Sunday, September 30, 2018

Matt Carpenter Achieves the Rare Feat of Going an Entire Season Without Grounding into a Double Play


Carpenter grounded into zero double plays in 2018

Matt Carpenter's 2018 season will be largely remembered for enduring the worst slump of his career and the seemingly salsa-fueled hot streak that followed.  However, the St. Louis Cardinals infielder also quietly achieved a rare feat during his excellent 2018 campaign when he finished the season without grounding into a double play.  By doing so, Carpenter became just the tenth hitter to go an entire campaign without being doubled up while amassing the required number of plate appearances to qualify for the batting title.

Grounding into double plays has been tracked by the NL since 1933 and by the AL since 1939.  Over that time, going an entire season without being doubled up while accumulating enough plate appearances to qualify for the batting title is a rare feat only accomplished by nine other hitters prior to Carpenter--George Watkins, Pete Reiser, Dick McAuliffe, Rob Deer, Rickey Henderson, Ray Lankford, Otis Nixon, Craig Biggio, and Chase Utley--and never by the same player twice.  Moreover, nearly half of the players to complete the double play-free campaign achieved it under special circumstances.  The first hitter to turn the trick, Watkins, did so in 1934 with just 329 plate appearances for the season as only 100 games played were required to qualify for the batting title at the time.  In addition, Henderson, Lankford, and Nixon each had their double play-free campaigns in 1994 when the baseball strike wiped out nearly the last third of the season.  Also, Augie Galan is sometimes credited with going the entire 1935 campaign without hitting into a twin-kill, however, according to Retrosheet's game logs from that season, the slugger was indeed doubled up on June 25 of that year.

Statistics from the ten double play-free seasons


Year G
PA
AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB
BA
OBP
SLG
OPS
OPS+
Watkins 1934 105
329
296 38 73 18 3 6 33 24 34 2
0.247
0.316
0.389
0.704
89
Reiser 1942 125
537
480 89 149 33 5 10 64 48 45 20
0.310
0.375
0.463
0.838
142
McAuliffe 1968 151
658
570 95 142 24 10 16 56 82 99 8
0.249
0.344
0.411
0.755
126
Deer 1990 134
511
440 57 92 15 1 27 69 64 147 2
0.209
0.313
0.432
0.745
108
Nixon 1994 103
461
398 60 109 15 1 0 25 55 65 42
0.274
0.360
0.317
0.677
75
Lankford 1994 109
482
416 89 111 25 5 19 57 58 113 11
0.267
0.359
0.488
0.847
121
Henderson 1994 87
376
296 66 77 13 0 6 20 72 45 22
0.260
0.411
0.365
0.776
111
Biggio 1997 162
744
619 146 191 37 8 22 81 84 107 47
0.309
0.415
0.501
0.916
143
Utley 2016 138
565
512 79 129 26 3 14 52 40 115 2
0.252
0.319
0.396
0.716
92
Carpenter 2018 156
677
564 111 145 42 0 36 81 102 158 4
0.257
0.374
0.523
0.897
143


Throughout his career, Carpenter has always been difficult to turn two on.  Going into the 2018 campaign, the Cards slugger had only once grounded into more than five double plays in a season.  Moreover, prior to 2018, Carpenter's career average for grounding into a twin-kill when he had the opportunity do so was just 6.1%--well below the MLB average which usually hovers around 11%.  Part of what makes Carpenter so difficult to double up are his swing mechanics which focuses on hitting the ball in the air and slugging hard line drives while avoiding hitting the ball on the ground.  In fact, Carpenter's 26.4% ground ball rate in 2018 easily ranked lowest among 140 qualified hitters and well below the MLB average of 43.2%.  Low ground ball rates have been commonplace for Carpenter the last several seasons as the Cardinals infielder produced the lowest mark in 2017 with 26.9% while his respective totals of 30.6% in 2016 and 29.7% in 2015 ranked him fifth and second from the bottom in those years.  Conversely, Carpenter's swing mechanics generates lots of fly balls and line drives as the slugger ranked among the top-ten in both categories during 2018.

Carpenter’s yearly GDP per Opp rates

Year
DPopp GDP GDP%
2011
3 0 0.0%
2012
86 10 11.6%
2013
74 4 5.4%
2014
80 3 3.8%
2015
95 5 5.3%
2016
71 4 5.6%
2017
97 5 5.2%
2018
91 0 0.0%
Career
597 31 5.2%


In addition to his swing mechanics, batting out of the leadoff spot played a large role in Carpenter joining the small group of hitters to complete a double play-free campaign.  Leadoff hitters are more likely to accomplish the feat than any other spot in the batting order because they are guaranteed at least one plate appearance with no runners on base.  Moreover, following their initial plate appearance, leadoff batters spend the rest of the game batting behind the weakest hitters in the order who are often asked to sacrifice when there is a runner on first base.

For the majority of his career, Carpenter has batted out of the leadoff spot where he has hit much better than in comparison to other spots in the order.  Carpenter is certainly not the prototypical top of the order base-stealing speed merchant, having never swiped more than five bags in a season.  What's more, over the last few seasons, Carpenter started putting up slugging percentage and home run totals more commonly seen by hitters batted in the heart of the order.  Nevertheless, Carpenter and the Cardinals seem to have recognized, perhaps begrudgingly, that despite his skill-set, the infielder performs his best when batted leadoff.

Carpenter's career GDP per Opp is just 5.2%
St. Louis initially began batting Carpenter at the top of the order during his 2013 breakout sophomore campaign in which the club won the NL Pennant and the slugger led the senior circuit in hits, doubles, and runs scored.  Since that time, the Cardinals have only temporarily moved Carpenter from leadoff--once to the number two spot in the order for three months in 2015 and then to the three-hole for the opening two months of 2017.  However, both times Carpenter struggled to produce and was subsequently moved back to leadoff where he regained his hitting stroke.  Despite Carpenter's previous difficulties batting outside of the leadoff spot, the Cardinals opened 2018 with Carpenter hitting third in the order.  After getting off to a slow start, Carpenter was moved from the three-hole on April 20 and rotated between leadoff and the two spot for the next several weeks.  Carpenter's season hit a low point on May 15 when the Cards infielder sported an anemic .140/.286/.272 batting average/OBP/slugging percentage slash line.  Nevertheless, a couple games on the bench and starts as the number seven hitter seemed to revive the slugger's struggling bat.  Finally, on May 26 the club moved Carpenter back to leadoff where he remained for the duration of the season.

Following his career pattern, Carpenter excelled hitting leadoff and put himself among the league leaders in several categories and into the NL MVP conversation.  Carpenter's move back to the leadoff spot and resurgence from his horrendous early season slump largely coincided with the secret planting of a garden in the slugger's backyard by teammate Adam Wainwright and Wainwright's daughters while the St. Louis pitcher was on the disabled list and Carpenter and the Cardinals were on a road trip in early May.  From this garden, Carpenter started making his own spicy homemade salsa and as his bat heated up he began putting the salsa on most meals and taking jars of it on road trips.  As Carpenter slugged his way out of his early season slump, his seemingly salsa-fueled hot streak gained ample media coverage.  Soon, T-shirts bearing the inscription "It's Gotta Be the Salsa" and salsa jars with Carpenter's secret recipe were being sold with a portion of the proceeds going to St. Louis charities.

Overall, Carpenter made 115 starts as St. Louis' leadoff hitter while having his name written into the three-spot 17 times and being tapped as the number two batter for 15 games.  In addition to Carpenter, six of the other nine hitters to complete a double play-free campaign--McAuliffe, Henderson, Lankford, Nixon, Biggio, and Utley--were primarily batted leadoff in the season they achieved the rare feat.  By contrast, hitters batted in the heart of the order are much less likely to complete a season without grounding into a double play as a higher majority of their plate appearances come with runners on base.  In fact, only Reiser has been able to turn the trick while regularly batting in the heart of the order as he was hit out of the three-hole during his double play-free 1942 campaign.  Interestingly, the two other hitters to turn the trick, Watkins and Deer, regularly batted sixth--though Deer also saw a fair share of his plate appearances come from the five and seven spots along with a few from the eight hole.

GDP opps from double play-free year and career GDP rates


DPopp cGDP%
Watkins 50 6.4%
Reiser 148 3.3%
McAuliffe 78 6.7%
Deer 87 4.2%
Nixon 61 9.6%
Lankford 67 6.4%
Henderson 31 9.5%
Biggio 78 8.1%
Utley 61 6.2%
Carpenter 91 5.2%


Over the course of his 2018 campaign, Carpenter had 91 plate appearances in which there was an opportunity for the slugger to ground into a double play.  Carpenter's 91 opportunities rank second highest among the ten hitters to achieve the rare feat, trailing only Reiser's incredible total of 148.  Reiser's presence at the top of the leaderboard is not surprising, as he was the only one of the ten hitters regularly batted in the heart of the order.  With his 2018 season included, Carpenter's career average for grounding into a double play when he had the opportunity do so dropped from 6.1% to 5.2%.  Among the ten hitters, only Reiser and Deer have career marks lower than Carpenter's impressive 5.2%.  Despite not being recognized as a fast baserunner, Carpenter's 5.2% is well below the career averages of Henderson and Biggio--two Hall of Famers renowned for their speed on the basepaths and expertise at batting leadoff.  In 2018, the average major league hitter grounded into a double play just over ten percent of the time that they came up with the opportunity to do so.  Thus, a hitter with Carpenter's 91 double play opportunities on average would have grounded into a twin-kill nine times.

Carpenter's 36 home runs stand out in comparison to the other nine hitters who completed the double play-free campaign.  Although Deer, Lankford, and Utley all produced 30-home run seasons during their career, each of those three sluggers' round-tripper totals were well shy of Carpenter's 36 during the year they avoided the twin-kill.  Through May 15, Carpenter had gone deep just three times.  However, as Carpenter went on his seemingly salsa-fueled hot streak, the slugger put up mammoth home run totals and surged into the NL-longball lead late in the summer.  Unfortunately, Carpenter's early season struggles reared their ugly head again as he homered just once in September and was consequently caught and passed for the lead in the campaign's final days.

The majority of Carpenter's HRs came in clusters
The manner in which Carpenter put up his impressive home run total added an extra level of intrigue to his double-play free 2018.  In fact, Carpenter went on a home run tear each month of the season--save for the first and final months of the campaign--with the majority of his longballs coming in tightly-packed clusters of games.  Carpenter’s first cluster of home runs took place between May 26 and 29 when the Cards slugger went deep in three out of four games.  Then from June 15 to 21, Carpenter smacked five round-trippers over seven contests including three consecutive games in a row.  Carpenter’s most impressive home run barrage came in July when he crushed eight longballs in six games between the 14th and 21st.  During that stretch Carpenter became one of just 28 players to go deep in six straight games--two shy of the record of eight shared by Ken Griffey Jr., Don Mattingly, and Dale Long.  Carpenter's July longball barrage also included a three-home run game on the 20th.  Finally, between August 3 and 10, Carpenter had two separate streaks in which the slugger went yard in three consecutive games interrupted by just one homer-less game to give him six longballs over the seven-contest stretch.

By finishing the 2018 season without grounding into a double play, Carpenter became just the tenth hitter to accumulate enough plate appearances while avoiding the twin-kill for an entire campaign.  Although the most recent double play-free season prior to Carpenter's happened just two years ago, due to its overall rarity, it may be a while before the next player accomplishes the feat.  Moreover, nearly half of the double play-free seasons were achieved under special circumstances, underscoring its difficulty and exclusivity.  However, with the combination of his swing mechanics and ability to consistently avoid the twin-kill coupled with the Cardinals proclivity to bat the slugger leadoff, Carpenter has the potential to put together another double play-free campaign and be the first hitter to accomplish the rare feat twice.

----by John Tuberty

Follow non-salsa-fueled blog on Twitter @BloggerTubbs


Photo credit:  Matt Carpenter 2016 Topps, Matt Carpenter 2017 Topps BUNT, Matt Carpenter 2018 Topps Now

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Saturday, July 28, 2018

My Father's Memories of Working with Carl Yastrzemski at Kahn's-Hillshire Farm in the Early Eighties

My father Jack (far right) along with (L to R) House Speaker "Tip" O'Neill, Carl Yastrzemski, & my father's boss Sidney

In the fall of 1979, my father Jack went to work for Kahn's-Hillshire Farm.  At the time my family lived in Maryland and my father was responsible for the sales of Hillshire Farm kielbasa and smoked sausage products.  His territory encompassed the entire state of Maryland, the District of Columbia, Northern Virginia, and parts of Delaware.  During that time, Boston Red Sox outfielder Carl Yastrzemski worked as a spokesman for Kahn's-Hillshire Farm.  Being a well-known baseball player with a memorable Polish last name, Yastrzemski was the perfect fit to help the company grow its kielbasa and smoked sausage market share.  When Yastrzemski and the Red Sox came into town to face the Baltimore Orioles, my father got the unique opportunity and rare privilege to work alongside and get to know a future Hall of Fame baseball player.  Over the years, my father has recounted his memories of Yastrzemski and shared his autographs, pictures, and other keepsakes given to him by the Red Sox legend. 

Autographed Yastrzemski cards given to my father
Carl Yastrzemski's lengthy major league career spanned from 1961 to 1983.  During his career, Yastrzemski won numerous awards including an MVP, three batting titles, and seven Gold Gloves for his left field defense.  Moreover, he achieved several milestones including 3,000 hits, 450 home runs, 600 doubles, along with 1,800-plus RBI and runs scored.  In 1967, Yastrzemski became one of a select group of players to complete the Triple Crown by leading his respective league in home runs, RBI, and batting average.  Yastrzemski spent his entire major league career playing for the Boston Red Sox and became affectionately known by the nickname Yaz.  In 1989, Yastrzemski was voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on his first year of eligibility with a whopping 94.6% of the vote.  

Yastrzemski was raised on a 70-acre potato farm on the Northeastern side of Long Island in Bridgehampton, New York.  Coincidentally, my father also grew up on a farm, spending his formative years on the 160-acre family homestead in the small town of Twin Lakes, Minnesota.  Growing up on a farm helped instill the hard work ethic that enabled Yaz to complete 23 seasons in the majors and play in an astounding 3,308 games--an all-time record at the time of his retirement.  Like Yaz, my father was known for his dedication to the job and could certainly be described as a workaholic.  Although my father had the strength and speed to play sports, his lack of hand-eye coordination prevented him from seriously taking part in athletics.  Not surprisingly, my father did not closely follow sports though this likely helped him foster a good working relationship with Yaz who has generally kept a low profile for a famous baseball player and probably appreciated the chance to work alongside someone who was not star struck by his presence.

As the salesman in charge of Kahn’s-Hillshire Farm’s kielbasa and smoked sausage market share for the Baltimore-Washington area, my father was given the opportunity to take Yaz to lunch to meet with buyers from the area’s supermarket chains when the Red Sox slugger came to Baltimore to face the Orioles.  The buyer for the grocery store plays a key role for a company looking to expand their market share as they decide what products are put on the shelf and which ones they promote in their weekly newspaper ad.  My father described his lunches with Yaz and the supermarket buyers, "The Red Sox and Yastrzemski would come to Baltimore twice a year to play their games.  Yaz would stay in his hotel and the next morning I would meet him about a quarter to twelve."  In the days before pagers and cellphones, my father said Yaz had his own way of screening calls to his hotel room, "So, I'd go by his hotel and I'd ring his room and he would answer the phone in a strange voice and I'd say, 'Is Yaz there?' and he'd say, 'Oh, hi Jack!  How ya doin'?  I'll be right down.'  And then I'd drive him over to the restaurant where we'd meet one of the supermarket buyers and have lunch for maybe two hours.”

Yaz started working for Kahn's-Hillshire Farm in 1976
Yastrzemski started working for Kahn's-Hillshire Farm in 1976.  Yaz’s role with the company went beyond just being a famous ballplayer who appeared on their packaging and in their ads.  In fact, a New York Times article from September 1979 stated that Yaz “spends two weeks a year at the (Kahn’s-Hillshire Farm company) headquarters in Cincinnati watching how meats are processed and learning the business.”  My father also mentioned Yastrzemski being serious about Kahn's-Hillshire Farm's products and said the Red Sox outfielder would talk baseball with the buyers but also "talk about the ingredients and how it was made as well as point out that Hillshire Farm was the number one kielbasa and smoked sausage brand and the only one advertised nationally"

My father first took Yastrzemski to lunch with one of the supermarket buyers during the 1981 baseball season and continued to set up lunch meetings with the legendary ballplayer through his final big league campaign in 1983.  Over the course of those three years, my father and Yaz made the rounds, going to lunch with nearly all of the supermarket buyers from the Baltimore-Washington area--meeting with not only buyers from large supermarket chains such as Giant, Safeway, and Grand Union but also smaller chains like Magruder, Food-A-Rama, and Jumbo.  "So, 1981 to 1983 was when I would meet Yaz for lunch and have a buyer there and they could talk baseball," my father explained.  "We did that three years in a row, twice a year and we had lunch with a buyer either two or three afternoons each time depending upon how long he was in town, always at least two.  What was really neat is that I had one buyer, Giant, who was the biggest supermarket in the Baltimore-Washington area and Yaz would call him up to double check and make sure he had Hillshire in the ad and would say, 'Hey, ya got Hillshire in the ad for Thanksgiving?  You gotta take care of Jack.'  And he'd call him up three weeks before Christmas, 'Hey, ya got Hillshire in the ad for Christmas?  Hey, ya got Hillshire in the ad for Easter?  Ya got Hillshire in the ad for Fourth of July?'  And I'd go in and see the buyer, and the buyer would tell me, 'Ya know Yaz calls me up and checks up on me to see if I'm promoting your stuff.'”

I never had the pleasure of meeting Yaz, though I would have been too young to remember him even if had.  I asked my father to describe Yaz's personality and what he was like and he said, "Yaz was good to me.  He was always nice to me and the people we had lunch with.  He introduced me to other ballplayers on the team and he liked my boss, Sidney as well."

Yastrzemski is not the only Hall of Fame baseball player my father has had the opportunity to meet.  Since my father's boss, Sidney worked out of New York City, my father did a lot of traveling between the D.C. and New York City Metropolitan areas so it was not uncommon for him to spot famous people.  In fact, my father regularly took the Eastern Air Lines Shuttle between Washington (now Reagan) National and La Guardia Airports where he once briefly met Johnny Cash and often saw national evening news anchors including Sam Donaldson who he humorously described as looking "demonic" in person.  During one of his business trips to New York City, my father crossed paths with a legendary former New York Yankees player.  "I went to a sales meeting at a hotel in Rye, New York which is north of New York City," my father recounted.  "At 7'o clock, I got on the elevator to come down and eat breakfast and Joe DiMaggio was on the elevator.  I said, 'Aren't you...?' and he said, '...Yeah, I'm Joe DiMaggio.'  He said, 'I thought I was getting out of here before anybody'd recognize me.  Then he asked me, 'You want a signature?'  I said, 'Sure.'  And he signed a piece of paper for me and got off the elevator and that was it."  From what I remember the piece of paper DiMaggio signed for my father was from a small, light green manila notepad.  Unfortunately, at some point during my childhood the signed piece of paper was lost.

Yaz introduced Red Sox teammate Dwight Evans to my father
Due to working alongside Yaz, my father also got the unique opportunity to walk into a major league locker room when the Red Sox outfielder invited him and his boss, Sidney, into the visitor's locker room at Memorial Stadium after games against the Baltimore Orioles.  "Sometimes Sidney would come down from New York when the Red Sox had a game in Baltimore and we would go to the game," my father remembered.  "On a few occasions, Sidney and I got a chance to see Yaz in the Red Sox locker room after the game.  Yaz introduced us to all these players, so it was quite a scene.  Dwight Evans was real personable, he was real friendly to Sidney and I.  I got to know Dwight Evans and he knew us by name.  He really liked Sidney and liked me."  Evans was one of Yastrzemski's closest friends on the team.  During the early-1980's, Evans evolved into one of the game's most dominant sluggers after being primarily known for his Gold Glove-defense in right field earlier in his career.

Yastrzemski retired from baseball at the end of the 1983 season, bringing an end to a distinguished career that spanned 23 major league seasons.  A testament to his hard work and dedication to the game, Yaz played well into his forties--with his final games coming just a few weeks after turning forty-four years old.  Unfortunately, Yaz's Red Sox were unable to make a run at the AL East Division title in his final campaign, putting together a lackluster 78-84 record to finish 20 games out of first place.  By contrast, my family's hometown Baltimore Orioles captured the AL East with a dominant 98-64 record to advance to the postseason behind the strength of solid performances by veteran mainstays such as Eddie Murray as well as up-and-comers like Cal Ripken Jr.

With the Orioles in the postseason, Kahn's-Hillshire Farm saw the playoff games as an opportunity to strengthen their relationships with the local supermarket buyers.  "I got a phone call from the Vice President of Sales and he told me he was sending me a check by overnight mail that would be at my house at 9 o' clock in the morning," my father recalled.  "I was instructed to go to this fancy hotel in the business district of downtown Baltimore and that I was going to get eight tickets to every playoff game and then when they got in the World Series, I got eight tickets for every World Series game.  I was to give those to the buyers of the supermarkets and give them each two tickets to go to the games.  However, before the first World Series game, Sidney told me, 'Take four tickets and take you and your family, and give the other four away and make sure you and the family go to one game.'"

The Orioles defeated the Chicago White Sox in the ALCS to advance to the Fall Classic against the Philadelphia Phillies who had their own solid core of well-established veteran players which included Mike Schmidt, Pete Rose, Steve Carlton, and John Denny among others.  The Series opened in Baltimore and my father decided to take my mother, my sister, and I to Game 1.  Unfortunately, the O's were defeated by the Phils in Game 1 with Joe Morgan and Garry Maddox going deep to lead the visitors to a 2-1 victory.  Being just a young child, my only recollections from that night is that it rained during the game and the Orioles lost.  The seats my father was given were a little past the first base bag and--as luck would have it--situated just under the bleachers so my family stayed dry during the game.  Fortunately, the O's rebounded from the Game 1 loss and took the next four games to win the Championship behind the timely hitting of catcher Rick Dempsey who was named the Series MVP and became both mine and my sister's favorite player for the duration of his time in Baltimore.

Following his retirement from professional baseball, Yastrzemski became marketing director of New England and Florida for Kahn's-Hillshire Farm.  With his new position, Yastrzemski no longer regularly traveled to Baltimore, thus bringing an end to his lunch meetings with my father and the supermarket buyers.  Nevertheless, my father still had the opportunity to cross paths with Yaz a couple more times.  A few weeks after hanging up his cleats, the Massachusetts Congressional Delegation honored the Red Sox superstar with a "Carl Yastrzemski Day" reception at the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C.  By virtue of their association with Yastrzemski, my father and his boss Sidney were invited to attend the party which Kahn's-Hillshire Farm provided kielbasa for.  During the reception, my father and Sidney got to briefly meet and have their pictures taken with Massachusetts Representative Silvio Conte and Speaker of the House Thomas "Tip" O'Neill, both of whom were close friends of Yaz and avid Red Sox fans.  While growing up in Massachusetts, O'Neill was given his nickname by his boyhood friends after James "Tip" O'Neill, a 19th century ballplayer who shared his surname.  Coincidentally, "Tip" O'Neill, along with Yastrzemski, is one of just fifteen sluggers credited with winning the Triple Crown, having led the American Association in home runs, RBI, and batting average in 1887.  However, O'Neill's accomplishment was unbeknownst to anyone at the time as RBI did become an official stat until 1920.

(L to R) O'Neill, Yaz, Sidney, my father Jack, & Massachusetts Representative Silvio Conte at "Carl Yastrzemski Day"
My father and Sidney had another neat experience involving O'Neill due to their association with Yastrzemski.  "In August 1985, the company had their national sales meeting in Washington, D.C.," my father remembers.  "After a morning meeting, we went on a tour of the Senate and House of Representatives office buildings.  While everyone was on tour, myself, Sidney, and the salesmen from New England--six, seven, maybe eight of us in total--went on a special side trip.  Yaz had it worked out so that we could all go by "Tip" O'Neill's office and get a picture taken of us sitting at his desk while he was away at Congress.  “Tip" O’Neill’s staff let us in and I even got to put my feet on his desk with a cigar in my mouth.  Yaz set all that up."

Although my father is not a sports fan, he made a point of saving keepsakes and memorabilia from his time working with Yastrzemski to give to my sister and me.  Many of these keepsakes were given directly to my father by Yastrzemski.  Among them are autographed baseballs signed by Yastrzemski to my sister and me.  Unfortunately even though the autographed baseballs were kept in enclosed glass displays, Yastrzemski’s signature has faded over time.  Another signed Yastrzemski ball included autographs of three of his Red Sox teammates, Mike Torrez, Dennis Eckersley, and Dwight Evans.  Based on the signatures of the three players sharing the ball with Yaz, my father was given the signed ball during the 1981 or 1982 season.  Over the years, as I learned more about Torrez, Eckersley, and Evans, the ball has come to have more meaning for me.  Mike Torrez is largely remembered for giving up Bucky Dent's go-ahead three-run home run during the one-game playoff between the Red Sox and Yankees for 1978 AL East Divisional Title.  Ironically, Torrez had won two World Series games as a member of the Yankees to help them defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers during the previous year's Fall Classic before signing as a free agent with Boston for 1978.  Despite surrendering the infamous-Dent home run, Torrez had a solid 18-year career with 185 wins--60 of which came during five seasons with Boston.  Hall of Famer Dennis Eckersley had some of his finest and worst seasons as a starter for the Red Sox before becoming a dominant reliever with the Oakland Athletics.  During his incredible 1992 campaign in which he won both the AL Cy Young and MVP Awards, "Eck" became one of my all-time favorite players after watching his ESPN interview with Peter Gammons.  Dwight Evans' 2,505 games played in a Red Sox uniform trails only Yastrzemski.  When my father would recount his time working alongside Yaz, Evans' kindness always stood out to me.  Evans finished his career with nearly 2,500 hits and 400 home runs along with eight Gold Glove Awards for his sensational defense in right field.  In my early twenties, I became interested in evaluating players with strong careers who were overlooked by Hall of Fame voters and I was surprised to find Evans had fallen short of Cooperstown.  Years later when I created my Tubbs Baseball Blog website, Evans became my favorite overlooked Hall of Fame candidate to write about.

Baseball signed by Carl Yastrzemski, Mike Torrez, Dennis Eckersley, and Dwight Evans
After receiving positive feedback from supermarket buyers during the playoffs and World Series, Kahn's-Hillshire Farm decided to continue using Orioles baseball tickets to strengthen their relationships with grocers.  "Because I had a good response of giving out the Orioles playoff and World Series tickets then, later that Fall after the World Series, the company made up their mind they would buy me a set of four season tickets for the '84 season," my father explained.  The seats my father and Sidney picked out were much closer to the action than the ones given to them for the previous year's playoffs.  The seats they selected were once again a little past the first base bag but now only about twenty rows away from the field.  While most of those tickets were given to supermarket buyers, my father took our family to a lot of games as well.  My father says he specifically set aside some Sunday afternoon games to take us to and my sister told me that he made a point to take us to ones that included promotions or giveaways such as On Field Photo Night, Bat Day, Sport Bag Night, and Back-to-School Binder Night.  My sister and I held onto most of the giveaways we received at the O's games.

Keepsakes of Orioles promotional items including Polaroids of Cal Ripken Jr., Billy Ripken, & Fred Lynn
Over the next few years, my father took our family to several Orioles games each season.  Unfortunately, the O's struggled to follow up their championship campaign, languishing as an also-ran team in 1984 and 1985 after spending much of the previous decade and a half as a perennial contender in the AL East.  The O's appeared ready to turn things around in 1986, sitting just a few games out of the AL East lead in early August before completely collapsing over the season's final two months to embarrassingly finish dead last in their division for the first time since the franchise moved to Baltimore.  The O's continued to struggle mightily in 1987 and were only saved from finishing in the AL East cellar by a dreadful Cleveland Indians team.  During those particularly difficult '86 and '87 seasons, my sister and I were among the few fans who passionately cheered "Eddie!!!  Eddie!!!" for the O's beleaguered first baseman Eddie Murray who was regularly booed by the Baltimore fans after a public contract squabble with team owner Edward Bennett Williams turned much of the fan base against him.

Shortly after the conclusion of the 1987 season, my father left Kahn's-Hillshire Farm and moved our family to Virginia.  My father remembers his final interaction with the Red Sox legend, "We had a national sales meeting in Boston in 1986 and I remember that this was the last time I saw Yaz.  He came over to where the salesmen were having supper that night and ate with us."  In 1989, Yastrzemski's playing career was forever immortalized with his induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.  Even though our family moved away from a baseball town, going to Orioles games and growing up with the stories, baseball cards, autographed memorabilia, and keepsakes from my father's time working alongside Yastrzemski helped shape me into a lifelong baseball fan.

----by John Tuberty

(More pictures from "Carl Yastrzemski Day" appear below)


Yastrzemski baseballs signed to my sister and I
 
More photos from "Carl Yastrzemski Day" featuring my father, Yaz, Sidney, O'Neill, & Conte
Photo Credit:  1980 Topps, 1982 Donruss, 1981 Topps, and 1983 Topps of Carl Yastrzemski; 1983 Topps Dwight Evans; 1982 Topps of Carl Yastrzemski, Mike Torrez, Dennis Eckersley, and Dwight Evans; all other photos are from Tubbs Baseball Blog personal collection: black and white photos are from "Carl Yastrzemski Day", ticket stub is from one of my family's seats in Game 1 of 1983 World Series, Polaroids of Cal Ripken Jr., Billy Ripken, and Fred Lynn are from 1987 On Field Photo Night 

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