Tag Archive | "Kansas City Blues"

Vince DiMaggio’s 46 Home Runs, Gehrig’s Last Hurrah, An All-Star Game & 107 Wins: The 1939 Kansas City Blues

When baseball fans look back on this season they will realize that Manager Meyer developed for the Yankee organization one of the most remarkable clubs in minor league history.—Parke Carroll

Vince DiMaggio

The Kansas City Blues of 1939 gave KC baseball fans one of the most thrilling baseball seasons this town has known. Blues history stretches back to the 1800s, but 1939 was just their third season as Yankees affiliates, and the evil empire stocked KC with some serious talent. The headliners in ’39 included a pitching staff where an ERA under 3.00 was the norm, a double play combo of Phil Rizzuto and Jerry Priddy and the monster bat of Vince DiMaggio. DiMaggio, older brother to Joe and Dom, had the greatest home-run season a Kansas City pro ever has, Lou Gehrig suited up for the last time in an exhibition in KC, the American Association (A.A.) All-Star game came to town, and the team rolled to a record-setting win total.

DiMaggio had spent the prior two seasons in the majors with the Boston Bees (the franchise better known as the Braves was rechristened the Bees between 1936—40). He was a decent hitter but underappreciated thanks to unimpressive batting averages and, worst of all, record-setting strikeout totals. His 134 whiffs in 1938 set a new major league mark, and in a time when strikeouts were over-stigmatized, he found himself back in the minors in ’39. Blues manager Billy Meyer went to work on DiMaggio’s swing in spring training, opening his stance, correcting a perceived “hitch” and a weakness for chasing high and tight fastballs. The tweaks unlocked some vicious power, the likes of which may not have been seen before or since from anyone playing for a KC team.

The cruel end to Lou Gehrig’s career had started halfway through the ’38 season. His statistics remained strong, but he did not feel quite right, and observers noted he was not moving well. By the time spring training rolled around in ’39, things had gotten seriously wrong. The Blues and Yankees squared off in Florida twice that spring. Gehrig sat out the first contest, which was the first Yankee game of any kind he had missed since 1925. Reporters noted he had been “going poorly” in the spring, hitting .132 and appearing “off in his fielding.” He played in the next game against KC, managing a hit, but “gave a slow motion picture of a first baseman” (March 25 Kansas City Times). Vince watched his brother Joe hit a towering homer in the game.

The Blues regular season got off to a sputtering start, like a car engine that would not turn over right away. Four of their first six scheduled games were washed out by rain, and the two they got in were both losses. In the third game, DiMaggio connected for his first round tripper, a 375 foot shot over the left field fence in Columbus, and the Blues gained their first victory. There was no stopping Vince or the rest of the team for the rest of the regular season once the engine roared to life. After a long road trip, the Blues finally made their home debut on April 26th in front of 14,500 KC fans—the largest opening day crowd among the eight A.A. cities. DiMaggio showed off by pulling another bomb to left that landed on top of the streetcars parked beyond the wall. Both shortstops in the game, Rizzuto and Pee Wee Reese for Louisville, would later be inducted to the Hall of Fame.

Meanwhile, Gehrig toughed it out with the Yankees, appearing in their first eight regular season games to bring his official string of consecutive games to 2,130. But on May 2nd in Detroit, Gehrig told manager Joe McCarthy he needed to be left out of the lineup. His career was over—save one brief appearance in KC.

Over a five game stretch in mid-May, Vince DiMaggio exploded for six home runs. He was up to 13 after just 28 games. The team embarked on a nineteen game road trip in May and June in which they played in all seven out of town parks. DiMaggio tacked on 9 dingers while on the road. By June 7th, after just 51 games, DiMaggio had already hit at least one round tripper in every A.A. park.

The Blues returned home to a huge ladies night crowd of 21,386 on June 9th. The Kansas City Times reported:

Such a crowd, which squeezed from the stands into the left field enclosure and from the stands upon the right field embankment, was the largest here in years. Its size and its enthusiasm gave full proof that these young Blues are baseball idols…And, for such a roaring crowd, the Blues performed in heroic cloth. Vince DiMaggio bulleted his twenty-fifth home run of the year over the scoreboard in the first inning; later he smashed out a long triple to right center.

The crowd swelled to 23,864 three days later when the Yankees came to town for a mid-season exhibition. There was a DiMaggio in center field for both teams. Gehrig had not played for six weeks due to his mysterious ailment. But in KC, “Lou played by popular demand. He hadn’t intended to play at all. But Lou is an obliging fellow and so he consented. After taking one turn at the bat in the second, when he grounded to (second baseman) Priddy, he retired in favor of Babe Dahlgren. But he had shown himself and the crowd roared to his name” (Times). The Yankees prevailed 4-1. The Kansas City Times ran this heartbreaking note the day after the game:

From the Mayo came the terrible diagnosis: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. On July 4th Gehrig made his “luckiest man on the face of the Earth” speech.

Vince and the boys kept rolling along, and on July 9th won the privilege of hosting the A.A. All-Star game slated for July 18th by having the best record in the league. Their 56-30 mark beat out the Minneapolis Millers by just half a game. The entire Blues squad would face off against an all-star team made up of the rest of the league. The game was pushed back a day due to rain. The KC fans turned out in force again, setting a new A.A. All-Star game attendance record at 16,521. (Attendance was so high throughout the first half of the Blues season “that talk (was) revived of Kansas City getting into the major leagues” according to The Sporting News.) The All-Stars had no trouble with the Blues, knocking them off 19-7. DiMaggio gave the hometown fans something to cheer for with a second inning blast.

Vince DiMaggio

Returning to regular league play, the Blues kept racking up victories. But so did Minneapolis. The race for the pennant remained tight all summer, with the Blues usuallly holding the top spot by the slimmest of margins. Two victories over Minneapolis in early August gave the Blues a two game cushion. DiMaggio hit numbers 37 and 38 in the second of those games, which may have impressed Cincinnati Reds scouts. The Reds purchased his services the next day, but he remained with KC through the end of their season. On August 29th, Jerry Priddy, Bill Matheson and DiMaggio combined for back-to-back-to-back home runs in KC.

Heading into a crucial series with Minneapolis in early September, the Blues had stretched their lead to 3½ games. After taking three of four from Minny, aided by DiMaggio’s 43rd and 44th homers, the Blues had all but mathematically assured themselves of the pennant. With their 103rd victory on September 8th, they had done that as well. No A.A. team had ever won more than 102. The Blues won 14 of their final 16 games, and finished with 107 wins to just 47 losses, a .695 winning percentage. They may have been the most winning team in KC baseball history. DiMaggio clobbered a total of 46 home runs. The last one went 425 feet to center. Nearly all the others were pulled to left or left-center. There were no cheap home runs at the Blues home park, Ruppert Stadium (later known as Municipal), where 24 of his dingers were hit: The corners were 350 feet from home, center was 450, and the wall in left was 18 feet high. His 1939 exploits were not limited to round-trippers; appearing in all 154 games, he tacked on 71 singles, 32 doubles and 9 triples while hitting .290 and slugging a ridiculous .636. His defense in center field and base-stealing exploits were also regularly praised in game recaps.

Bizarrely, the pennant-winning Blues were matched up with the third place Indianapolis Indians in the post-season’s first round while the second place Millers were rewarded by facing a weaker opponent in the fourth place Louisville Colonels. Unfortunately, the Blues regular season magic disappeared. Indianapolis, at 82-72, looked to be no match for the Blues. But thanks to “airtight work by the Indianapolis mound staff” (The Sporting News), the Blues dropped the series 1-4 with little fight. Indianapolis outscored KC by an astounding 34-9 margin over the five games. DiMaggio was as befuddled by the Indy hurlers as the rest of his mates, managing just two hits and no homers in the five games. However, one of those hits was a triple that knocked in the only run scored in the Blues only victory of the series.

The day after being eliminated in Indianapolis, DiMaggio found himself back in the majors and appeared as a pinch hitter for the NL-leading Reds in Cincinnati. DiMaggio did not do much damage in his eight games with the Reds, connecting for just one hit, a double, in 14 at bats. The Reds won the NL pennant, but Vince was not eligible to play in the World Series, where the Reds were swept by Joltin’ Joe and the Yankees. Vince stuck around in the majors for seven more seasons, including a few good years for the Pirates and two All-Star appearances. He led the majors in strikeouts six times, but still managed to be a productive player thanks to the pop in his bat. He belted 125 major league homeruns, but he never had another season like he and the Blues did in 1939. Few players or teams have.

Aaron Stilley also blogs here and Twitters here.

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Royals In Municipal Stadium

Joe Keough, 1969

Kansas City’s Municipal Stadium hosted professional baseball from 1923-1972 on the corner of 22nd & Brooklyn. It is most widely associated with the Kansas City Blues, Monarchs and Athletics, but was also home to the Royals for their first four seasons. The Royals opened their time at the park on April 8th and 9th, 1969 against the Twins. It was an auspicious start – a pair of 4-3, extra inning, walk-off wins for the home team. On the 8th, Joe Keough knocked in the winning run in the 13th inning, and on the 9th, Lou Piniella was the hero in the 17th inning. Just two games old and the franchise had played 30 innings. The Royals went on to play a total of 318 games at Municipal over those four years, and won exactly half of them.

Their was a surprisingly stable group of core players that were with the expansion team all four years in Municipal, including Lou Piniella, Ed Kirkpatrick, Paul Schaal, Bob Oliver, Joe Keough, Tom Burgmeier, Dick Drago, Jim Rooker and Mike Hedlund. Piniella played the most games at Municipal as a Royal (280). Amos Otis joined the team in 1970. Paul Splittorff pitched there between ’70-’72. (This was pre-DH, so he hit there too.) Fred Patek plied his trade as a Royal for the final two years in Municipal. Big John Mayberry began his reign as a Royal in ’72.

Dimensions at Municipal circa 1972. It played as a neutral hitter's/pitcher's park during the Royals time there.

Public bonds had been issued in 1967 to build what would become the Truman Sports Complex, and according to Curt Nelson, Royals Stadium was initially slated to open for the 1972 season, but was delayed a year by a construction strike. The team did not seem to mind playing in Municipal that year–they posted a 44-33 record at home. The Royals played their final Municipal game on October 4, 1972, and went out in style with a 4-0 shutout by Roger Nelson, who allowed just two hits to the Rangers. The stadium sat empty for four years before it was demolished in 1976.

The following leader-boards include only stats racked up by Royals players at home games in Municipal Stadium:

Games:

Lou Piniella 280
Ed Kirkpatrick 245
Paul Schaal 233
Amos Otis 223
Bob Oliver 206
Cookie Rojas 173
Fred Patek 149
Joe Keough 146
Pat Kelly 125
Jackie Hernandez & Tom Burgmeier 111

Plate appearances:

Lou Piniella 1119
Amos Otis 937
Paul Schaal 904
Ed Kirkpatrick 839
Bob Oliver 754
Cookie Rojas 691
Fred Patek 635
Pat Kelly 511
Joe Keough 430
Jackie Hernandez 402

Runs:

Amos Otis 123
Paul Schaal 107
Lou Piniella 101
Ed Kirkpatrick 92
Bob Oliver 78
Fred Patek 77
Pat Kelly 74
Cookie Rojas 65
Jackie Hernandez 42
Joe Keough, Joe Foy &
John Mayberry
36

Hits:

Lou Piniella 318
Amos Otis 259
Paul Schaal 202
Cookie Rojas 177
Ed Kirkpatrick 171
Bob Oliver 160
Fred Patek 149
Pat Kelly 118
Joe Keough 91
Jackie Hernandez 88

Doubles:

Lou Piniella 53
Amos Otis 48
Paul Schaal 45
Ed Kirkpatrick 31
Cookie Rojas 30

Triples:

Lou Piniella 12
Amos Otis 11
Fred Patek 8
Bob Oliver 8
Paul Schaal 7

Home runs:

Ed Kirkpatrick 26
Bob Oliver 18
Lou Piniella 17
John Mayberry 13
Amos Otis 11
Paul Schaal 6
Pat Kelly 5
Joe Foy 5
Mike Fiore 5
Richie Scheinblum &
Gail Hopkins
4

RBI:

Lou Piniella 168
Ed Kirkpatrick 120
Bob Oliver 95
Amos Otis 91
Paul Schaal 83
Cookie Rojas 68
John Mayberry 49
Joe Foy 48
Richie Scheinblum 34
Pat Kelly & Fred Patek 31

Stolen bases, caught stealing, success rate:

Fred Patek 58 11 84%
Amos Otis 57 12 83%
Pat Kelly 38 13 75%
Joe Foy 21 10 68%
Paul Schaal 11 6 65%

Walks:

Paul Schaal 120
Ed Kirkpatrick 104
Amos Otis 82
Pat Kelly 72
Lou Piniella 56

Strikeouts:

Bob Oliver 135
Ed Kirkpatrick 108
Lou Piniella 95
Pat Kelly 84
Jackie Hernandez 84

Batting average (min. 100 PA):

Richie Scheinblum .329
Amos Otis .312
John Mayberry .311
Lou Piniella .309
Steve Hovley .306
Cookie Rojas .283
Rich Severson .281
Gail Hopkins .279
Mike Fiore .276
Joe Foy .273

On-base percentage (min. 100 PA):

Richie Scheinblum .425
Mike Fiore .423
John Mayberry .403
Pat Kelly .379
Steve Hovley .378
Joe Foy .374
Amos Otis .371
Paul Schaal .363
Gail Hopkins .354
Jerry May .349

Slugging percentage (min. 100 PA):

John Mayberry .531
Richie Scheinblum .457
Amos Otis .436
Lou Piniella .434
Rich Severson .406
Ed Kirkpatrick .401
Joe Foy .400
Gail Hopkins .398
Mike Fiore .388
Steve Hovley .378

On-base plus slugging (min. 100 PA):

John Mayberry .934
Richie Scheinblum .881
Mike Fiore .811
Amos Otis .807
Lou Piniella .777
Joe Foy .774
Steve Hovley .756
Gail Hopkins .752
Pat Kelly .749
Rich Severson .743

Total bases:

Lou Piniella 446
Amos Otis 362
Ed Kirkpatrick 288
Paul Schaal 279
Bob Oliver 237

Wins:

Dick Drago 23
Tom Burgmeier 16
Mike Hedlund 16
Jim Rooker 15
Paul Splittorff 13

Losses:

Dick Drago 26
Jim Rooker 19
Wally Bunker 12
Mike Hedlund 11
Bill Butler 11

ERA (min. 50 IP):

Ted Abernathy 2.23
Bob Johnson 2.46
Moe Drabowsky 2.62
Dave Morehead 2.72
Tom Burgmeier 3.06

Games started:

Dick Drago 63
Jim Rooker 36
Mike Hedlund 31
Bill Butler 28
Paul Splittorff 28

Innings Pitched:

Dick Drago 476.2
Jim Rooker 267
Mike Hedlund 239
Wally Bunker 202
Paul Splittorff 197
Bill Butler 194
Roger Nelson 179.2
Al Fitzmorris 166.1
Tom Burgmeier 156
Bruce Dal Canton 137.2

Hits allowed:

Dick Drago 449
Jim Rooker 254
Mike Hedlund 220
Wally Bunker 186
Al Fitzmorris 178

Runs allowed:

Dick Drago 177
Jim Rooker 123
Mike Hedlund 96
Al Fitzmorris 93
Wally Bunker 89

HR allowed:

Dick Drago 30
Wally Bunker 23
Mike Hedlund 17
Bill Butler 17
Al Fitzmorris 11

Walks allowed:

Dick Drago 127
Jim Rooker 119
Bill Butler 100
Mike Hedlund 76
Al Fitzmorris 68

Strikeouts:

Dick Drago 247
Jim Rooker 151
Bill Butler 125
Paul Splittorff 125
Bob Johnson 123

Strikeouts per 9 IP (min. 50 IP):

Bob Johnson 9.2
Moe Drabowsky 7.2
Dave Morehead 6.6
Ted Abernathy 5.9
Ken Wright 5.9

Shutouts:

Dick Drago 7
Jim Rooker 7
Bill Butler 4
Paul Splittorff 3
Roger Nelson 3

Saves:

Ted Abernathy 19
Tom Burgmeier 16
Moe Drabowsky 6
Ken Wright 5
Al Fitzmorris 3

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Best Kansas City A’s Players, Part II

Here are the final seven players on the list of top KC A’s players as ranked by wins above replacement (WAR) as found on Baseball-Reference.com. (Click here for Part I.)

7. Ray Herbert ∙ P ∙ 1955, 1958—61 ∙ 152 GP ∙ 7.5 WAR

Herbert made a living as a serviceable pitcher for 14 years in the majors, including a standout year with the A’s in 1960. The A’s purchased his contract from the Tigers before 1955 and used him sparingly that season before sending him to the minors for ’56 and ’57. He returned to Kansas City in ’58 and had a solid year, then regressed a bit in ’59. Then came the big 1960, in which Herbert started 33 games for the A’s, registered a miniscule 3.28 ERA (122 ERA+) and the second highest WAR (5.8) among pitchers in the AL. The A’s sent Herbert packing to the White Sox in the middle of ’61. That was enough to propel Herbert to the highest spot on this list for a pitcher.

6. Bob Cerv ∙ LF ∙ 1957—60 ∙ 413 GP ∙ 8.5 WAR

Cerv is another player on this list who spent time with the Kansas City Blues as a member of the Yankees farm before joining the A’s. His contract was purchased from New York prior to the ’57 season, and he spent the next three and a half years as a fixture in the A’s left field. Much of his value came from one season, 1958, when he broke out with the greatest season a KC A’s player ever had: 38 homers (a Kansas City record, A’s or Royals), a .305/.371/.592 slash line (159 OPS+), an All-Star game start, the third highest WAR in the AL, and a fourth place finish in the MVP vote. The season would have been remarkable enough from a healthy player, but Cerv battled through serious injury. From the book The Kansas City Athletics by John E. Peterson: “(Cerv) was batting .344 on May 17 and led the American League with 11 home runs and 30 runs batted in when he broke his jaw in a collision at home plate…Cerv broke his jaw in two places when the left side of his face collided against (Red) Wilson’s shoulder.” Cerv forced himself back into the lineup after missing just three games, and continued playing at a high level in spite of his jaw being wired shut and living on a liquid diet for a month. He homered six times during that span. Again from Peterson’s book: “By the end of the season Cerv suffered a broken jaw, a broken hand, two broken toes along with an injured knee and ankle.” The season sticks out like a sore thumb in Cerv’s long career, which was otherwise fairly unremarkable.

Cerv is the highest ranking outfielder on the list; the top five spots are all held by infielders:

4. Hector Lopez ∙ 3B ∙ 1955—59 ∙ 586 GP ∙ 8.9 WAR

Lopez shifted between various defensive positions throughout his 12 year career, but the A’s deployed him primarily at third base. Bill James has called him “As bad a defensive player as you would ever want to see,” but he made up for defensive shortcomings with his bat. He wasn’t an elite slugger in his four and a third seasons in KC, but hit consistently. His final tallies with the A’s feature 99 doubles, 67 homers, and a 107 OPS+. He was swapped to the Yankees (who else?) mid-season 1959 in a trade that netted the A’s the other number four on this list:

4. Jerry Lumpe ∙ 2B ∙ 1959—63 ∙ 715 GP ∙ 8.9 WAR

A Missouri native, Lumpe attended Warsaw High School and Southwest Missouri State. As a college basketball player, he won back to back NAIA national championships. The Yankees signed him to play baseball, and he broke into the bigs with them as a part-time player between ’56—’58. When he was sent to the A’s in ’59, he became the everyday second baseman for the next four and half seasons. He was a consistent presence in the A’s lineup, and was especially good in his career years of ’61 and ’62. He was sent to Detroit in the trade that brought Rocky Colavito to KC for the ’64 season.

3. Wayne Causey ∙ SS ∙ 1961—66 ∙ 689 GP ∙ 9.0 WAR

Causey was another consistent presence in the A’s middle infield, and garnered some MVP votes in his career years of ’63 and ’64. Causey didn’t hit for a lot of power, but was a tough out in his time with the A’s (.350 OBP). According to Jane Charnin-Aker on baseballlibrary.com, Causey kept losing his position to hotshot rookies while with the A’s. Dick Howser knocked him off short, then Ed Charles off third. He held down short in ’63 and ’64 before Bert Campaneris took over. After his playing days, Causey spent some time as a scout for the Royals.

2. Norm Siebern ∙ 1B ∙ 1960—63 ∙ 611 GP ∙ 12.1 WAR

Another Missouri native, Siebern hails from Wellston in the St. Louis area. He teamed with Lumpe on the back-to-back NAIA champion basketball teams at Southwest Missouri State. Siebern joined the A’s in the Maris trade—it is ironic that even though the trade was infamously bad, the A’s did get a terrific player in the deal. I rate Siebern as the best hitter the A’s had for all four seasons he played with the club—a rare bout of consistency in the ever volatile A’s lineups. His ’62 was especially impressive: he played every game, bashed 25 homers, and got on base at an eye-popping .412 clip to go along with a .495 slugging percentage. He represented the A’s at the All-Star games of ’62 and ’63. Like Causey, Siebern also went on to do some scouting for the Royals.

1. Ed Charles ∙ 3B ∙ 1962—67 ∙ 726 GP ∙ 14.4 WAR

Ed Charles, a 29 year-old rookie in ’62, wore the KC A’s uniform for more games than any other player, and judging by wins above replacement, provided the most value to the team. Signed by the Boston Braves in 1952, Charles racked up nine seasons and 1,148 games in the minors before finally getting his break in the form of a trade to Kansas City. He broke into the majors with style, fashioning a .288/.356/.454 hitting line (114 OPS+), and continued on as a supremely reliable presence as the A’s third sacker for five years. According to Charles biographer Ed Hoyt, Charles “offered no standout skill, but usefully adequate levels of contact, power, speed, and defense.” Like David DeJesus on recent Royals teams, Charles never rose to stardom or All-Star recognition, but quietly contributed in all aspects of the game. That steadiness over many years added up to significant value. Hoyt writes that Charles “achieved fame as a baseball poet, reciting his poetry on television a few times a year and mailing verse to young fans with requested autographs.” Following his individual success with the A’s, he was sent to the New York Mets in a 1967 trade. In his final playing year, Charles enjoyed the ultimate team success with the 1969 “Miracle” Mets. The 36 year-old provided a veteran presence on the mostly baby-faced champions.

Aaron Stilley also bloggercizes at Kansas City Baseball and makes tweet-tweets here.

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