Showing posts with label Spokane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spokane. Show all posts

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Friday, August 29, 1947

              W  L Pct. GB
Bremerton .. 80 63 .558 —
Salem ...... 77 61 .558 ½
Vancouver .. 78 62 .557 ½
Spokane .... 79 56 .549 1½
Victoria ... 77 65 .542 2½
Tacoma ..... 66 75 .468 13½
Yakima ..... 56 86 .394 24
Wenatchee .. 52 88 .371 27


VANCOUVER [Keith Matthews, Sun, Aug. 30]—The count is now 19 victories for Jim Hedgecock and eight straight for the Capilanos. And they’re both still riding high.
Last night at Capilano Stadium Hedgecock strutted his dippy-doo as the Caps took their second straight series win from Bremerton in this WIL baseball crucial.
The game went to 10 innings this time, one over part for the course. Fans, in fact, are wondering what baseball par is.
Besides the game itself, which was brilliant and satisfying enough, the strange case of umpire Bill Abbey kept the filled stands in fits.
Abbey could do no right for our fans. In most of the cases Abbey's decisions could have gone either way. He could, you might say, be excused here. But in one instance Bill was definitely at fault.
PASSED BALL
This was in the final tenth, when the Caps rallied around for the winner, with a helping hand from Bremerton pitcher Bill Ahearn, who couldn't find the plate or any of the nearby corners.
Ahearn gave a double to Charley Mead as the rally started. Then he walked Bill Reese and Bill Brenner on nine pitches.
With Len Tran at bat Ahearn tried the little guy with a wide sweeping curve. The pitch bounced off catcher Frank Volpi's glove and rolled to the grandstand.
ABBEY ASLEEP
Enter umpire Abbey. The seet of balls and strikes was caught with his ground rules down and he mad no motion to wave Mead in from third.
Abbey, as a matter of fact, would have let the game go right on had not his partner, Johnny Nenezich, stormed in to inform Bill that the ball game belonged in the record books.
That was the end of it, but the in-between stuff was interesting. The Caps led early as Bill Brenner hit a two-run homer in the second.
Then the Brems got three back in the third as Ed Murphy ripped a double down the left field line. The ball hit awfully close to the foul line which side we won't say. Abbey said it was fair but it wasn't unanimous.
Tongith the Caps go for it all. A double-header, starting at 7:30, will find Carl Gunnarson spinning the short one and Bob Hall the other.
[WILfan note: Bremerton scored three in the third. Bill Barisoff brought home Murphy with an out. Only one was earned ... The Caps tied it in the bottom of the inning when Frank Mullens singled and Ahearn issued three walks in a row (Paul Carpenter, Mead, Reese)].
Bremerton ....... 003 000 000 0 — 3 7 1
Vancouver ...... 021 000 000 1 — 4 10 2
Ahearn and Volpi; Hedgecock and Brenner.

Tacoma at Victoria, postponed, rain.
Spokane at Yakima, postponed, rain.
Salem at Wenatchee, postponed, rain.

THE HOME PLATE
By KEITH MATTHEWS

[Vancouver Sun, August 30, 1947]
Johnny Nenezich and Bill Abbey, a pair of WIL umpires who have stirred up some fun in the league this year, told us a fair yarn about this week’s forfeited game in Spokane.
This was the instance, you’ll remember, when Salem loaded the bases on Spokane with none out and the score tied 5-5 in the seventh. A couple of close decisions on the bases sent the Spokes into a fine lather.
“They say umpires neyer draw crowds,” said Nenezich. “That forfeit came in the first of a three-game set. There was only a fair-sized house there the night of the fun but the total attendance was 20,000 for the series. Maybe you think they didn’t come to get their shots at us,” Johnny went on.
“You know eggs cost ninety cents a dozen down there and I’ll be they threw fifty bucks worth at us in that series. That wasn’t all, either. Tomatoes, lettuce, cabbage, carrots and potatoes. Everybody had their own ideas and ammunition,” laughed Nenezich.
“Bob Abel, the league president, came over from Tacoma to see what the trouble was. He walked across the field to talk to us and got an over-ripe tomato in the back of the neck. Man, was he sore,” Johnny exclaimed.
* * *
Umpires Nenezich and Abbey were particularly put out with the display Spokane centre fielder George Schmess showed.
Abbey said, “That Schmees, who was over 300 feet from third base (that’s where the close decision occurred) thundered all the way in to tell us we missed one. I told him to get back in the field and play ball, and the guy must have swore for ten minutes without repeating himself.”
“When I finally pulled the clock on him and turned my back, Johnny (Nenezich) saw him wind up as it to take a sock at me. That did it. We kicked Schmees out, and along with him Spokane manager Ben Geraghty and first baseman Herb Gorman, Then we cleared the field and forfeited the game to Salem,” Abbey finished.
“The thing that will hurt Spokane and those players is the money angle. The team gets fined an automatic $250 for forfeiting and there were individual fines for Schmees, Gorman and Geraghty of not over $25 by not under $15,” Nenezich finished.
* * *
He probably won’t win any manager of the year awards, but you can’t help but glory in the fact it looks like the Caps have found a manager who will be welcome to stick around for awhile.
Bill Brenner did get away to a slow start. After all, this was a new business for him. But the fans were on his neck, and for a few weeks it looked like Bill’s number was up.
But the guy learns fast. His timing for removing and staying with starting pitchers got better. He discarded some waste players and a only kept those who would be in there punching when he readied this gang for the stretch drive.
Then big Bill asked Bob Brown for one more pitcher, a first baseman and an outfielder. The Hunk Anderson for Carl Gunnarson trade was made. Then Jim Estrada was shipped out for Bill Reese. And finally Brown talked Seattle out of Paul Carpenter.
Now Brenner was ready. He had the players to make the move. It needed only the managerial stroke for the big push.
Then the Caps were in sixth place, thirteen and a half games out of the lead. Now, they are in third spot, a half a game from the front.
Brenner had been a good clutch leader all the time. He is cool and calculating in the c1utch, stabbing inspiration into his mixture of youth and experience. You wouldn’t care to count the number of games that Benner has broken up with clutch hits, home runs or otherwise.
* * *
And the Brenner system is working. The guy is probably the friendliest manager in the world.
Everyone on the team is a “pal” to Brenner. He’s big and tough but just about as malicious as a puppy. His ball club fights to the end for him. And they've been paying off.
There are quite a few fans who think Brenner is a veteran of the game. It is true that Bill has been playing baseball for some time, but his actual age is 25.
Bill was one of Oregon’s football heroes in his college days. Wouldn’t you know it, though, the way he blocks runners from scoring on long throws from the outfield.
Brenner, like any other baseball manager, has pulled some masterful boners this year. But right now he can do no wrong.
One of the Caps, who shall pass anonymous for now, was down in the dumps the other day because he wasn’t playing too much. And when he was playing he wasn’t hitting the ball.
An umpire sympathized with the player and said, “what’s the matter, kid, Brenner not giving you a fair shake?”
The kid shot back, “Not on your life, fella. That’s the fairest, squarest guy you’ll ever meet. He’s just all man, that Brenner is.”

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Games of Sunday, June 29, 1947

WESTERN INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Standings on Monday morning, June 30
. . . . . . . .Win Loss PCT. GB
Bremerton .... 43 30 .589 --
Salem ........ 40 31 .563 2
Spokane ...... 40 32 .556 2½
Tacoma ....... 38 34 .528 4½
Victoria ..... 35 34 .507 6
Vancouver .... 38 37 .507 6
Yakima ....... 29 41 .414 12½
Wenatchee .... 24 48 .333 18½


First Game
Wenatchee ...... 101 010 100 - 4 14 2
Tacoma ........... 100 001 21x - 5 13 2
Cronin and Winter; Walden and Kuper.
Second Game
Wenatchee ........ 000 010 0 - 1 6 1
Tacoma ............. 040 000 00x - 4 7 1
Condon, Rose (6) and Winter; Tinsley and Kuper.

First Game
Spokane ........... 140 010 002 - 8 11 2
Bremerton ....... 200 052 02x - 11 9 0
Samson, Forsyth (5) and Bufflap; Marshall, Johnston (2) and Volpi.
Second Game
Spokane ........... 010 000 0 - 1 6 2
Bremerton ...... 230 021 x - 8 10 1
Latino and O'Neill; Sullivan and Ronning .

Only games played

ON THE RUN
Sagging Tigers
Unless Manager Red Harvell can pull a rabbit out of a hat, his Tacoma Tigers won't go anywhere except down in the Western International League race. They may still have visions of grabbing the pennant, but a more immediate goal is a .500 average and the first division.
Come to think of it, that rabbit wouldn't do Harvell any good unless the bunny could pitch. With five regulars over the .300 mark in batting, the Tiger attack is living up to spring expectations, but hurlers haven't got it.
As of last Sunday, Earl Kuper, Tiger catcher, was swinging at a .395 clip. Glen Stetter, last year's batting king, had .344; Dick Greco, the home run specialist, .337, Hedington, who wasn't here for the training camp, is hitting .310, and Tedeschi has a .309 average.
A curious feature of the league averages is that the catchers are holding the first three spots. Mastro of Vancouver [sic] leads with .409, with Kuper following and Volpi, Bremerton backstop, in third with .359. Also note that Ed Fitzgerald, Sacramento's rookie catcher, leads the P. C. L. with .355. He was at Wenatchee in 1946.
Chain Gang Gripes
The big beef now being noised in Spokane is that Brooklyn is building up its Class C Santa Barbara club at the expense of the Indians.
That is a very sad story. Although the Indians are leading the league as this is written, and promise to make a fight all the way, it is still a melancholy narrative. After all, with the right players they might win the penant by 50 games.
And we'll toss the complaint on this pile over here, which is two feet high and includes nothing but sob yarns from farm team towns, telling how some big league club isn't doing right by Our Boys.
There have been complaints about the farm system ever since Branch Rickey started the Cardinals in the business of growing diamond stars like corn-fed cattle.
Since then, one of the major duties of the major league commissioner has been to see that the farms are operated with a semblance of ethics, and a large portion of Judge Landis' fame rests on those emancipation proclamations which freed hundreds of ball players.
The matter of playing favorites in a chain is only one of many sides to the question of the farm system's value. Good or bad, however, it is a fact of life, like the atomic bomb, and professional baseball is struck with it.
A cross-indexed record of how much each team in each chain finished would be an interesting document. Lacking both the information and the energy to compile such a record, the scribe passes on a couple of guesses about what you would find in it.
Guess No. 1: The teams which are owned by another fare better than those which have working agreements, because the owner is more interested in the gate receipts.
Guess No. 2: The most promising players go to the most trusted manager, who can be counted on to ready the youngsters the most and won't be tempted to burn out a young hurler.
Spokane has a working agreement with Brooklyn. Considering the number of teams in the Dodger string, it is a wonder Branch Rickey Jr. can remember the name of a club 3000 miles away. But maybe the Deacon, will punch Spokane's card.
- Union-Bulletin, Sunday, June 29, 1947

Monday, June 18, 2007

Games of Friday, June 20, 1947

WENATCHEE, June 20 – A 10-run eighth inning put the game away for good as the Vancouver Capilanos downed the Wenatchee Chiefs, 16-9, tonight in a Western International League baseball game.
The Caps had a 7-0 deficit when they scored twice in the sixth. Charlie Mead and Lou Estes singled, then Len Tran doubled.
In the eighth, Buddy Hjelmaa worked Bob Condon for a walk, then Mead, Estes and Bob Stumpf singled before Tran cleared the bases with a double. Jim Estrada reached first on Clyde Haskell’s error and Joe Vivalda came in to relieve. Lee Mohr singled and Hjelmaa doubled, so Tom Rose replaced Vivalda — and gave up three more runs.
Steve Andrate homered for the Chiefs. Mel Wasley and Nick Pesut each had three hits, Pesut hitting a homer, a triple and a single.
Vancouver ........ 000 002 0(10)3—16 18 0
Wenatchee ....... 140 200 002— 9 11 2
Hall, Bryant (5) and Stumpf; Condon, Vivalda (7), Rose (7) and Pesut.

SALEM, June 20 – The Victoria Athletics fell victim to 18-year-old high schooler Darrel Eliason making his first professional start, as the Salem Senators pulled off a 6-3 win tonight in the Western International League.
Elaison, fresh out of Sandy, Oregon High School, scattered ten Victoria hits as his mates bunched eight blows to hand Jim Arnold his first defeat in his second league start.
Led by Bob Moore, who punched out four huts, the Solons tallied five runs off Arnold in the first three innings as a pair of walks and an error figured in the scoring. They counted their final run in the seventh when Joe Blankenship was doing the Victoria hurling.
The losers scored two in the second, with hits by Vic Mastro and Bill White amd a bobble by Mel Nunes doing the damage. A wild pitch with the bags loaded in the fifth inning accounted for their other score.
Victoria ....... 020 010 000—3 10 2
Salem .......... 203 000 10x—6 8 1
Arnold, Blankenship (8) and Anske; Eliason, Sporer (9) and Kerr.

YAKIMA, July 20 – Gene Thompson clouted two inside-the-park home runs as the Yakima Stars defeated Tacoma 15-3 in Western International League action tonight.
Tacoma ......... 000 100 011— 3 7 3
Yakima ......... 302 080 21x—15 16 1
Shapley, Clough (5) Greenlaw (7) and Kuper; Simon and Phillips.

Bremerton ......... 000 210 002—5 10 3
Spokane ............ 003 600 00x—8 11 0
Lowman, Marshall (4) and Volpi; Samson and Bufflap.

Catcher to Join Spokane
SPOKANE, June 20 – James Francis (Frank) O’Neill, star Villanova Unievrsity catcher for the last two seasons, today reported to the Spokane Indians on option from Mobile, Alabama, the Brooklyn Dodger club in the Southern Association. O’Neill enters the class “B” Western International Baseball League as a replacement for second-string Spokane catcher Vito Dimaria, who was released outright today.

Ex WIL Star Vanni Heading East
SEATTLE,June 20 — Edo Vanni, popular Seattle Rainiers outfielder, has landed a job with the Birmingham, Ala., team of the Southern Assocition and will report immediately, Earl Sheely, Rainiers general manager, said Friday. He was released recently. Pitcher John Orphal, with a three won, five lost record with the Rainiers was sold to Birmingham in a straight cash deal, Sheely added.

THE HOME PLATE
By KEITH MATTHEWS
[Vancouver Sun, June 21, 1947]
If Bob Brown, generalissimo of things up Cap Stadium way, lives to be 100, he will likely never again engineer as clever a deal as the one which brought young and talented Carl Gunnarson to the Caps in exchange for sore and moaning Hunk Anderson, the fellow with the creaking old mill.
Now let’s get one thing straight before we move on. We have nothing at all against Anderson. He is a good guy. His chief fault is that he moans too much and that his salary wing, the right one, isn’t as chipper as Gunnarson’s payoff left flipper.
To illustrate a point we will tell of an incident which took place here last year. Anderson had just beaten the tough Bremerton Bluejackets. He beat them with a five-hitter, and shut ‘em out to boot, 4-0.
In the dressing room after the game (sports writers were allowed to talk to reporters in those days), we said “Nice game, Hunk, very, very nice.”
“Thanks,” beamed the big right-hander. Then he winced. “But my arm, oooooh, it hurts. And my back. The pain is awful.”
* * *
Just how Brown talked Portland into making a deal like that will remain a mystery through the ages. You’ll note we said the deal was made with Portland. That it was. Gunnarson was Beaver chattel.
It is possible that Portland did not know Anderson, though the latter was in t e Coast League part of last season. We would prefer to believe, however, that cagy Robert P. pulled a fast one.
Just the other day when Bob and I were talking baseball, the chatter got around to Gunnarson. It was off the record, too. That’s what makes it interesting copy.
“I think Gunnarson could win some ball games for Seattle right now,” said Brown. “Of course, I am not offering him to Sheely (Rainier business manager Earl Sheely), until the season is over.”
The latter statement stopped me for a minute. It could only mean that a sale was in the offing for left hander Carl. It looks like this even up deal will put the Caps from $3000-$4000 in pocket.
Of course, Gunnarson has been working toward Seattle ever since he joined Bill Brenner and crew in Tacoma several weeks ago. He had a three won and one lost record with Salem. Now he has piled on four straight victories and hasn’t been stung yet as a Capilano.
* * *
Carl’s advancement has been remarkable. When I first saw him in 1942 he was an awkward, jerky-motioned left. He pitched for Norvans in our senior league.
Three years later Carl had put in a full term with Portland and was starting on another with Salem.
The jerkiness was gone. Here was a sweet, smooth-throwing southpaw who pitched with both arm and head. He had a fair-to-middlin’ fast ball. His curve was a big jug-handle which danced a jitter-bug tune as left-handed hitters fell all the way back to the dugout. He tossed the curve in two speeds, and for right-handed hitters he cut down the “jug” to a near slider.
Carl is cocky, too, and that helps some. Errors at his back don't bother him at all. He shrugs, serves up some more of his “alive” stuff and bingo, he’s out of the jam.
And so it looks like Carl is Seattle bound. He might like it if we added that he is a fair hitter, too. Since he joined the Caps he has made nine hits for 18 trips, or a .500 mark. He does everything rather well, you see.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Greenlaw to Hurl Opener

SPOKANE, — Pete Zmitrovich, one of the new Spokane Indians' best pitching prospects, and veteran Cy Greenlaw, 18-game winner for Tacoma last year, will be starting hurlers Friday night when the two teams open the Western International league baseball season here.
Other starters listed by Managers Ben Geraghty of Spokane and Luther (Red) Harvel of Tacoma are:
Spokane—Herb Gorman, first base; Rip Koenig, second base; Buddy Hicks, shortstop; Bob Morgan, third base; “Biff” Bufflap, catcher; Doug Donnan, left field; "Scat" Scarpelli, center field and Jimmy Dow, right field.
Tacoma—Earl Kuper, catcher; Gil Neumann, first base; Glenn Stetter, second base; Ed Keehan, shortstop: George Pelati, third base; Bob Joratz, left field; Peter Tedeschi, center field, and Dick Greco, right field.
- Friday, April 18, 1947