The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly: Pittsburgh Pirates: Heart-Pounding, Jaw-Dropping, and Gut-Wrenching Moments from Pittsburgh Pirates History
By John McCollister and Steve Blass
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The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly - John McCollister
greatest.
THE GOOD
Throughout the story of the Pittsburgh Pirates, a legion of magical moments and legendary players has emerged not only to make headlines, but also to bestow upon their fans certain unforgettable memories.
We shall forever cherish these treasures that include the most dramatic World Series in the history of baseball and a flashy right fielder who set the standard for excellence.
While we could fill an entire volume with just the good
shown by the Buccos, here are a few instances that will hopefully bring back a pleasant memory or two.
THE 1960 PIRATES: THE SEASON, THE GAME, THE HIT
The year 1960 marked the beginning of remarkable changes in American history. A young Roman Catholic senator named John Fitzgerald Kennedy was elected president of the United States, and the so-called establishment suddenly realized that the torch of leadership had passed to a new generation. It was the start of the Age of Aquarius
that challenged heretofore accepted norms about the family, for blind obedience to the letter of the law, even for faithfulness to the religion in which a person was raised.
Prior to 1960, Major League Baseball also embraced its own set of traditional standards. The reserve clause bound players inextricably to their teams unless they were traded or released. Players signed autographs whenever possible—without charging. When a manager gave an order, he was obeyed without question. And, of course, the New York Yankees were expected to win the World Series.
Pirates fans recall with fond remembrance how their beloved Bucs shattered that last prediction.
From the minute the Pittsburgh ballclub set foot on the diamond on April 12 in Milwaukee, an aura of hope engulfed its players, manager, coaches, and fans. The Pirates lost the season opener, but just five days later, during an Easter Sunday doubleheader, they transformed dreams into genuine expectations. Pitcher Bob Friend blanked the Cincinnati Reds on a masterfully pitched game in the first contest. Game 2 offered a preview of coming attractions when Pittsburgh, down 5–0 going into the ninth inning, rose from the dead.
Hal Smith’s three-run homer and Bob Skinner’s game-winning shot into the right-field stands produced a come-from-behind 6–5 victory.
What made the Bucs a miracle team that year? Part of the reason was the solid core of players that filled its roster. Along with Skinner and backup catcher Smith, general manager Joe L. Brown molded a team with a formidable lineup that included catcher Forrest Smoky
Burgess, hard-hitting first baseman Dick Stuart, center fielder Bill Virdon, third baseman Don Hoak, shortstop Dick Groat (that year’s National League batting champion and winner of the Baseball Writers Association of America’s Most Valuable Player Award), second sacker Bill Mazeroski, and an exciting right fielder with a heap of promise named Roberto Clemente.
Complementing these everyday players was a mound staff of aces that included 20-game-winner Vernon Law, Bob Friend (UPI’s Comeback Player of the Year), Harvey Haddix, and relief specialist ElRoy Face. General Manager Brown initiated a favorable midsea-son trade by swapping the talented infield prospect Julian Javier to the Cardinals for veteran southpaw Wilmer Vinegar Bend
Mizell.
Waving his arm in the air, Bill Mazeroski crosses home plate on that memorable October 13, 1960, and becomes immortal in the hearts and minds of Pirates fans everywhere.
Another important part of the picture of success was a tobacco-chewing, cigar-smoking craggy Irishman who wore No. 40 and sat in the far corner of the dugout. Manager Danny Murtaugh, now in his fourth year as Pirates skipper, employed not only a keen sense of baseball awareness and pragmatic leadership, but also a delicious sense of humor that went a long way to ease tensions normally associated with running a big-league team. This product of Chester, Pennsylvania, responded to one caustic critic, I’d like to have that fellow who hits a home run every time, who strikes out every batter when he’s pitching, and who never makes a mistake on the field. The only trouble is getting him to put down his beer and come down out of the stands.
A DEVASTATING BLOW
The late commissioner of Major League Baseball, Dr. A. Bartlett Giamatti, once wrote: Baseball is meant to break your heart.
Seldom do defeats of a team affect fans as much as do losses on a baseball diamond.
Bill Mazeroski’s Series-winning home run on October 13, 1960, was no exception.
Barry Altman, a rabbi in Ormond Beach, Florida, still recalls that moment when he was in middle school growing up in the Bronx. I was so overcome with emotion,
he remembers, that I actually hid underneath our front porch so I wouldn’t have to go to school and face my classmates.
Sportscaster Bob Costas, who carries Mickey Mantle’s baseball card in his wallet, said, As an eight-year-old Yankees fan in 1960, I literally wept when Bill Mazeroski’s home run cleared the ivy-covered wall at Forbes Field. Today, I have come to terms with it and can see Mazeroski for what he really was—one of baseball’s all-time great players.
Finally the 1960 Pirates were blessed with two intangibles. The first was a simple but catchy slogan: Beat ’em Bucs.
It appeared on bumper stickers of family cars and on windows of offices at Westinghouse. It was pasted on school notebooks of teenagers who proudly displayed the black and gold catchphrase praising their hometown heroes.
The other rallying cry for the team was a pep song sung to the tune of Camptown Races,
with an equally simplistic treatment as the slogan. It had a chorus: The Bucs are going all the way…all the way this year.
Neither of these gems would go down in the history of poetic immortality, yet they were enough to spark the enthusiasm of players and fans alike as the Pirates seesawed in and out of first place until July 27. On that day, they came of age
and settled into the league lead to stay.
Pirates fans responded with unbridled enthusiasm, marching through turnstiles as never before. On September 12, the club set a new single-season attendance record by passing the old mark of 1,517,021 set back in 1948. Champagne corks popped 13 days later when Chicago mathematically eliminated the second-place St. Louis Cardinals from the pennant race and, for the first time in 33 years, the Pirates were kings of the National League.
By season’s end, grabbing headlines for the pennant-winning Bucs were pitchers Law (20–9), Friend (18–12), Mizell (13–5), Haddix (11–10), and Face (10–8). Swinging the big clubs were Groat (.325, two home runs), Clemente (.314, 16 home runs), Smith (.295, 11 home runs), Burgess (.294, seven home runs), Hoak (.282, 16 home runs), Skinner (.273, 15 home runs), Mazeroski (.273, 11 home runs), and Stuart (.260, 23 home runs).
Seeing the National League Champions
flag fly over Forbes Field was one big thrill. Raising one that announced Pittsburgh as the winner of the World Series would be even greater.
Only one thing stood in the way: the mighty New York Yankees.
The last time the Pirates had appeared in a World Series was in 1927, when they faced the likes of Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and the Murderers’ Row
Yankees. This year seemed to be no different. The new Yankees flexed another set of muscles known as Mickey Mantle (40 HR), American League MVP Roger Maris (39 HR and a league-leading 112 RBIs), Yogi Berra, William Moose
Skowron, Bobby Richardson, Tony Kubek, and Elston Howard, along with pitchers Edward Whitey
Ford, Art Ditmar, and Bullet
Bob Turley.
Guiding the 1960 edition of the Yankees (deemed by some experts as the second-best assembly of Bronx Bombers ever) was the crafty Charles Dillon Casey
Stengel, now in his 10th World Series with the Yankees, who had led his team to seven world championships.
The unbeatable
Yankees were odds-on favorites to take the Series in four or, at most, five games. Some local bookies in New York refused to take any bets, because so few customers would risk money on the Pirates.
Pittsburgh fans would not lose enthusiasm for their team simply because of predictions by some shady gamblers. Even the Federal Court downtown took a semiholiday when a judge announced court would be in session from 9:30 AM until 11:30 AM on game days.
The heads of baseball gurus shook in amazement when Pittsburgh squeaked out a 6–4 victory in Game 1 at Forbes Field. Law’s admirable pitching and Mazeroski’s home run overcame clouts out of the park by Maris and Howard.
As if to say, Enough is enough,
the Yankees rolled up their sleeves and pummeled the Pirates in Games 2 and 3 by scores of 16–3 and 10–0.
Law and Face limited the Yankees bats to eight hits in a 3–2 victory in Game 4 that was highlighted by a game-saving, leaping catch by Virdon in center field that robbed slugger Bob Cerv of a sure double.
Roger Maris clubbed a home run in Game 5, but that didn’t offset timely doubles by Burgess, Groat, Mazeroski, and Virdon, as Haddix and Face allowed only five hits in a 5–2 win.
Instrumental in the Pirates’ World Series victory over the New York Yankees in 1960 were (left to right) pitchers Vernon Law and ElRoy Face, and outfielder Bill Virdon.
Back in Pittsburgh for Game 6, even the most pessimistic fan joined in the chorus of the theme song, The Bucs Are Going All the Way.
Whitey Ford muzzled the singing when he whitewashed the Pirates for the second time in the Series, 12–0. Pittsburgh bats were tame, with only seven singles all afternoon.
All of this was but an overture to the game and the hit—both of which faithful Pirates fans continue to speak of with awe and reverence.
The early-morning sun peeking over the horizon on October 13, 1960, brought out a colorful fall kaleidoscope of scarlet, lemon, and gold leaves still clinging to the trees in Schenley Park, just beyond the outfield walls of Forbes Field. It seemed as though some of nature’s finery wanted to linger just to witness what was about to happen.
Were any fiction writer to have submitted to a publisher the script for the 1960 World Series, especially for Game 7, it probably would have been rejected as being unrealistic.
But that’s just one of the rewards of baseball; the predictable is not an ironclad guarantee.
Manager Murtaugh, in a gutsy move, benched his leading home-run hitter, first baseman Stuart, in favor of the better fielding Rocky Nelson. Law started on the mound for Pittsburgh, while Turley was the choice of Yankees manager Stengel.
Law set the Yankees down in order in the first. With two outs, Skinner walked in the Pirates’ half of the inning. Nelson then made Murtaugh look like a genius when he parked a 2–1 pitch into the right-field stands for a home run, giving the Bucs a 2–0 lead.
The packed house of 36,683 continued to cheer in the second inning as Stengel removed starting pitcher Turley in favor of rookie Bill Stafford following a single by Smoky Burgess. A walk, a bunt single, and a single by Virdon doubled Pittsburgh’s total to a more comfortable 4–0 lead.
Moose Skowron’s homer in the fifth gave the Yankees their first tally. Following a single and a walk in the Yankees’ half of the sixth, Murtaugh replaced Law with forkball specialist ElRoy Face. A single by Mantle made the score 4–2, and a long home run by Yogi Berra gave New York a 5–4 lead.
THE TEAM OF THE 20TH CENTURY
Baseball fans of any team in Major League Baseball engage in often heated debates on who were the greatest players throughout the team’s history at various positions. Pittsburgh Pirates faithful are no exceptions.
Quite possibly, in an attempt to put these debates to rest, on September 18, 1999, the Pirates announced the results of balloting by fans for the Team of the Century,
following a two-month, write-in campaign in cooperation with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
Receiving the most votes from the more than 14,000 fans who participated in the survey were: Bill Mazeroski (13,049), Roberto Clemente (12,791), Willie Stargell (12,579), and Honus Wagner (11,106).
The official results from the poll for the two highest numbers of votes for each position were:
First Base
Willie Stargell (12,579)
Dick Stuart (575)
Second Base
Bill Mazeroski (13,049)
Rennie Stennett (364)
Shortstop
Honus Wagner (11,106)
Dick Groat (951)
Third Base
Pie Traynor (9,754)
Bill Madlock (2,173)
Left Field
Ralph Kiner (7,948)
Barry Bonds (4,834)
Center Field
Lloyd Waner (4,726)
Andy Van Slyke (4,678)
Right Field
Roberto Clemente (12,791)
Paul Waner (890)
Catcher
Jason Kendall (5,508)
Manny Sanguillen (5,265)
Right-Handed Pitcher
Vernon Law (4,889)
Bob Friend (3,177)
Left-Handed Pitcher
Harvey Haddix (6,222)
John Candelaria (4,249)
Relief Pitcher
Kent Tekulve (6,366)
ElRoy Face (6,206)
Manager
Danny Murtaugh (7,875)
Jim Leyland (2,735)
Soon after the results of this vote were announced, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette received an avalanche of phone calls from angry readers who disagreed with certain selections. Thus, the newspaper’s goal to curb all debates went unfulfilled.
A curtain of gloom fell on the partisan crowd.
The once beautiful skies seemed to grow darker as the Yankees increased their lead by scoring two more runs in the eighth.
Behind 7–4, the Pirates could have shrugged their shoulders and accepted the fact that they did their best against incredible odds. But that was not the character of a team that had rallied to win 28 games that season when they trailed after the sixth inning. Pinch-hitter Gino Cimoli smacked a single. That seemed to be a wasted hit when Virdon hit a sure double-play grounder to short. The ball hit a pebble on the surface of the infield (which Manager Stengel later described as a cabbage patch
), took a wicked hop, and caught shortstop Tony Kubek in the Adam’s apple. Kubek lay prostrate on the ground, and both runners were ruled safe.
The blow sent a groggy Kubek to the hospital and proved to be a turning point. Groat’s single made the game 7–5. Skinner’s sacrifice bunt moved the tying run into scoring position. Two batters later, Roberto Clemente beat out a high chopper for an infield hit, and Virdon scored to bring the Pirates within one run.
Hal Smith, a reserve catcher who hit 11 home runs all year, stepped to the plate and, with one swing, etched his name into Pirates immortality. He sent a 1–2 pitch over the left-center-field wall for a home run, giving the Pirates a 9–7 lead.
The roar of the crowd may have registered a 7 on the Richter scale as radio broadcaster Chuck Thompson exclaimed, Pittsburgh has just become an outdoor insane asylum. We have seen and shared in one of baseball’s great moments.
Screaming fans and an announcer’s hyperbole aside, the Yankees refused to surrender. Old reliable Bob Friend, in a rare relief appearance, yielded singles to Bobby Richardson and pinch-hitter Dale Long. After one out, Mantle singled off reliever Harvey Haddix, driving in a run. Berra then hit what appeared to be a double-play ball to Nelson at first base, but instead of throwing to second, Nelson chose to step on first, thus eliminating a force-out. Mantle dove back to first base, avoiding a tag as the tying run crossed the plate.
The stage was now set for the most dramatic ending in World Series history.
Leading off in the bottom of the ninth, with the score knotted at 9, Mazeroski faced new Yankees hurler Ralph Terry. The giant Longines clock high atop the scoreboard in left field showed the time as 3:36.
On a 1–0 count, Maz swung at a high fastball and sent it high and deep toward left field. Berra, playing left field, ran toward the wall and stopped. With his back facing the infield, the future Hall of Famer stood helplessly as he watched the 400-foot blast disappear into those outstretched limbs of trees in Schenley Park. Berra then fell to his knees, realizing that the ball and the World Series were out of his reach.
The 24-year-old Maz ran, skipped, and hopped around the bases, waving his hat over his head, his other arm windmilling in celebration. Some fans ran onto the field and followed him. The rest of Forbes Field erupted like a Bessemer converter at U.S. Steel.
If it is true that baseball is life with the volume turned up, then Pittsburgh was living life to its fullest. For the next hour, according to Sports Illustrated, Forbes Field was awash in noise.
For the first time in 35 years, the Pirates were champions of the world and gave their fans a moment they would remember for the rest of their lives.
CLEMENTE: A TOUCH OF ROYALTY
Had ballet dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov elected to become a professional baseball player, he would have played right field like Roberto Clemente. Those fans fortunate enough to have seen Clemente during his 18-year career with the Pittsburgh Pirates saw artistry in motion whenever the flashy Puerto Rican outran a long fly ball or rifled a throw back to the infield.
During his rookie season in 1955, Clemente caught the attention of local fans not because of his overwhelming batting average (.255), but because of his unique way of playing the game. He shagged fly balls, for example, using a basket catch,
as did Willie Mays. When he tossed the ball back to the infield, he did so with a relaxed, underhanded motion that gave a disarming appearance of nonchalance. That abruptly changed during the game if an opposing base runner dared to challenge him to advancing from first to third on a hit to right field. Clemente’s arm then became a howitzer, and the hapless runner slid into nothing but a ball awaiting him in the