosely affiliated with the Indians in ‘24. He didn’t make the cut, joined a local team in Bellingham, WA, where he hit about .269 before upping that big to over .400 in ’25. That got him signed by the San Francisco Seals, the PCL powerhouse, where over the next three seasons Earl averaged about .342 on way over 200 hits – the PCL played about 190 games a year back then – and 27 homers as a center fielder. In ’29 he was sold to Cleveland and he was a huge hitter right off the bat, hitting .332 his rookie year, with 110 runs and 96 RBI’s. Earl would have a great ten-year run for the Tribe, during which he averaged .325 on about 190 hits, 115 runs, 37 doubles, 12 triples, 23 homers, and 108 RBI’s per year, including a ’35 season when he had to play with a blistered hand because a firecracker had gone of in it on July Fourth. He bounced big to have his biggest season in ’36 with a .378 average on an AL-leading 232 hits and 15 triples. In ’37 he developed a spinal condition that killed his stroke, though he continued to be the regular center fielder through ’38, hitting .330 that season. During the ’39 season he was traded to Detroit where he finished the year as the reular guy in left and in ’40 finally saw some post-season action as a reserve. He finished up with the Boston Braves in ’41 with a .318 average on 2,019 hits, 238 homers, 128 triples, and 1,164 RBI’s in about eleven full seasons. He went hitless in his Series at bats and made each of the first eight All-Star teams. He finished the ’41 season back in Seattle of the PCL – he hit .325 – and then retired from playing back to his hometown where he helped run the family greenhouse business. That he did until 1950 when he bought a motel that he ran the next twenty years. He retired in ’70, made the Hall in ’75, and passed away in ’83 from pneumonia at 81. He has a great bio linked to here.

Joe Jackson is covered on the White Sox team page.

Charlie Jamieson was a Jersey kid who grew up in Paterson (he went to the same high school as Larry Doby). Signed by Buffalo, a Double A team, in 1912 when he was 19, he kicked off his career as a pitcher and his first two years went a combined 27-17 with a 2.97 ERA. In ’14 he started putting in some outfield time and while his pitching stats fell a bunch to 3-8 and a 4.60 ERA, he hit .308 that year. In ’15 it was all outfield as he hit .307 in 138 games. He was sold to the Senators that September and hit .279 that final month. After another season-plus of little use he was selected off waivers by the A’s in July ’17. Though he got more regular time the rest of that season and the next his numbers weren’t so hot and prior to the ’19 season he went to Cleveland in a trade. That year he had to do after-war service work and he missed pretty much the whole season. But in ’20 he gradually worked his way into the regular spot in left, hit .319 and began his eleven seasons as the regular guy there. While with the Tribe he averaged .316 with a .390 OBA and about 89 runs a season. He had his biggest year in ’23 when he led the AL with 222 hits and hit .345. The next year he hit .359. He batted over .300 eight of his eleven full seasons and twice had over 200 hits. He wound things down in ’31 and ’32 and then played a final season in Jersey City in ’33 when he was 40. Charlie finished up top with a .303 average on 1,990 hits and hit .333 in six games in the ’20 Series. He also pitched a bit and went a combined 2-1 with a 6.19 ERA in 48 innings. While playing he frequently played in local fall leagues back in Jersey under an assumed name, though everybody knew it was him. He returned to the Paterson area full time where I have been unable to find what he did professionally. He passed away there in ’69 at age 76.

George Burns was called Tioga George after a town in PA near where he grew up in Philly to distinguish him from another George Burns who was playing when this George came up to The Show. After leaving school at 16 to play local ball, George eventually worked his way to the pros by the time he was 20 in ’13 in D and A ball out west, hitting .338 at the lower level and .301 at the higher one. He was sold to Detroit prior to the ’14 season and hit .291 his rookie year as the team’s regular first baseman. He remained with Detroit through ’17 putting up decent but unspectacular numbers, peaking in ’16 with a .286 average and 73 RBI’s. He was then sold to the Yankees and flipped to the A’s and hit .352 his first year in Philly on an AL-leading 178 hits. His average fell to .296 the next year and shortly into the ’20 season he was sold to Cleveland for his first round with the Tribe. While he barely played as a back-up first baseman he did hit .300 with three RBI’s in the Series that year. After another season of back-up work in ’21 – though he hit .361 with 49 RBI’s in 224 at bats – he was traded to Boston, took over first for the Sox, and averaged .317 with totals of 19 homers and 155 RBI’s his two seasons there. He then returned to the Tribe where he settled into a regular gig at first the next few years. After putting up comparable numbers to his Boston ones the next two seasons he broke out in an MVP ’26 season, hitting .358 with 115 RBI’s, an AL-leading 216 hits and a record-setting 64 doubles. After settling back to his pre-’26 level in ’27 – but with 51 doubles – he spent the next two seasons playing sparingly for Cleveland, the Yankees, and back with the A’s. He finished with MLB marks of .307 with 444 doubles, 72 homers, 952 RBI’s, and 2,018 hits. In the post-season he hit .250 in six games. Somehow while playing up top George also managed to manage – oops – teams in the minors his last three seasons. He did that again briefly in ’30 before that season moving out to play and then both manage and play in the PCL. He hit well out there for those super long seasons, averaging about .337 in his five years as a regular. He then relocated to Seattle full time and became a deputy in the sheriff’s department which he did through his retirement in ’68. He passed away early in ’78 from cancer at age 84. He has a SABR bio.

Al Rosen was a Jewish kid who was born in South Carolina and grew up in Florida where he played ball through bouts of asthma and boxed to defend his heritage. He became awfully good at both and after high school continued to do so at the University of Florida for a year. He left school in ’42 to play pro ball and signed with a D affiliate of the Indians where he hit .307 that summer. He then went into the Navy for WW II where he was in the Pacific Theater until early ’46. He returned that summer to C ball and hit .323 with 16 homers and 86 RBI’s and then moved to Double A the next year where he exploded with a .349/25/141 season and then got some token at bats that Fall with the Tribe as he would the next couple seasons. In both ’48 and ’49 he put up big numbers in Triple A before a mid-year call-up that second season. Initially in Cleveland Al had to play third behind Ken Keltner but in ’50 he finally gained the starting spot and, still a rookie, led the AL with a then rookie record 37 homers, hitting .287 with 116 RBI’s and a .405 OBA. In ’51 he disappointed himself with a .265/24/102 year but bounced in ’52 with a .302.28/105 season in which he led the AL in RBI’s. That was also the first of his four successive All-Star seasons. His MVP season came in ’53 when he narrowly missed the Triple Crown with a .335/43/145 season in which he lost the hitting title by .001 to Mickey Vernon. He also led the AL with 115 runs and had an OBA of .422. But Al had a bad back and after a ’54 season of .300/24/102 he faded pretty fast the next two seasons and voluntarily retired after the ’56 one. Al put up a .285 average with 192 homers and 717 RBI’s and .384 OBA in basically six full seasons. He only struck out about once every ten at bats, pretty good for a power guy. In the post-season he hit .231 in four games. After playing he became a broker in Cleveland with Bache and Company, a forerunner of what is now Prudential. He did that for 17 years while also coaching in the spring. He then left to work in casino management which he did until ’78 when he was hired to be GM of the Yankees, a frustrating task under the Boss. Al lasted through that year’s title and then quit in ’79 after being frustrated with his role (Sparky Lyle was not a fan in “The Bronx Zoo”) and then returned to casino management for a couple years. In ’80 he became GM of the Astros and though his time there was frustrating as well the team went 386-372 through ’85 when he left. He then took the same role in San Francisco where he helped revive the Giants to two playoff appearances and helped the team go 589-475 through ’92 when he retired to California, where he continues to reside. Al has a SABR page as well.

I always want to put an extra T in Hal Trosky’s name and turn him into a revolutionary but Hal actually had a pretty mellow youth while growing up on his dad’s farm in Iowa. A big three sports guy in high school, he was signed by a local scout of the Indians when he graduated in ‘31, hit .302 his first summer in D ball, and .322 in ’32 in a season split mostly between D and B ball. Hal batted cross-handed, a habit he continued in the majors. In ’33 he hit .323 with 33 homers in Double A and then .295 in his September call-up for the Tribe. His first play at first base he fielded a liner by Babe Ruth that was hit so hard it knocked his glove into right field. He then had a huge rookie year in ’34 during which he hit .330 with 35 homers and 142 RBI’s. In ’35 his numbers faded a bit to a .271/26/113 season. In ’36 he had his biggest year with a .343/42/162 season as his RBI total led the AL along with his total bases. The next three years he averaged .321/25/114 seasons but his playing time decreased each season as he began experiencing incapacitating migraine headaches. In ’40 his numbers dropped to .295/25/93 and his RBI totals coming in at under 100 bummed him a bunch. In ’41 as team captain he relegated himself to platoon work at first and after a .294/11/51 half-season he took himself out of the line-up full time to return to Iowa, farm for the war effort, and try to solve his headache issues. After sitting out all of ’42 and ’43 he returned in ’44 to play for the White Sox and as their first baseman hit .271 with ten homers and 70 RBI’s to lead the team. The headaches again took him out of action in ’45 and he returned to Chicago in ’46 to hit .254 in his final season. He finished with a .302 average, 228 homers, and 1,012 RBI’s. In ’47 he managed a local semi-pro team and for the next few seasons worked as a scout for the ChiSox. He continued farming through ’62 when he took a gig selling agricultural real estate, which he did a bit over ten years. He passed away of a heart attack at home in ’79 at age 66.eHHeHYeHJh

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

#114 - Angels Team Records/Checklist

Ah, the '73 Angels. I loved this team as a kid 'cause of Bobby Valentine and Nolan Ryan, but what a mess it was. They took a charge at respectability that year with Ryan and Bill Singer piling on early wins and Bobby hitting the crap out of the ball. But then he went down, they went 5 and 12 right before the All-Star break and were out of it before the summer really got going. But Nolan kept kicking butt so every fourth day was going to be an adventure. Plus they did have some power with Mike Epstein, Frank Robinson, and Bob Oliver to keep things interesting. And lots of young guys. The team card here is another one that is emblematic of the set. Between the blurry photo and the shadow I cannot tell who anyone is. Also, even if I could, a lot of the faces wouldn't be on the team roster anyway.

The checklist front gets to what I alluded just above. The Angels had a high turnover before the '74 season. Look at these signatures: out of 12 of them, three of them weren't even on the '73 team. If you go back one more season, only three guys - Ryan, Bob Oliver, and Sandy Alomar - were on the team in '72. So there were lots of moving parts on those California teams of the early to mid-'70's. These signatures are representative also. Frank Robinson's is classy; Mike Epstein's is big and all over the place; Vada Pinson's is quietly regal; and Sandy Alomar's is smooth. This card would be a field day for a handwriting expert. But the degree of turnover it implies really was not very conducive to winning a lot of ball games.


As with the newer teams that hadn't won anything yet, Topps presents a year-by-year team record instead of just the records of the team's pennant winners. And all the record holders are pretty recent guys since the team had only been around since '61. Here are the backgrounds of the guys without cards in this set:

Bobby Knoop was signed by the Braves in '56 out of his Iowa high school and started that year in D ball. Always a second baseman with very good defensive skills his progression through the Milwaukee system was arrested a bit by too many strikeouts and a surplus of middle infielders. After hitting fairly well at the lower levels, he had a nice half season at Double A in '60 hitting .280, also his first season of action in Triple A. He remained at the higher level the next two years, though his average took a hit as he missed a bunch of time for his military commitment. He then went to the Angels in '63 through the Rule 5 draft and after a much improved Triple A season came up to the majors in '64. From then through '68 he was the club's starting second baseman and during that time he won three Gold Gloves and was named to an All-Star team. While his defensive work was excellent, he had trouble at the plate again posting lots of K's. His best years were '65 when he topped out at .269 and '66 when he led the AL with eleven triples and also hit 17 homers with 72 RBI's, all those numbers well above his norm. In '69 he was traded to the White Sox for Sandy Alomar who didn't have the defensive props but added speed and a more consistent stick. In Chicago Bobby again was the starter for two seasons, though '70 was beset by injury. In '71 he went to the Royals as infield backup to Cookie Rojas where he remained through '72 when his playing career ended. He finished with a .236 average and was a .980 fielder and is in the top 100 for career putouts, assists, and double plays at second base. He immediately went into coaching and by '77 was up with the ChiSox where he stayed through '78. He then was with California for a long haul - '79 through '96 - and also put in a year at Toronto in 2000. More recently he has worked for the Rockies as a scout and as a director of player development.

Albie Pearson was a small (5'5") energetic outfielder who was signed by Boston in '53 out of his California high school where he was 25-6 with a 0.83 ERA and hit over .500 his senior year. Though signed as a pitcher, he proved to be too good a hitter in the minors, hitting well over .300 and developing good speed and an excellent eye; his career OBA in the minors was well over .400. But an understandable lack of power and his size kept him on the farm for the Sox. Prior to the '58 season he was traded to the Senators for Pete Runnels and that year he came up and won the AL Rookie of the Year for his .275 average and energetic play. In '59 he started slowly, missed some time to injury, and was sent to the Orioles for Lenny Green. There he backed up the outfield the next two seasons and in '60 spent some time back in Triple A, where he again hit over .300. In '61 he went to the Angels in the expansion draft. The team's first starting center fielder, Albie would average 100 runs a season the next three years while hitting about .285 during that time. His runs total led the league in '62 and in '63 he was an All-Star while hitting .304. But Albie had serious back issues and in '64 began missing significant time because of them. By early '66 he was removed from the starting lineup and he was released later in the year. Like Bobby Knoop, he was done as a player by his early thirties. Albie hit .270 for his career with an OBA of .369. He would later DJ but his passion was helping kids and he currently runs and for many years has run the non-profit Father's Heart Ranch in which he receives struggling children. He sounds like the real deal Angel.

Buck Rodgers was signed by Detroit in '56 and like Bobby Knoop above earned a reputation for his defense in the minors. While he would hit a combined .277 in the minors, he advanced slowly - he was a contemporary of Bill Freehan - and by '60 had played only 23 Triple A games. He then went to the Angels in the expansion draft and after hitting .286 with 62 RBI's for the Triple A club, made it up to LA at the tail end of the season, and hit an uncharacteristic .321. In '62 he became the starting Angel catcher and put up stats - .258/6/61 - that earned him second place in AL ROY voting and put him on the Topps rookie team. He was a starter through the '68 season, and was quite adept at picking off runners, peaking with a 52% in '67, but unfortunately his rookie offensive numbers would prove to be by far the best of his career. His '63 was hurt by a broken finger he initially tried to play through and then missed time for; in '65 he had an ankle injury; and in '67 he had a blood infection. By '68 he was hitting around Mendoza levels, and in '69, after spending most of the season in Triple A, he was released, after the Angels fired their only manager until then, Bill Rigney, who was a big fan. That was it as a player for Buck, who was a lifetime .232 hitter and threw out 43% of attempted base stealers. He turned to his new career - coaching - immediately and moved around a bunch. He coached for the Twins ('70 to '74) after following Rigney to Minnesota, managed in the Angels chain ('75 and '77), coached for the Giants ('76), coached ('78 to '80) and managed ('80 to '82) the Brewers, managed the Expos ('85 to '91), and managed the Angels ('91 - '94). During that last gig he had to take some time off while recuperating from a bus crash in '92. His managing record was 784-773 and I believe he is the winningest manager in Expos history (520 wins), a team for whom he won Manager of the Year in '87. After managing he scouted for the Phillies through '96 and then became head of baseball operations for an independent Cali team. In '98 he retired after reciving a big insurance check for that '92 bus accident. Buck has a SABR bio.

Leon "Daddy Wags" Wagner was a colorful outfielder who liked to party. Signed by the Giants in '54 out of Tukegee University, he was a huge power hitter in the low minors, including in '56 when he hit 51 homers in B ball. In '57 he was out for the military then returned in '58 to Triple A ball. After a big partial season he was promoted and put some time in the SF outfield for and hit .317. But that SF outfield was packed with hitters and when in '59 his average fell to .225 Leon was then traded to St. Louis where he had a crappy year and went down to the minors. At the end of that '60 season he was traded to Toronto of the International League who then flipped him to the Angels for Lou Johnson. With LA Wags became a starter and a big power guy, the next three years averaging 30 homers and 92 RBI's a season. In '62 Daddy would tap 37 homers for 107 ribbies, his best season. While with the Angels he had two All-Star appearances. In '64, troubled by Leon's party habits, the Angels sent him to Cleveland for Joe Adcock. For three seasons he continued to start in the Indians' outfield, over that time averaging 28 homers and 82 RBI's a season. In '66 he would be involved in an on-field collision with Larry Brown that would put Brown in the hospital for a month. In '67 Leon would be platooned in right field with Rocky Colavito by new Cleveland manager Joe Adcock (the same guy for whom Daddy was traded) and that was the beginning of the end for both Wags and Rocky. In '68 he went to the White Sox for Russ Snyder and in '69 he returned to San Francisco where he spent most of his time the next two years in the minors. One more Triple A season for Leon for the Padres in '71 and he was done. He finished with a .272 average, 211 homers, and 669 RBI's. After his career he acted in a few movies, owned a clothing store - "Get Your Rags From Daddy Wags" - which he ran into the ground, and continued his recreational use of drugs. He passed away in 2004 at 69; at the time he was living in a shed behind a video store in LA. He, too, has a SABR bio.

Minnie Rojas was a Cuban pitcher signed by San Francisco in 1960 when he was 27. Prior to then he had been a pitcher for the Cuban national team but was also a soldier for the ruling regime in the Fifties. So when Castro came to power, poor Minnie was on the wrong side of things. The last American scout in Cuba - Dave Garcia, who would later be an MLB manager - discovered Rojas and convinced the Giants to draft him since if he remained in Cuba he would probably be killed. Minnie had excellent control but almost zero speed, and by '63, though he'd reached Triple A, his career ERA was over 4.00, which wasn't great since he was nearly exclusively a reliever. The Giants then sold Minnie to Jalisco in the Mexican League in '64. But getting out of the States was awfully tough for Minnie that spring since he didn't have a visa and couldn't go home so he didn't get to Mexico until that August, though he then went 6-6 with a much better ERA. Then in '65 for the same club Minnie went 21-12 which put him on the Angels radar  and the club picked him up from Jalisco for $2,500. He started the '66 season in Triple A putting up good numbers including lots of strikeouts as a spot starter and was then promoted later that spring and finished off the year for the Angels nicely, going 7-4 with a 2.68 ERA and ten saves. In '67 he went 12-9 with a 2.52 ERA and led the league in games finished and his 27 saves to win Fireman of the Year. But that success was short-lived as arm problems in '68 caused his numbers to tank a bit and by '69 he was back in the minors and then Mexico, in what would be his last season. Minnie went 23-16 with a 3.00 ERA and 43 saves in the majors. Then in 1970 he was involved in a horrible car crash that killed his wife and two daughters and left Minnie paralyzed. He would recover enough to run some teams in Mexico. He passed away in 2002 at 68.

George Brunet grew up in Michigan and was signed by Detroit in '53 (or '52). After a couple seasons in regional ball he was sort of passed on to the Kansas City A's in the mid-50s. That transaction - or non-transaction - pretty much epitomized his career in which he pitched just about everywhere (his page on baseball-reference has the most uniform numbers I've ever seen). After posting some really mediocre numbers at a bunch of levels - only for one club was his ERA under 4.00 - he first came up in '56. The next year he got off to an uncharacteristic 10-3 start in Double A and then lost eight straight when his club scored not a run behind him for 51 innings. He left KC in mid-'60 and his travels took him to the Braves, the Astros, and Baltimore, for all of whom he was pretty terrible up top but put up consistently good Triple A numbers. In late '64 he found his way to the Angels, got up top immediately and although over the next four-plus seasons he put up a losing record - twice leading the league in losses - he actually had pretty good other numbers, was a staff workhorse, and was way better than average in ERA. During the '69 season he left California for the Seattle Pilots where he returned to his bad number days. In "Ball Four" Jim Bouton and he had an exchange about George's refusal to wear underwear. After hanging out the next three seasons with the Senators, the Pirates, and the Cards, respectively, he played in the minors for a couple years, ending things with San Diego in '73. In the majors he went 69-83 with a 3.62 ERA, 39 complete games, 15 shutouts, and four saves. In the minors he went 111-113 with a 3.95 ERA. But George wasn't done in '73. He then went down to Mexico where he pitched straight through until '89. That meant that without a whole lot of success on top that he pitched for 37 seasons. He threw a no-hitter when he was 42 and became a member of the country's baseball hall of fame based on his 132 wins, 55 shutouts, and 2.66 ERA. In '81 he had a heart attack down in Mexico and that slowed him down only a little. But in '91 while he was coaching down there he had another heart attack that would prove fatal. He was 56.

Dean Chance was a big deal high school pitcher in Ohio - he went 52-1 - when he was signed by Baltimore to a big bonus in '59. After a couple decent seasons in the minors he was unprotected, selected by the new Senators in the '60 expansion draft, and then immediately traded to the Angels, apparently per order from the AL commissioner. After throwing some decent Triple A ball in '61 he came up at season's end for good. Beginning in '62 he became very high profile for two reasons: one was that he immediately became staff ace of a new team that was surprisingly successful; two was that Dean, a big good-looking guy, and his roommate buddy, Bo Belinsky, became big Hollywood jet setters and frequently traveled in rarefied celebrity company. While Bo would crash pretty quickly, Dean became a damn good pitcher, peaking in '64, when he won the Cy based on his 20-9 season. eleven shutouts, and sick 1.65 ERA. He would hang with the Angels through '66 when he had a losing record and was traded following the season to Minnesota. Dean left the Angels as its all-time leader in most pitching categories, having gone 74-66 with a 2.83 ERA in his five seasons. He won 20 his first season with the Twins, had a nice .500 season in '68, and then missed a bunch of '69 to injury, though he pitched around it pretty well. But the injury hampered his pitching style which consisted primarily of a low fastball and a screwball changer, and his numbers thereafter went south pretty quick. The next two seasons he pitched for Cleveland, the Mets, and Detroit and was done after '71, finishing with a record of 128-115 with a 2.92 ERA, 83 complete games, 33 shutouts, and 23 saves. In his only post-season appearance he got hit hard in a couple innings. After baseball Dean ran his own carnival and was a boxing promoter, and had a stint as president of the IBA.


Given the above, the expectation is that a significant part of the '73 Angels team will be missing from this checklist, which is correct. Starting with catcher, the only guys in the whole set with any time there are Charlie Sands and Rick Stelmaszek and they only had 59 at bats between them. The other guys - Jeff Torborg, John Stephenson, and Art Kusnyer - were pretty much done major league-wise. At first, Jim Spencer had gone to Texas, where he had a card. At second, Billy Grabarkewitz moved to Philly and Billy Parker was done. Al "Dirt" Gallagher put in the most time at third in his last season and Jerry DaVanon got more at bats than either included catcher as a backup infielder. None of those last three has a card. The outfield and DH are covered, though. Only Ken Berry, who has a card with the Brewers, is missing. But over 900 California '73 at bats are missing from this set which has to put them near the top of the heap. On the pitching side, Clyde Wright and Steve Barber moved to the Brewers also. Only Andy Hassler, who went 0-4 in his first season, and Ron Perranoski, at 0-2 - he was covered on the Twins team post - had decisions and didn't have cards, so 156 of 162 decisions is represented. That's not so bad. Here is my stab at the missing guys in the team photo. Gallagher is the second guy from the left in the second row and Torborg and Stephenson the last two in that row. Kusnyer is the tall guy, third in in the third row and DaVanon the eighth guy in. Parker was even shorter than Alomar - next to Kusnyer - so I don't think he's here. And I don't see either of the missing pitchers.

Just about everybody played for the Angels, including the last guy, so:

1. Leroy Stanton was on the '73 Angels;
2. Stanton and Dick Drago '76 Angels.