Showing posts with label Chicago White Sox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago White Sox. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Happy Baseball Birthday... Steve Gierman

Happy Baseball Birthday shout out to my fellow baseball blogger and Chicago White Sox fan Steve Gierman.

Steve is celebrating birthday #38 today, in of all places, Portage, Michigan, where I grew up and went to high school.

Steve loves the ChiSox and runs the blog White Sox Cards.

One of Steve's passions is to get former ChiSox slugger Harold Baines into the baseball Hall of Fame.

Check out his blog, or go to
@WhiteSoxCards
on Twitter to give Steve a
#HappyBaseballBirthday shoutout.

Happy Baseball Birthday Steve!

Play Ball!

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Sunday Salute

Its the final day of the 2014 regular big league baseball season, Game 162.

Baseball is the greatest of all games, a test of resolve that comes down to one game sometimes, as it does in the Motor City and the Windy City today.

My Detroit Tigers, yes, they're mine, have a 1 game lead in the American League Central Division over the Kansas City Royals .

The Tigers host the Twins, and the Royals play at the White Sox, to determine the division champion for 2014.







A tip of the cap to all the great baseball fans out there, keep up your passion for our great game.

A special tip of the cap to Paul Konerko of the Chicago White Sox and Derek Jeter of the New York Yankees as they play their final games of their Hall of Fame careers.

Thanks for the memories.

Play Ball!

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Happy Baseball Birthday... Hawk Harrelson

Today's Happy Baseball Birthday is former big league first baseman and outfielder Ken "Hawk" Harrelson.



Kenneth Smith Harrelson was born on September 4, 1941, in Woodruff,  South Carolina.



Hawk went to high school at the Benedictine Military School in Savannah, Georgia,  where he played golf, baseball, football,  and basketball.



Harrelson was signed as a amateur free agent by the Kansas City Athletics in 1959.



Hawk made his big league debut on June 9, 1963, at the age of 21.



Hawk played first base and right field for 9 big league seasons,  1963-71, for the Athletics,  Washington Senators,  Boston Red Sox, and Cleveland Indians. 



In 1968, playing for the BoSox,  Harrelson led the American League in RBI, with 109, playing in the All-Star Game for the only time in his big league career. 



Hawk played in 900 games, scored 374 runs, collecting 703 base hits, 94 of them doubles,  along with 13 triples, 134 home runs, and 421 RBI in 2,841 at bats.


In the field Harrelson was a terrific defensive player, making only 41 errors in 4,101 chances, a .990 lifetime fielding percentage. 


Hawk played his final big league baseball game as a member of the Indians,  on June 9, 1971, at the age of 29.


After baseball Harrelson played proffessional golf, missing the cut in the 1972 British Open by one stroke (+11).


Hawk started broadcasting baseball games in 1975,  staring as a analyst on Red Sox games with Dick Stockton. 


Harrelson waa fired by the BoSox for his criticism of the teams players, and Hawk moved on to broadcasting ChiSox games in 1981, the left the booth in 1985, becoming the White Sox General Manager.


Harrelson was a less than successful GM, firing a young manager named Tony LaRussa, and his assistant GM, a guy named Dave Dombrowski.


In 1990 Hawk became the White Sox #1 TV announcer,  a job he is still doing today.


I love Hawk Harrelson...there, I said it.


There is no radio or TV play by play announcer with more love of the game of baseball and passion for his team quite like Hawk Harrelson and his beloved South Siders.


From his signature "...you can put it on the board...YES!"  home run calls for the White Sox,  to the "...he gone!"  call when an opposition player strikes out, Hawk Harrelson broadcast ChiSox games with unbridled baseball knowledge and passion. 


One of the reasons I love Hawk is that he loves the game, and will praise any player, on any team, for their good play, and criticize any player,  including ChiSox players,  for their poor play.


Hawk is also fantastic when he recalls the history of the game, including his playing days, and his tales of playing against the great American League players and teams of the 1960s.


Hawk was a member of the 1967 American League Champion Boston Red Sox, playing alongside guys like Carl Yaztremski and Jim Longborg, and facing down big league pitchers named Luis Tiant, Sam McDowell,  Mickey Lolich, and Bob Gibson.


There seems to be no gray are when it comes to Hawk Harrelson, its either pro Hawk, or anti Hawk.


Hawk has certainly done and said controversial things, but that's Hawk Harrelson,  and I think you have to give him credit for his consistency in the way he calls ball games.


Hawk is a 5 time Emmy Winner broadcasting baseball games, two time Illinois Sportscaster of the Year recipient,  2010 Ring Lardner Award winner, and a 2007 Ford Frick Award finalist.


To me, quite simply,  Ken "Hawk" Harrelson deserves to be in the broadcasting wing of the Hall of Fame.


Happy Baseball Birthday Hawk... "Mercy!"


PLAY BALL!






Friday, August 15, 2014

Happy Baseball Birthday...Charles Comiskey

Today we say Happy Baseball Birthday to former big league ballplayer,  manager, Chicago White Sox owner and Hall of Famer Charles Comiskey.


Charles Comiskey was born on August 15, 1859, in Chicago,  Illinois. 


After attending St. Louis University Comiskey signed with the St. Louis Browns of the American Association, in 1882.

Charles Comiskey made his big league debut for the Browns on May 5, 1882.


Comiskey played first base and was player/manager with the Browns, winning 4 consecutive American Association Pennants, 1885-86-87-88, winning the World Series in 1886.


Comiskey was also player/manager of the Chicago Pirates of the Players League in 1890, and managed the National League Cincinnati Reds in 1892-93-94.



Comiskey played in 1,390 big league games, collecting 1,529 hits, 207 doubles,  68 triples, with 28 home runs and 883 RBI in 5,796 at bats.



Comiskey played his final big league game as a player on September 12, 1894, at the age of 35.


After his playing days Comiskey became a baseball owner, and after owning a team in St. Paul, Minnesota,  Comiskey became the owner of the Chicago White Stockings of the new American League in 1901.


Comiskey's ChiSox won American League Pennants in 1906, 1917, and 1919, winning World Series Championships in 1906 and 1917.


"The Old Roman" was a very frugal owner, and that led to the infamous "Black Sox" scandal, where eight White Sox players were found to have thrown the 1919 World Series againat the Cincinnati Reds. 


The players were suspended by Comiskey during the players trials, and even thought each player was found not guilty by a jury, newly elected Baseball Commissioner Kennesaw Mountain Landis permanently suspended all 8 ball players from ever playing in the big leagues again.


The White Sox, one of baseball's best teams, never recovered from the scandal, and the team would go 40 years before winning another pennant. 


Charles Comiskey, know simply as "Commy" to his friends, passed away on October 26, 1931, in Eagle River,  Wisconsin,  at the age of 72,


Comiskey Park, built in 1910, and the White Sox hosted the very first Major League All-Star Game, in 1933.


Charles Comiskey was Inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veteran's Committee in 1939.


Today we send out a Happy Baseball Birthday to the Old Roman,  Charles Comiskey. 


PLAY BALL!




Sunday, August 10, 2014

Happy Baseball Birthday...Rocky Colovito

Happy Baseball Birthday! to former big league slugger Rocky Colovito.







Rocco Domenico Colovito was born on August 10, 1933 in New York, New York.




Rocky attended Roosevelt High School in NYC, and signed as a amateur free agent with the Cleveland Indians in 1951.




Rocky made his big league debut with Cleveland on September 10, 1955, and came up to stay in 1956, hitting .276 in 101 games, scoring 55 runs,  slugging 21 home runs, with 65 RBI,  in 322 at bats.



Those 21 home runs started a streak of 11 consecutive 20+ home run seasons, 1956-66,  including three 40+ HR years, '58, '59, '61.








With the Tribe in '58 Rocky smashed 41 home runs, with 113 RBI, batting .303, and leading the American League in slugging percentage at .620.





In '59 the Indians slugger smacked a American League leading 42 HR, driving in 111 Tribe runners, making his first American League All-Star team.





Just before the start of the 1960 season the Cleveland Indians shocked the baseball world by trading Colovito to the Detroit Tigers for 1959 American League batting champion Harvey Kuenn.











Indians fans loved the slugging Colovito, and Tigers fans loved Kuenn, and neither set of fans were very happy.










Colivito and the Tigers would prove to be the winners of the trade.



One of my favorite baseball cards in my collection is the 1962 Topps card of him in his classic Tigers road uniform.








In 4 years alongside future Hall of Fame RF Al Kaline, Colivito smashed 139 home runs, 45 of them coming in 1961, along with 140 RBI, a .296 average and his first All Star Game as a Tigers player.






Following the 1963 season the Tigers traded Rocky to the Kansas City Athletics,  after a 22 HR, 91 RBI season.










Rocky hit 34 HR, with 102 RBI for the '64 A's, who then traded Colovito back to his original team, the Indians.





Colovito promptly smacked 26 homers and drove in an American League leading 108 base runners in 1965.






In '66 Rocky slugged 30 homers and had 72 RBI, making his final All-Star Game.





In the middle of the '67 season, on July 29th, the Tribe sent Colovito to the Chicago White Sox, who  then sold Rocky to the Los Angeles Dodgers.





On July 7, 1968, the Dodgers released Rocky, who signed with the New York Yankees on July 15th.





The Yankees then released Rocky at the end of the 1968 season, Rocky's final year in the big leagues.











In his 14 years in the big leagues,  Rocky Colivito played in 1,841 ball games, collecting 1,730 base hits, 282 doubles,  21 triples, 374 home runs, 1.159 RBI, and 971 runs scored.





In the field Rocky made just 70 errors in 3, 516 chances, finishing with a .980 fielding percentage.






Colovito coached in the big leagues after his playing days, with the Indians in the 1970s and the Kansas City Royals in the 1980s.





Rocky Colovito was named to the Indians All Century Team in 2001, and was Inducted into the Cleveland Indians Hall of Fame.





 Happy Baseball Birthday! wishes to the Rock, Rocky Colovito!





PLAY BALL!










Monday, August 4, 2014

Happy Baseball Birthday...President Barack Obama

Happy Baseball Birthday #53 to our Commander - In- Chief and Chicago White Sox fan, President Barack Obama.



Monday, June 16, 2014

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Happy Baseball Birthday...Monty Stratton

Today's Happy Baseball Birthday!  is former Chicago White Sox pitcher Monty Stratton.




One of my favorite baseball movies is The Stratton Story, the true story about Stratton, who's big league career ended after a hunting accident on his family farm in 1938.



Monty Franklin Pierce Stratton was born on May 21, 1912, in Wagner, Texas.
Monty started pitching in the minor leagues before being signed by the ChiSox.
Monty made his big league debut on June 2, 1934, and pitched on Chicago's South Side through the 1938 season.

Stratton's finest years were his last two, 1937, and 1938.

Monty started 21 games for the ChiSox in '37, completing 14, amassing a 15-5 record, with a 2.40 ERA, making the American League All-Star squad.




In '38 Stratton started 22 games, completing 17 games, a 15-9 record, with a 4.01 ERA.

Stratton's hunting accident caused his right leg to be amputated, ending his big league career.

Monty was a coach for the ChiSox in 1939 and 1940.

In 1938 a charity game was played in Monty's honor, between the North Side Cubs and the White Sox, raising $28,000 for Stratton.

After several years of hard work on his baseball skills, getting a good motion, landing on his prothstetic leg, fielding bunts, covering first base, Stratton returned to baseball in 1946.

Pitching for the Class C Sherman Twins, Monty went 18-8, with a 4.17 ERA.
From 1947, through 1953, Monty pitched in Class B, C, and D baseball.

The aforementioned movie, The Stratton Story, starring Jimmy Stewart as Monty, and June Allyson as his wife Ethel, was terrific at the box office, and earned an Academy Award for Best Screenplay.




Monty Stratton served as an advisor during the film's production.


Monty Stratton died after battling cancer, on September 29, 1982, at the age of 70.

Today we celebrate the life of Monty Stratton.


Happy Baseball Birthday Monty!


Play Ball!  ⚾

Monday, April 7, 2014

30 years ago today

On April 7th, 1984, at old Comiskey Park in Chicago, Detroit Tigers pitcher Jack Morris threw a no hitter, beating the Chicago White Sox, 4-0.

What I remember about this game is that I was working at the J C Penney in the Regency Square Mall here in Jacksonville while the game was being played.

While on my break that day, I walked up to the TV areanin the store just in time to watch Morris pitch the ninth inning of his no hitter.

The game was the NBC Game of the Week, and for a Tigers fan thousands of miles away from Michigan, it was the only way back then I'd get to see my team play.

That Morris no hitter, along with the Tigers 35-5 start to the season, including a 16 game road winning streak  at the beginning of 1984, gave all Tigers fans reason to believe in our guys that year.

That 1984 team, World Series Champions, was fueled by Morris and his no hitter.

Jack Morris belongs on the baseball Hall of Fame.

Yes, I had to get that in this post.

30 years today Jack Morris made Detroit Tigers history....baseball history.

#JackMorrisbelongsinthe HOF