2/17: Demon Vin - Turkey Mike, Nate, Dale & Stu Sign; BB Loses Arb Twice As Billy Wins, Groat Honored, Hot Stove, Chugging Along, Quick Pitch, Ike Likes Hans; HBD Dave, Whammy, Ed B, Eddie P & Rivington
- 1890 – IF Rivington Bisland was born in New York City. He got his first big league game with the Pirates in 1912, going 0-for-1 as a September pinch hitter after hitting .287 for Springfield of the Central League. Bisland was taken in the Rule 5 draft by the St. Louis Browns in 1913 and then got another shot with the Cleveland Naps the following season after reneging on an oral agreement with the Pittsburgh Rebels. That was it for him. In 31 games, he hit .118, and after being released in June spent the next two years with the Atlanta Crackers, where the club paid him $350 per month, well over the league limit, to keep him from jumping to the Rebs. He retired after the overpay was discovered rather than face the league’s music (a suspension), played a year of semi-pro ball and then went on to be a fairly successful boxing promoter. (Thx to Diamonds in the Dusk.)
- 1901 – C Eddie Phillips was born in Worcester, Massachusetts. Phillips caught for parts of six MLB campaigns and got his most work as a Pirate in 1931. He started behind the plate for 100 games, batting .232, and was traded to Kansas City as part of the Bill Swift deal the next season. He retired after the 1943 season following 17 years of pro ball and became a minor league manager.
- 1905 – LHP Ed Brandt was born in Spokane, Washington. In his final two MLB seasons (1937-38), he tossed for Pittsburgh and went 16-14-2/3.23. He was mostly a good pitcher on bad big league teams. In 11 MLB years, Ed’s record was 121-146/3.86; he started 278 games and finished 150 of them. After his 1939 retirement, Brandt ran a hometown hunting lodge and tavern. He was killed on November 1st, 1944, when he was struck by a car at age 39.
- 1909 – With an early “pace-of-play” reg, the NL made it mandatory that a relief pitcher face one batter with a five-pitch warm up limit. The rule countered managers who would yank a pitcher, bring in another (slowly) to kill a little time, and then pull him if they didn’t like the hitting matchup or after the main guy got good and loose. It eventually became Rule #6.2.2.
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Turkey Mike – 2012 Upper Deck Goodwin Champions |
- 1912 – The Pirates switched outfielders, sending Vin Campbell to the Boston Braves for Mike Donlin. Both players were solid hitters but neither were one trick ponies. Campbell was a successful businessman (Vin eventually settled on the automotive business, selling tires in Pittsburgh for 20 years before opening a chain of New York City shops) while Donlin was a vaudevillian (he carried around an old theater program with him as a good luck talisman), movie actor and all-around bon vivant. Both left baseball for periods of time to hold out for bigger salaries knowing they could pay the bills with their side jobs. Donlin hit .316 in 77 games for the 1912 Pirates while Campbell hit .296 and led the league in at-bats for the Braves that season. After the season, the 34-year-old Donlin was waived and claimed by the Phillies but refused to report and retired. He came back in 1914 after sitting out a season to play for the Giants, but his bat deserted him and 35 games later, his career was finished. Donlin was nicknamed “Turkey Mike” due to his red neck and distinctive strut; it’s said many fans even imitated his unique way of walking. It wasn’t a moniker that Mike particularly cared for; go figure. Campbell, who was expendable in Pittsburgh after the emergence of Max Carey, was also out of baseball for a year and then played out his string in the Federal League, hitting .315 in 1914-15. His nickname was “Demon,” a carryover from his college football days at Vanderbilt where he was a member of the Heisman All-Southern Team.
- 1932 – The Pirates hopped the train, chugging from the Pennsylvania Station to Paso Robles, California, to start spring camp. From camp’s end until the season started, the Buccos barnstormed in San Francisco, Oakland, Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, Fort Worth, Dallas and Memphis before stopping in St. Louis for Opening Day. That was followed by a trip to Cincy before finally reaching home to meet the Cards for the Home Opener on April 20th, two months and 6,884 miles later.
- 1932 – As the camp train chugged along, so did the rumor mill. A report from New York had the Giants offering 1B Sam Leslie, SS Eddie “Doc” Marshall and OF Freddy Leach for the 29-year-old Paul Waner, who the G-Men hoped to pair up in the outfield with Mel Ott. Alas for the Big Apple, their low ball offer fell through as Big Poison remained a Bucco through 1940. Leslie had a nice career starting and off the bench for NY and Brooklyn (he compiled a .304 lifetime BA) before hangin’ ‘em up in 1938, while 1932 was the last MLB campaign for Marshall and Leach.
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Whammy Douglas – 1958 Topps |
- 1935 – RHP Charles “Whammy” Douglas was born in Carrboro, North Carolina. Whammy only got 11 starts in MLB, all in 1957 with the Bucs, going 3-3/3.26. He was sent back to AAA Columbus for the ‘58 campaign, posting a 16-10/3.35 line and was traded to the Reds in 1959. His promising career was dead-ended by elbow and shoulder problems. One physical impairment that didn’t bother him, though, was the fact that he was blind in his right eye after a childhood accident. Branch Rickey pressed him on the handicap, and Douglas replied that “You have one hitter. He’s got one bat. And I have one ball.” As for his moniker, Douglas recalled “I was striking everyone out, so they just started calling me ‘Whammy.’” The first to dub him as such was Burlington Times-News writer Bill Hunter and the nickname followed Douglas around baseball.
- 1941 – OF Dave Wissman was born in Greenfield, Massachusetts. The Bucs signed him out of the University of Bridgeport in 1961, and he got his only big league shot in 1964, playing in 16 games for the Pirates and hitting .148. Wissman played AAA ball for Pittsburgh and the Detroit Tigers over the next three seasons and hung up the spikes after the 1967 campaign.
- 1954 – A week before Honus Wagner’s 80th birthday, President Dwight Eisenhower sent Hans a letter that read in part “Realization that you now count your years at the four score mark reminds me, with something of a shock, that it was fifty years ago that I used to follow your batting average with the keenest of interest.” The Flying Dutchman was one of Ike’s childhood sports heroes when DDE was growing up in Abilene, Kansas. Eisenhower was a high school and local semi-pro ballplayer and as a youth had declared his ambition “to be a real major league ballplayer, a real professional like Honus Wagner.”
- 1957 – The Pirates inked a couple middle-of-the-order first basemen in Dale Long and Dick Stuart. Neither helped the Buc cause in ’57 as Long played just seven games before he and his $19,500 salary was traded to the Chicago Cubs in May (he hit .298 w/21 homers for them) while Big Stu banged out 45 long balls across three minor league levels and debuted in ’58.
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Billy Hatcher – 1990 Upper Deck |
- 1990 – The Pirates split a pair of arb decisions. They won the big case, beating Barry Bonds, who was asking for $1.6 M but had to settle for the Buccos offer of $890K. Billy Hatcher won his decision, being awarded $690K rather the Pittsburgh tender of $525K, giving him a bigger salary than fourth OF RJ Reynolds, who also went to arbitration but lost, accepting a $535K payday despite hitting .270 to Hatcher’s .213. The FO was 3-3 in arb cases, winning Bonds, Reynold’s and Bobby Bonilla’s challenges but dropping Hatcher’s, Bob Kipper’s and Rafe Belliard’s bids. They lost the last two hearings, with Doug Drabek ($1.1M) and John Smiley ($840K) coming out on top.
- 1991 – Barry Bonds lost to the Pirates in arb, being awarded $2.3M after his MVP campaign (.301 BA, 33 HR, 114 RBI, 170 OPS+) after pleading his case for $3.25M. Over the next two years, he hit .301/59 HR/219 RBI/181 OPS+ before heading west to greener pastures in San Francisco.
- 2009 – CF Nate McLouth signed a three-year/$15.75M contract with an option that bought out his arbitration years. It guaranteed his salary but not his home; he was traded to Atlanta in June to open a starting spot for Andrew McCutchen. He returned to the Bucs briefly in 2012, then played in Baltimore and Washington before taking his final bow after the 2014 season.
- 2016 – Dick Groat was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 80th annual Dapper Dan Dinner. In 1960, Groat hit .325, was named National League MVP for the World Series winners and earned three All-Star berths as a Bucco shortstop. The former Duke star is in both the Baseball and Football College Halls of Fame and was inducted into the Pirates franchise HoF in 2023.
Source: https://oldbucs.blogspot.com/2025/02/217-demon-vin-turkey-mike-nate-dale-stu.html
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