There
were three former Major League baseball players I need to mention who died in
2019.
One
is Hall of Fame (1986) outfielder Frank Robinson, the first African American baseball
superstar who did not get his start in the Negro Leagues. Robinson died on February 7 last year in Los
Angeles, California.
Another is Elijah “Pumpsie” Green, the first African American to
play for the Boston Red Sox. He died on July 12 in
San Leandro, California.
Finally,
there is Jim Archer. He has no place in
baseball history as the previous two. However,
as one of the starting pitchers in the first Major League game I attended,
Archer has a place in my personal history with baseball. He
died on September 9 in Tarpon Springs, Florida.
Frank
Robinson
If
you read my two March 2019 blog posts, you would know what I think about Frank
Robinson; born August 31, 1935 in Beaumont, Texas. I took his death from bone cancer
personally. When the first time I saw
him on television circling the bases after hitting a home run in the second
Major League Baseball All-Star Game in 1959, he became my favorite professional
baseball player.
Frank
Robinson’s autobiography is called “My Life is Baseball” (Knopf Doubleday
Publishing Group 1975). That title
reflects a true picture of his accomplishments in the game. National League Rookie of the Year in 1956,
he hit 38 home runs. Robinson is the
only one to receive the Most Valuable Player (MVP) award in both leagues; in
the National League with the Cincinnati
Redlegs in 1961 (they went by the Redlegs, not Reds back then) and in the
American League in 1966 with the Baltimore Orioles. Hitting 586 career home runs, he played on
five pennant winning teams and two World Series Champions; 1966 and 1970
Baltimore Orioles.
Robinson
became the first African American Major League manager in 1974 with the
Cleveland Indians; first of the four teams in his 16 year career as a manager (1,065
wins and 1,176 losses). He had the reputation
as having a “hardnosed”, “old school” approach, although he did mellow in the
in the way he handled players as he got older.
During his career, he also served as a batting coach, an outfield coach,
a consultant for club owners, and held positions in the Office of Major League
Baseball.
I
will miss my favorite baseball player.
However, I still have his 1959, 1960, 1964 Topps baseball cards (lost
the 1965) and also the Post Cereal Frank Robinson cards for 1961 – 63.
Elijah
“Pumpsie” Green
On July 21, 1959 when he entered the game against the
Chicago White Sox in Comiskey Park as a pinch runner, Elijah “Pumpsie” Green
became the first African American to play for the Boston Red
Sox. Twelve years after Jackie Robinson broke into Major League
baseball, the Red Sox were the last Major League team pre-expansion (existing
before 1969) to have an African American or dark-skinned Latino player on the
Major League roster.
Born on October 27, 1933 in Boley, Oklahoma, Green’s
family moved to Richmond, California when he turned eight years old where he
became a three sport star (baseball, football, and basketball) in high school. At
6’ and 175 pounds, he became a switch hitting shortstop that played baseball in
junior college. While playing in the California League (Class C
minor leagues) Green signed with the Red Sox in 1955.
Ted Williams & Pumpsie Green |
Born May 25, 1932 in Max Meadows, Virginia, Archer
signed with the New York Yankees in 1951.
In 1961, he came to the Kansas City A’s as a rookie southpaw in a trade
with the Baltimore Orioles. By that
August, he had become one of the A’s front line pitchers.
On the field for the White Sox that day were two
former Negro League players; outfielders Orestes Minnie” Minoso and Al
Smith. Also, the White Sox had Hall of
Famers Luis Aparico at shortstop and Nelson Fox at second base.
Scoring three runs in the sixth, the White Sox won 5 –
3. It would be the ninth of Archer’s
fifteen losses for the season. He won
nine games and had a 3.20 ERA. The A’s
were 61 – 100, finishing in ninth place.
Problems developed in Archer’s left shoulder in 1962. He pitched only 27 innings and the A’s sent
him to the minor leagues. He never again
appeared in a Major League game.
Historical
notices from week of January 5: Birthday
for Jim Pendleton former Negro League and Major League player born January 7,
1924 and Earl Battey former All-Star catcher for the Minnesota Twins (1960 –
1967); born January 5, 1935.
For
my daily historical notices go to Kevin L. Mitchell@Lasttraintocoop
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