Thursday, May 31, 2012

A Grooved Pitch—Hall of Famer vs. Three Game Cup of Coffee Youngster

by Dennis Pajot

One hundred years ago this month the sixth-place Milwaukee Brewers opened a series against the second place Minneapolis Millers on Sunday, May 26, facing future Hall of Fame member Rube Waddell.

The eccentric Waddell is known to most baseball fans. Although on the downside of his career, he was still a pitcher to be reckoned with. During his major league career Rube posted a 193 and 143 record, mostly with Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics. Of these 193 wins, 50 were shutouts. He led the league in strike-outs six straight years in the first decade of the 20th Century, including 349 in 1904. Unfortunately, much of this is overshadowed in some people's minds by the stories of his wrestling alligators, chasing fire engines, and drinking alcoholic beverage to excess. Minneapolis manager Joe Cantillon took in the believed washed up pitcher in 1911, and Rube responded with a 20 win season for the Millers.

On this Sunday in Minneapolis Rube struck out nine Brewers and allowed only four hits, two of them bunts, in route to a 6 to 2 victory. One of the hits he surrendered appears to have been a little tainted. According to the Milwaukee Journal:
In the ninth Capron was the first Brewer up. All afternoon his townsfolk and fellow students had waited for him to do something, and when his final chance came, Waddell's kindness overpowered him. He slipped one over the heart of the pan with nothing on it but the cover. Cape met it square and off it went towards center. Once out on the grass, the Minneapolis outfield became more interested in watching Capron run than in fielding the ball. Clymer stood still and allowed Rossman to do the shagging. In the meantime Capron kept speeding on and when the ball was finally started toward the home plate, he was well on his way and reached home with the Brewers' first run.
The Capron in this story was Ralph Capron, a left-handed hitter acquired by the Brewers about three weeks before from the Pittsburgh Pirates. The 22-year old Minneapolis native was known to Wisconsin football fans as a star at the University of Minnesota, having scored a sensational touchdown against the Badgers the previous fall.


This was Ralph's first year in professional baseball. Pirate manager Fred Clarke saw he had plenty of ability, but needed seasoning. His ability included speed, as he could run the 100-yard dash in 10 seconds flat. Capron had quit school, not finishing his law degree and was wondering if he had made a mistake turning professional.

The young outfielder was hot so far with the Brewers. The morning of the game in question the statistics in the paper showed Capron was hitting a hefty .327. Ralph was having a pleasurable time in his home area. Against the St. Paul Saints two days prior, with his family in the stands, he had two hits, including a home run.


Back to the May 26 game. After Capron's suspicious home run, Jimmy Breen hit a slow roller into the infield. Waddell was slow getting to the ball and when he did he "hoisted it to the grand stand," and Breen went all the way to third. After a strike out, a bunt by Ray Schalk scored Breen.

Tom Dougherty certainly had not matched Waddell on the mound. The big Milwaukee right-hander gave up 12 hits and walked four. Every hitter in the Miller line-up had at least one hit, except second baseman Dave Altizer. Minneapolis lead off hitter Billy Clymer had three hits—one a double—but could not score a run. Clean-up man Red Killefer led the Millers in that category, scoring twice. Brewer second sacker Nemo Leibold had a particularly bad afternoon, striking out four times in four at bats against Waddell.

Ralph Capron would quickly cool off and was benched in favor of Jimmy Breen in early June. However, when used he showed his speed. In the first game of a doubleheader on June 13 at Columbus Capron had a bunt triple. He was sent up to bunt in the sixth inning, with outfielder Newt Randall on second. Cape came through with a neat roller, which bounded over first base and continued on its way into right field. With his blazing speed, Ralph reached third before the ball was finally stopped.

Capron continued to struggle as the season continued. On July 22 he was returned to the Pirates, leaving the Brewers with a .267 average in 51 games, which included four triples and two home runs. A week later he was sent to St. Paul, where he finished the season. Capron's troubles were apparently more mental than physical; late in the season the Milwaukee Journal's baseball beat writer Brownie wrote that Capron's speed was never in doubt, only that he "was solely lacking in grey matter. [Mike] Kelly in St. Paul has told his players no matter what sort of a bone headed play Cape pulls off to say nothing, but to 'con' him along." It was reported Capron had a guaranteed contract with Pittsburgh, so he would be paid his $2,800 for the season, if he played any more or not.

In August, the Brewers appealed to the National Commission to get back the $500 option purchase from the Pirates on Capron. When the Brewers notified Pittsburgh that they would not retain the player and wanted the money back the Pirate management refused. The commission ruled that releasing the player constituted a forfeit by the Milwaukee club for any reimbursement.

Ralph Capron played a total of three games in the big leagues with Pittsburgh in 1912 and 1913, unable to get a hit in his one at-bat, but scoring one run. He would play 63 games for Baltimore of the International League in 1913 and 1914, hitting only .258 and .195. Ralph Capron would live to the ripe old age of 91, dying in Los Angeles in 1980.

The other "person of interest" in our story, Rube Waddell, did not live the long life Ralph Capron did. In the spring of 1912, in Hickman, Kentucky, there was terrible flooding. Rube helped to sandbag the river, standing for hours in icy water. He came down with pneumonia, but pitched well in 1912. On February 20, 1913, Waddell was again a hero, helping out at a fire in Hickman. His illness came back, but he managed to pitch some in 1913. Later that year the big left-hander was diagnosed with tuberculosis and went to live with his family in Texas. He died on April 1, 1914, at the age of 37. In 1946 George Edward "Rube" Waddell was inducted in the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Months before his passing the Cincinnati Times-Star wrote this about the great left-handed pitcher:
Rube Waddell, so the doctors say, is a victim of consumption. Sympathy will pervade the base ball world—for the Rube, absurd character though he may have been, did a lot of good as he journeyed on his way. The man who brings merriment instead of sorrow; who causes mirth instead of grief; who adds one smile and never adds one tear—that man is a benefactor and a worthy citizen. Judging him from such a point of view, Waddell was a doer of great good. His ridiculous adventures never bore a sting and never harmed a soul, while the stories old of the Rube's incessant pranks added to the gaiety of nations.
Perhaps instead of being remembered as much for chasing fire engines and for pitching shut-outs, Rube Waddell should also be remembered for his heroic actions in Hickman, Kentucky, and a little for his "gift" pitch to a young ball player, making that 22-year old a one-inning hero in front of his hometown fans and family.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

"Red"

Richard Smith, Milwaukee's bulky backstop was one of the "Brews" solid cornerstones from 1936-1952


"Red"
by Paul Tenpenny
(Tencentz@aol.com)
Copyright 2012 Tencentzports
Printed with permission of the Author

If one only looks at Richard Smith's statistics as a player with the Milwaukee Brewers, you would miss the "rest of the story" as broadcaster Paul Harvey used to say. Smith's actual playing time for the Brews was indeed brief. He appeared in only 14 games as a player in 1936 and 1939. Yet few people have made more of an impact on Milwaukee's American Association ball team than this man during his tenure.

Richard Paul Smith was born on May 18, 1904 in Brokaw, Wisconsin, a city on the picturesque shores of the Wisconsin River. Richard's ethnic heritage was part Menominee Indian and German/Irish. By his early teens, Smith's family moved to Combined Locks, Wisconsin along the Fox River, just south of Green Bay. The young redhead loved sports, excelling in both baseball and football.

"Red" graduated from Kaukauna High School and attended college at nearby Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. Smith was part of their 1922 football squad who were undefeated that year.

1922 Lawrence University Football Team

Smith continued his college education in South Bend, Indiana, entering the hallowed halls of Notre Dame where he played football under their famed coach, Knute Rockne.

1926 "Fighting Irish"
Knute Rockne lower left, Red Smith upper right

The friendships forged at Notre Dame would have a strong influence on his future. Red was part of their 1926 football team which went 9-1 for the season.

Red was the catcher and captain of the Notre Dame baseball team.

1927 Red Smith
Catcher and Team Captain-Notre Dame

Enjoying baseball and football, Smith would turn professional in both sports in 1927.

Football

Red returned to Green Bay to play for his "hometown" Green Bay Packers in 1927. The Packers were coached by fellow Notre Dame alum, Curly Lambeau and would finish the year in 2nd place with a 7-2-1 record. Lambeau did double duty as the team's fullback along with his being its field general.

For 1928, Smith would take his cleats east to play for two different New York teams, the New York Giants (4-7-2) and the New York Yankees (4-8-1).

He returned to Green Bay for 1929, joining the eventual NFL champions as the Packers went undefeated, finishing 12-0-1.

In 1930 Red moved on to Newark, New Jersey and played for the Tornados who had a dismal season. (1-10-1.)

He finished his playing career with the (7-6-1) New York Giants in 1931.

While his professional football career was over as a player in 1931, Red would continue on in the sport, coaching at both the college level and in the pros.

Red coached for Georgetown in 1930 and then moved on to Seton Hall in 1931 where he would become their athletic director, overseeing both the school's baseball and football programs. He would coach at the University of Wisconsin from 1933-1935.

The Green Bay Packers and the New York Giants would use Red as an assistant line coach from 1936-1944.

1937 Green Bay Packers
(Smith-top row far right)

Baseball

As with football, the 23 year old Smith turned professional as a baseball player in 1927. He joined the International League's (AA) Jersey City Skeeters. While there he played in 22 games and hit for a .205 batting average in 78 at bats. Smith got his shot in the big leagues, playing for the New York Giants managed by the great John McGraw. Unfortunately for Red, his major league career would be but a vapor, playing in only one game. Playing his familiar position at catcher, he scored a put out but didn't get a chance to swing the bat for the Giants.

For his next stop, Red joined International League's Montreal Royals in 1928, appearing in 98 games and improving his batting average to .292 in 298 at bats. Defensively Smith performed well, with a .955 fielding average. 1929 found him splitting time between the International League's Reading Keystones(AA) for 21 games and the Eastern League's (A) Providence Grays for 17 games. He hit a combined .234 that season. In 1930 he moved to the Eastern League's Albany Senators where he hit .322 in 36 games with a fielding average of .962.

Red's other responsibilities kept him out of playing baseball in 1931. In 1932 Red returned to the International League playing for the Toronto Maple Leafs. He played in 96 games for Toronto, and in 288 at bats, Red hit for a .247 average and fielded a solid .986 behind the plate.

Coaching responsibilities in the Badger State took Smith away from playing baseball for the 1933-35 seasons.

Red Smith would come to the Milwaukee Brewers in 1936. The Brews had lost both of their starting catchers, Bill Brenzel and George Detore to injuries. Smith was secured to fill that gap until the regulars healed.

All Thumbs, George Detore and Bill Brenzel
(Author's Collection)

While his time as a player was short here in Milwaukee, he was popular with the fans hitting a fat .417 average with 10 hits in 24 at bats in his 12 games played. Red filled a needed gap for the Milwaukee Brewers in 1936.

The Catcher Connects -Red Smith
(Author's Collection)

The Milwaukee Brewers would win the American Association crown that year, with a record of 90 wins and 64 losses and would go on to win the Little World Series in 1936.

Red's ability to handle players and general knowledge of the game was evident and he would go on to manage several of the Brewers farm teams and of course, continued to play some while skippering these teams.

As player with the Fieldale, Virginia Towlers - Bi-State League (D) he scattered 54 hits in 151 at bats for a .358 average. Behind the plate, Red fielded a .975 average in his 45 games played.

When the Milwaukee Brewers abandoned Fieldale, Player/ Manager Smith moved on to the Hopkinsville Hoppers of the Kentucky - Illinois - Tennessee League (D) for 1937- 1938. He hit for a solid .281 average over the two years and did a good job as their backstop. He played in 49 games for 1937 and 63 in 1938.

Red would return to the Milwaukee Brewers in 1939, but only for a brief 2 games with 2 hits in 5 at bats.

His final at bat was reserved for the Green Bay Blue Sox of the Wisconsin State League (D) in 1941. As their manager, he put himself back in 3 games that season, one of them as a pitcher. He batted a perfect 1.00 with a single going 1-1 the season.

Red Smith
(Author's Collection)

Red's minor league batting career totals:
Smith played for 10 seasons with 398 hits in 1404 at bats with 64 doubles, 8 triples and 10 home runs. He compiled a lifetime minor league batting average of .283.

Red Smith's real skill though, was recognized by teams in both football as well as baseball, that of coach and manager. In the dugout, on the field and with the players, Red knew what it was to play the game and had the ability to bring out the best in those around him.

The 1931 Seton Hall University yearbook sums up Smith's abilities:
"During the year 1930-31, Seton Hall made a radical change in its athletic program. It marked the introduction of inter-collegiate football after twenty-five years in which the Blue and the White of Setonia had not been seen on any gridiron.

The man was Richard P. Smith, a former University of Notre Dame player.

...In the person of Mr. Smith, we have an ideal leader. He knows both football and baseball thoroughly, having played while in college and afterwards. He also inspires confidence and love in the men under his system of coaching. He teaches the fundamentals and fine points and adapt's a man's natural style of play to his system of coaching. which goes to make a smooth-working, harmonious machine."
This ability of Red to inspire, teach and adapt players skills to benefit the whole of the team was well suited for the Milwaukee Brewers both at the higher levels and in the instructional leagues. Smith would effectively mold many players in the Brewer system and for some, help propel them on to the major leagues.

Smith in the Dugout

While Smith did a great job filling in for the injured players as a backup catcher, we need to take a closer look at Red, not as a player but in the dugout and in charge of his element.

Red was put in charge of the Fieldale, Virginia Towelers replacing Joe Guyon June 5, 1936. With Smith as manager, the team would finish in 3rd place in the Bi-state league. More notable was Red's oversight of a 19 year old Milwaukee native, by the name of Ken Keltner who would join the Brews in 1937. While in Fieldale, Keltner would hit for a whopping .360 batting average with 32 home runs.

Red accompanied Brewers to spring training for 1937 in Biloxi, Mississippi where he encouraged Brews manager Al Sothoron to try Keltner in the infield. Smith played him in the infield while with the Towelers. He predicted that, "Keltner is destined to develop into a greater hitter than Chet Laabs." Smith, a keen judge of young players, was dead on with his prediction.

Ken Keltner played exceptionally for Milwaukee in 1937 and would move on to have an equally exceptional career in the major leagues with the Cleveland Indians in 1938.

Kenny Keltner 1937 Spring training

With the Brewers abandoning the Fieldale team, Harry Bendinger hired Red for 1937 and 1938 to manage the Hopkinsville Hoppers. While there Smith would manage many players who would later play for Milwaukee, Stan Galle, Joe Just and slugger Hal Peck to name a few.

In 1938, Peck would hit for a .331 batting average with 187 hits in 565 at bats.

Hal Peck, Milwaukee Brewers Slugger
(Author's collection)

By May 25, 1938, Smith would be made director of the entire Brewer farm system.

In 1941 and 1942 Smith would manage near his hometown in Green Bay, Wisconsin for the Blue Sox/Bluejays.

1941 Green Bay Blue Sox - Wisconsin State League Champions
Red Smith on top right, next to Andy Pafko

While there, Red would develop players like Andy Pafko on their 1st place 1941 Blue Sox team. Pafko of course, would go on to a long major league career with the Chicago Cubs, Brooklyn Dodgers and the Milwaukee Braves. While with Green Bay in 1941, Handy Andy hit for a .349 batting average.

Also on that 1941 Green Bay squad was George "Bingo" Binks.

Milwaukee Brewers Slugger "Bingo" Binks
(Author's collection)

Red Smith gets the credit for changing his swing and turning him into a great hitter. Once he spread out his stance a bit, said Smith, "he became one of the best hitters" for the Blue Sox.

1942 Green Bay Blue Jays - Manager Red Smith

In 1942, One of Smith's charges was a young man by the name of Earl Gillespie, who unfortunately wouldn't make it as a ball player. Local Wisconsin sports fans know that Earl would go on to have an enviable career as the play-by-play announcer for the Milwaukee Brewers in 1952 and then become the voice of the Milwaukee Braves from 1953-1965. He would move on to become a trusted sports reporter and Sports director for Milwaukee's WITI-TV 6.

Earl Gilespie - Milwaukee Braves Announcer
(Author's collection)

Milwaukee had not done well as a team since 1936 and it was becoming a concern for the American Association that if Milwaukee would fail, so could go the league. Into this difficult situation, jumped an ambitious Bill Veeck Jr. with his friend Charlie Grimm, who took over management of the Milwaukee Brewers in 1941. The rest, as they say, is history...

Under new management -1941 Program
(Author's collection)

Milwaukee would bring Red Smith on as a coach for 1943. Smith, was a perfect fit for the improving Milwaukee Brewers.

1943 Milwaukee Brewer Team Photo
(Author's collection)

Along with his baseball expertise, he played his part well in the zany world of Bill Veeck's Brewers. Forgetting the world at war for at least a few hours, Milwaukee fans enjoyed the diversion provided on and off Borchert field.

Look Magazine September 7, 1943
(Author's collection)

When it came to baseball though, Smith was a very active and able assistant to "Jolly Cholly." His ease at handling pitchers and catchers was only natural for the former backstop.

1943 Coach Smith, returning to the dugout in Kansas City
(Author's collection)

A "rare" view of Red Smith in action during a game with Kansas City, showing Smith wearing the team's road uniform.

Smith's 1943 Road Jersey
(Author's collection)

Milwaukee would go on to win the American Association crown for 1943 with a record of 90 wins and 61 defeats.

In 1944 Charlie Grimm would move up to the majors at the helm for the Chicago Cubs, with Grimm, bringing on Casey Stengel to manage Milwaukee in his absence. Smith would stay on to assist Stengel for 1944.

The Brews would again top the American Association with a superb record of 102 victories and only 51 defeats. Red was allowed to leave the team on August 25th so he could join the New York Football Giants with promises to return to Milwaukee the next spring...

Milwaukee Brewers 1944 Champions
(Author's collection)

... but sad news for Milwaukee was good news for Red Smith, as he would be moving up to the big leagues to coach along side his good friend, Charlie Grimm, with the Chicago Cubs in 1945.

Charlie Grimm and Red Smith Reunited

1945 would be a Championship year for the Grimm and Smith led Chicago Cubs. Chicago would win the National League crown with a record of 98 victories vs. 56 losses besting the 2nd place Cardinals by 3 games. They battled the Detroit Tigers in the World Series, losing in 7 games to the American League Champs.

The Cubs would finish the 1946 season with a 82 - 71 record, but with most of the major league players returning from the war, competition was keen and Chicago could only muster a 3rd place finish for the season. This would also finish Charlie Grimm as Cubs manager.

Smith would return to Chicago for another 3 seasons, 1947 thru 1949, but the Cubs would plummet to the cellar of the National League. They finished in 6th place in 1947 and in last place for both 1948 and 1949.

Back to The Brewers

The Dynamic Duo is Back in Brewtown
(Author's collection)

Charlie Grimm would return as skipper of the Milwaukee Brewers in 1951. "The success-studded combination of Jolly Cholly and Red Smith are back in business at 8th and Chambers and once more all roads lead to the ballpark," proclaimed the Brewers newsletter.

Smith's role this trip to Milwaukee was that of the Brews General Manager. Sure enough, as advertised, "Winning ways were back at Borchert Field." It was an exciting season, with the Brewers going all the way, winning the American Association pennant with a record of 94-57. This powerhouse team would go on to win the playoff series and the Little World Series.

1951 American Association & Little World Series Champions
(Author's collection)

For the 1952 season, the Brewers promised another pitched battle for a 2nd straight American Association crown. The Milwaukee team touted a "typical Smith-Grimm" formula. A combination of returning players and new additions that would emphasize "capable athletes performing as a solid unit, rather than an assortment of individual stars."

Charlie Grimm would be called up by Lou Perini to manage the Boston Braves on May 31st... necessitating Red's taking over as interim manager until Bucky Walters would take over June 6th.

Smith Takes Charge
(Author's collection)

The 1952 edition of the Milwaukee Brewers would better their 1951 predecessors with a season record of 101-53. Unfortunately, the team wouldn't repeat in the playoffs, losing in the final round,4 games to 3 to Kansas City.

1952 Milwaukee Brewers-Red Smith
(Author's collection)

1952 turned out to be the final season for the Brewers in Milwaukee as the real plans of Lou Perini were revealed when Charlie Grimm would lead major league baseball to the city. The Boston Braves would become the Milwaukee Braves in 1953. Red Smith would stay on as General Manager with the minor league team that moved on to Toledo. The "Toledo Sox" would win what would have been the Milwaukee Brewers 3rd American Association title in a row in 1953.

1953 American Association Champions - Toledo Sox
(Author's collection)

Red would stay with the Sox until the team left for Wichita, Kansas, becoming the "Wichita Braves" in 1956. Red would remain in Ohio.

Smith would work for the Buckeye Brewery in Toledo, eventually becoming their president until its closing in the early 1970's.

When baseball returned to Toledo (Mud Hens) in 1966, now affiliated with the International League, Red would serve as their general manager and then vice president.

Richard Smith would reside in Ohio for the remainder of his life, but would return frequently to his home state, Wisconsin.

Red Smith Sports Award Dinner Letterhead
(Author's collection)

Red lent his name to an annual award banquet organized in 1965 to raise funds to support local youth sports organizations. It has grown greatly since its inception, including funding a minor league team and presenting local awards and scholarships. Two major awards are given away each year. The Red Smith Award given to a person who has excelled (like Red) in sports from the State of Wisconsin and the "Nice Guy" Award which is presented to a National sports figure. It still continues to this day and has become one of the largest of its kind held in the Midwest.

"SPORTSMAN"

Red Smith was quite comfortable no matter the hat. Playing, coaching football, or swinging the bat.

He did it all!
(Courtesy Rick Johnson)

Fullback, lineman, a line coach, catcher, manager or the front office were all easy roles for Red to assume. He did them all because he genuinely loved it all.

When he wasn't engaged in playing, managing or coaching sports he enjoyed making sport of the great outdoors that he loved all his life.

Fishing - Hunting - Fred Miller

From early on, Smith was never far from the outdoors he loved. Fishing always had a prominent place in leisure activities, having grown up in central Wisconsin. Beautiful lakes and woods were always nearby and eagerly sought out by Smith. An avid angler, Red was just as skilled with a fly rod as he was with traditional rod and reel. He would tie his own flies. His grandson, fondly remembers going fishing with his "Bompa" hundreds of times.

While bass fishing in Florida, Red caught and had mounted a 15lb. large mouth from the Ocklawaha River in 1962, a fish, by the way, that grandson Rick still has. Lake Erie was a favorite fishing spot for walleye and perch for Smith. Most of the fishing trips his grandson recalls were close to Toledo. The Maumee river, Lake Erie, small lakes in southern Michigan and privately stocked ponds. While they would often get lost on the way looking for certain fishin' holes, they ended up fishing somewhere, not necessarily where they intended to fish. Smith adapted to challenges in his avocation the same way he did with his vocation.

Smith was also an avid small game hunter, gunning mostly for rabbits and birds. Red had a gun shy Brittany Spaniel named "Chugger" who served him loyally as his bird dog. Red would spend the majority of his time hunting in Michigan, Ohio and his home state of Wisconsin.

One of his close friends was fellow Notre Dame grad Fred Miller of the Miller Brewing family. Red hunted and fished with Miller often. The Miller's had property in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and they would hunt and fish together there as well as in Canada on a regular basis.

December 17, 1954

Plaque of Fred Miller
Downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Fred Miller became Miller Brewing's President in 1947 and began his close relationship with Milwaukee sports that would have a profound and lasting effect on the city. He was instrumental in the building of a new ball park, Milwaukee County Stadium, to replace the aging Borchert Field. He saw the value in developing a stronger partnership with brewing and baseball that would benefit both parties. Always the sports fan, he developed close friendships with many ball players, using some to be spokesmen for Miller beer.

Twin Engine Lockheed Ventura Bomber
(Miller converted one to carry 9 passengers)

Tragedy would strike the Miller family on December 17, 1954 when the plane carrying Miller, his son and two pilots crashed shortly after take off.

In a conversation with Milwaukee Brewers and Braves shortstop Johnny Logan, this author learned that Red Smith was supposed to be on this trip. This was confirmed by Smith's grandson. A fortunate change in plans for Smith avoided this tragedy.

"IT'S IN THE CARDS"

Red Smith enjoyed playing cards. With ball players and friends, there was always time for a competitive game of poker or gin rummy. There was ample down time during baseball season for cards.

Rain Delay in Milwaukee - Red at the Card Table

Sometimes cards would get him into trouble with family. While fishing trips met with her approval, taking the grandson to any of his card games sometimes displeased his daughter. Maybe this is why.

An incident worth mentioning gives some insight to Red's concentration and focus when playing cards. While some of the details are lost to time, Red got involved in a card game aboard a ship in New York City. While the boys played on, enjoying their time, slapping cards and bending a few elbows with some refreshments, alcohol was thought to be involved... the ship apparently moved on to its destination without notifying the players. Red and company were oblivious to their next port of call, Bermuda.

"LET'S EAT"

Red cast a pretty big shadow and was known to take his eating quite seriously. Richard Smith put the same diligence into his eating as he did with sports. By himself he did quite well, but make it a team effort, look out!

"Smorgy" Smith
(Author's Collection)

No one could handle the knife and fork better than Richard Smith and his "Partner in Dine", Charlie Grimm. Wherever this two man swarm of locusts went, they left their mark in empty plates. Their dining habits are legend. Jolly Cholly gave Smith the nickname of "Smorgasbord " when he described his long time friend in his autobiography, "Baseball I Love You."

With their return to Milwaukee in 1951, Smorgy and Cholly would again test the mettle of their belts as Brewers. A storeroom near the Borchert Field clubhouse was turned into a kitchen. The Brewers installed a refrigerator, freezer and a hot plate.

Let's Eat - Borchert Field 1943
(Author's Collection)

For lunch they had Polish sausage and sauerkraut. Every Monday, 50 pounds of cold cuts were delivered for them. During the spring time run of walleye in Escanaba, Michigan, they ordered 100 pounds of fillets. They had them fried up on one of the concession stand hot dog griddles. I can only wonder what thoughts those smells invoked in the fans, who had to settle for hot dogs?

Charlie Grimm also relates what he calls "their biggest night as gourmets" back in 1944 while in Chicago. While eating dinner with Bill Veeck, then with the Cleveland Indians, Charlie continues:
The waiter brought us each a couple pats of butter and dropped a small stack of black bread on the table. This had disappeared when he came back to take our orders. He announced that among the goodies was a double sirloin.

"Ah, said Smorgy, "that's for me!"

"Me too, " I said.

The waiter suggested we agree on how we wanted it cooked.

Veeck interrupted. "They each want one." he said.

The waiter objected, saying it was for two.

"Real big?" asked Smorgy.

"Oh yes sir, real big."

"Great" said Smorgy, "Bring a couple. We haven't had anything to eat since noon."

Red ordered a plate of cottage fries, too.

"You get them with your steak," said the waiter.

"Fine," answered Smorgy, or maybe it was me. "Bring the french fries too. And also bring some of that stuff you pile up like logs with the yellow goo over it."

When the waiter looked puzzled, Veeck explained, "They mean asparagus and Hollandaise sauce."

We ate it all, but not before the waiter had brought in a bowl of butter and a whole loaf of that black bread.
"ONE OF THE GUYS"

Throughout his life, Richard Smith excelled at "being one of the guys." Whether it was as a player, team captain, coach, manager, General Manager, Athletic Director, President etc., Red never lost touch with the camaraderie of being part of the team.

Red Smith - 1970's

Red was known to show up at the University of Toledo baseball and football practices or attend the games, toting along a bag of chewing gum for the guys. With his lifelong love for the great outdoors, he enjoyed it with others. Grandson Rick Johnson has a lifetime of memories of his grandfather to cherish. Thanks Rick for sharing some of them with me.

Red Smith joins the ranks of Bill Veeck and his pal, Charlie Grimm, as having a profound effect on Milwaukee's baseball history. Red's hard work helped the Milwaukee Brewers to become one of the best, if not the best team in the American Association from 1936-1952.

Richard "Red" Smith's final resting place.
(Courtesy of Rex Hamann)

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

His Place in Brewers History

Milwaukee Brewers PR Manager John H. Steinmiller tweeted out this photo of a new mural added to Miller Park:

Located in the concourse behind the right field corner, it showcases logos (although not necessarily primary logos) of the big-league club throughout its history.

I'm glad to see the Beer Barrel Man, with his long connection to the original Brewers, recognized by the Brewers in any context.

Until we get a real memorial to the Brews, secondary tributes like this one will have to do.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Prices and Tips for Attending Brewer Games, 1912 Style

by Dennis Pajot

For the first Sunday game of the 1912 season, April 28, the Milwaukee Journal gave readers this information and tips on attending Athletic Park:
  • Game called 2:30 p.m.
  • Gates open at 12:30 p.m.
  • Admission 25 cents, 50 cents, 75 cents and $1.00
  • Entire grandstand, except 500 seats back of catcher, are 50 cents. That section is reserved at 75 cents.
  • Box seats $1.00
  • Right wing of grandstand is in the sun.
  • All bleacher seats are 25 cents and are situated in center field.
  • All entrances are on Chambers and Eighth Streets.
  • Rain checks will be attached to each ticket and time will be saved if the holder tears the rain check off before entering the turnstile.
  • No intoxicating drinks will be sold in the left wing of the grandstand or in the reserved seat section.
  • In all other cities in the American Association women remove their hats. While it is not compulsory, the men behind you will take it as a great favor.
  • Eighth Street cars will take you directly to the entrance. One minute service will be started today.
  • If you don’t mind walking a few blocks you can take a Third Street car or a Milwaukee-Northern car.
  • Exit to the centerfield bleachers is located at Eighth and Burleigh Streets.
  • When entering the main gates turn to your right for the bleachers.
  • Exchange tickets are to be had at the main gate.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

1911 Team Photo

In 1940, the Brewers hired former White Sox catcher Ray Schalk to manage the club. Schalk had come up through the Brewers, playing on the pennant-winning 1913 and 1914 clubs. To celebrate the hire, the Milwaukee Journal ran this photo of the 1911 Brewer squad, Schalk's first in a Brewer uniform.

Ray Schalk Was a Rookie Catcher When This Picture Was Taken

Covered with dust, the team picture of the 1911 Brewers hangs on the north wall of the office at Borchert field. It was the first group photograph which included Ray Schalk, then a rookie catcher and now manager of the local American association club. Schalk is third from the left (front row). Others (left to right) in that row are Ralston, outfielder; Dolan, infielder; Nemo Liebold, outfielder; Jimmy Breen, utility infielder; Jimmy Barrett, manager-outfielder; Ralph Cutting, pitcher, Harry Clark, third baseman; George Stone, outfielder; Newt Randall, outfielder; Stoney McGlynn, pitcher. Back row (left to right). John Nicholson, pitcher; Chappy Charles, infielder; Phil Lewis, second baseman; Clarence Short, pitcher; Tom Dougherty, pitcher; Tom Jones, first baseman; Don Marion, pitcher. The latter two and Barrett are known to be dead. Dougherty lives in Milwaukee.
Schalk first came to the Brewers in 1911 from Taylorville in the Illinois-Missouri League. His contract, purchased for $100, was sold one year later to the Chicago White Sox for $10,000. He spent the next sixteen years at Comiskey Park, all behind the plate and the last two as player/manager.

After hanging up his mask, Schalk continued his managerial career in the minors. He put in six years in charge of the International League's Buffalo Bisons and two with the American Association's own Indianapolis Indians before being hired to guide the Brews through the last months of the season following the resignation of Mickey Heath on July 27th.

Schalk was elected to the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown by the Veterans Committee in 1955. Today, he's perhaps best remembered for his connection to the 1919 Black Sox scandal, one of several former Brewers caught up in the scandal.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Book Review: "Bill Veeck: Baseball's Greatest Maverick"

Today's Book Club installment is a new biography, released just last week, of our very own Bill Veeck. It's entitled, naturally enough: "Bill Veeck: Baseball's Greatest Maverick" by Paul Dickson.

Veeck is probably best known for his promotional exploits as a major league owner (sending the 3'7" tall Eddie Gaedel up to bat for the St. Louis Browns, Comiskey Park's exploding scoreboard), but was also a man who passionately loved the game and its fans. At every stop in his baseball career, Veeck sat in the grandstands with regular fans, proclaiming a belief that one's knowledge of baseball was in inverse proportion to the price of his or her seat.

Veeck's sense of social justice also shines through in Dickson's account. Although wags will joke today that the phrase "CHAMPION OF THE LITTLE GUY" on his Hall of Fame plaque is a reference to Gaedel, Veeck was a lifelong believer in civil rights. In 1943, he had a deal to buy the Phillies, which he intended to stock with players from the Negro Leagues. Veeck made the mistake of informing Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis of those plans, and the next day the National League stepped in to take over the Phils, scuttling Veeck's deal. Fourteen years later, with Cleveland, Veeck integrated the American League by signing Larry Doby just three weeks after Jackie Robinson's debut for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Dickson does a marvelous job of tracing that sense of justice back to his father, Wm. L. Veeck, Sr. The elder Veeck was a successful Chicago sportswriter and columnist when he was hired to run the Chicago Cubs in 1918 by owner William Wrigley Jr., who asked the critical columnist "You think you can do better?" (Veeck's response: "Well, I certainly couldn't do any worse.").

While with the Cubs, the senior Veeck was a force for changing and broadening the game. He persuaded the reluctant owners to agree to an annual All-Star Game in 1933, and that same year proposed a series of interleague games to boost sagging attendance in the dogs days of summer. Decades later, his son would become an innovator in his own right, with the same mixed record of success.

Veeck the Younger cut his eye teeth on his father's Cubs team (much is made of how he helped plant the first ivy vines along the outfield wall) before striking out on his own with the Milwaukee Brewers.

One of the things that most struck me while reading Dickson's account was how Veeck spent his life building a professional family. He had a habit of working with the same people over and over, moving together from one team and one city to the next, they either following him directly or rekindling a professional relationship once he had settled in to his new home. This was perfectly embodied in his relationship with Rudie Schaffer. Schaffer was an accountant for the Milwaukee Brewers when Veeck and Charlie Grimm bought the team in 1941, and Sport Shirt Bill instantly took a liking to Schaffer's "boundless love of baseball".

1943 Milwaukee Brewers
(Schaffer back row left, Veeck back row right)

Schaffer quickly became Veeck's right hand man, ran the club while Veeck was in the Marines, and stayed with him thereafter. When Veeck bought the Cleveland Indians in 1946, Schaffer was brought in to take over as general manager. Schaffer would do the same for the Browns when Veeck moved to St. Louis. He would also be a key figure in Veeck's tenure as owner of the Chicago White Sox, as well as his brief foray into horse racing at Suffolk Downs. When Veeck was honored as "Baseball Executive of the Year" in 1977 after turning around the previously-hapless White Sox, Veeck gave much of the credit to Schaffer: "He does the work and I take the bows."

There was another member of Veeck's troupe who joined in Milwaukee. Johnny Price was a shortstop signed from the Oakland Oaks as much for his between-inning entertainment as his work on the field.

Veeck took price to the big leagues in 1946, signing him to a contract with the Indians as a pinch hitter. "He won't hit much," Veeck said, "but he's the greatest baseball entertainer in the country." Veeck had the inspired notion of pairing him with Max Patkin, the other great baseball clown, who he brought to the Indians as a coach.

I was also struck by how much Veeck's time as owner of the Brewers informed the rest of his career. Much of what we think of as his shtick was developed at Borchert Field. The movable fence he built at Cleveland Municipal Stadium to contain opposing players' home runs? Had its origins in Borchert Field's "spite fence". The zany fan giveaways and raffles he held throughout his career were first tried on the fans at the Orchard. Even the infamous White Sox uniforms he introduced in 1976 had their roots in Milwaukee. Although their most iconic feature was the rarely-worn shorts, the road uniforms were notable for their solid blue shirts and matching pants.

The navy-over-navy road uniform, eschewing traditional gray, bears a distinct resemblance to the Brewer uniforms Veeck introduced to Milwaukee in 1942:

Mickey Heath Tries On the New Brewer Uniform

The new baseball uniforms for the Brewers arrived last week and Mickey Heath (left), back with the club as coach, tried on the home suit. He and Rudy Schaffer, club secretary, are holding up a shirt of the road uniform. Home uniforms are of white jersey and the road suits are dark blue. At present the most important date on the Brewers' calendar is the one shown in the picture—Apr. 16, opening day.
As the American Association Brewers were the incubator for players on their way to the majors, so too was the club important in the development of Bill Veeck as an owner.

Even the cover photograph reinforces his connection with the Brewers. In it, a young Veeck sits in his desk at Borchert Field, wheeling and dealing on the phone. Over his shoulder is the oversized trophy he bought to commemorate the Brews' Opening Day attendance record in 1942. On the wall, a stern photo of Kenesaw Landis stares down at him. This little touch could have been an ironic gesture, given the Commissioner's role in thwarting Veeck's plans for the Phillies, not to mention the many run-ins the Brewers' organization had with Landis over the years.

Dickson's tome is meticulously researched (one of his sources was our very own Paul Tenpenny), engaging and a worthwhile addition to any baseball fan's library, but those of us who love the Brews will find it a particular pleasure. You can buy it now at your local bookstore, on Amazon or, if you don't mind the ludicrous price tag you can download an iBook from Apple (seriously, guys, there's no way that should cost the same as a hardcover copy). I can't recommend it highly enough.