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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Sunday, November 22, 2009
89 days until Pitchers and Catchers!
Today’s image is both a sequel to an earlier picture and also a nod to the fact that it’s November 22nd.
JFK throws out the first pitch in 1962’s ASG.
From National Archives via pingnews.
Tomorrow: Beware the elusive Dinosaurball!
Gamingboy
Posted: November 22, 2009 at 10:36 AM | 109 comment(s)
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Meanwhile, by the time we get to Reagan, he's out on the mound, where Presidents have been ever since. So was Reagan, the old baseball announcer, the first guy to do it, or did Carter start the tradition?
Traditionally the first pitch was always thrown from the seats. I don't know when they started doing it from the mound.
Hard to believe 46 years have passed since that awful day in Dallas. I just did an entry on my classic Hollywood blog about the Texas Theatre in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas, where Lee Harvey Oswald was apprehended. The Texas Theatre, at "Carole & Co."
Incidentally, today at 1:30 (Central), the Texas will show "Cry Of Battle," part of a double feature playing the theater that day.
Interesting as well in that the prevailing theory is that is was JFK himself, whose vanity about his hair and his good looks (and his political acumen to find an extra way to stand out) led him to eschew wearing a hat though the 1950s, that was a major cause in the sudden and dramatic reduction in American men wearing hats between the '50s and '60s.
Maury Wills, a DC native, would be voted the game's MVP. Wills entered the game as a pinch-runner for Stan Musial, stayed in at shortstop, and scored two runs.
You can see LBJ in the photo, to Jack's right (directly underneath his hand). The photo's connection to today is (of course) that it was 46 years ago that LBJ became U.S. President, upon the assassination of JFK.
The "24" leading off for the National League was Dick Groat, then with the Pirates. My first guess would have been Willie Mays, the subject of yesterday's photo, but Willie batted third that day.
DB
Aside from today's date, the picture is somewhat timely for me, as I am currently reading The Best and the Brightest.
Thank heavens President Draper got elected!
Interesting as well in that the prevailing theory is that is was JFK himself, whose vanity about his hair and his good looks (and his political acumen to find an extra way to stand out) led him to eschew wearing a hat though the 1950s, that was a major cause in the sudden and dramatic reduction in American men wearing hats between the '50s and '60s.
I've heard this all the time and it seems to have a lot of truth to it. And just imagine what might have happened to the memorabilia industry (which didn't exist then, but we can pretend that it did) if Kennedy had worn a baseball cap.
Did Rich Ashburn, then with the Mets, get to play in this game? Just curious; we know Stan Musial did, and his career dated back to 1941. Perhaps some rookie who played at RFK in 2007 (Jesus Flores?) will have a long career. (I was going to note that Ashburn might have been back at RFK in '87 for a Phillies-Mets exhibition game, but I believe his daughter had just died in an automobile accident and he was attending to her funeral.)
No
DB
You can see that there still are some people with hats, not many, but a few.
It's also said that Kennedy, with his bad back (which was always a problem for him, and was further worsened during PT109's ill-fated accident), popularized the rocking chair. An interesting note is that Kennedy very well may have been the most physically troubled president since FDR. At times he wore a brace. In fact, he was wearing it in Dallas, and it's believed that he might have survived had he not been wearing it, as he would have slumped, causing the final shot to miss (instead, it hit him in the head).
--
Oh, the two young boys in front are members of a Washington Boys' Club.
In short, hatlessness was already trendy when Kennedy became President. Eisenhower was often without hat. And Kennedy did wear a hat for special occasions, including the entirety of his inauguration except his speech.
Sure, but that doesn't mean that JFK's typical hatlessness through the 1950s hadn't already been a signficant contributor to the change in fashion that had taken place by 1961. JFK was an extremely famous figure before he ran for President.
There's no "may have been" about it. Kennedy was a physical wreck in about ten different ways, constantly in and out hospitals throughout his life, narrowly escaping death several times.
Jamie Moyer was four days past his first birthday on November 22, 1963. Randy Johnson was two months old. And Roger Clemens' wife as a baby was taken by her parents to watch the Dallas motorcade.
And yet he remains in the popular perception the epitome of youth and vitality, while President Ford- undisputably the most athletic president of the second half of the 20th century (Number retired at Michigan! The Secret Service had to hire world-class skiers in order to keep up with him on the slopes! Had hle-in-one during a pro-am!)- is considered a bumbling klutz in the Zeitgeist.
It's entirely conceivable that even if JFK hasn't been assassinated in 1963, he may have died of natural causes while in office from any number of ailments.
And in that alternate reality, there are even more conspiracy theories.
I grew up in the 50's and 60's, and it was only in the early 60's that the homburg began to disappear from public life. It certainly wasn't "trendy" to go hatless before that. Whether that had much to do with Kennedy, who knows, although it was certainly mentioned at the time. But then I was in Washington, where if Kennedy sneezed the entire city caught cold.
That said, those pictures on that snopes link don't really tell the story of why that "urban myth" (if it was a myth) originated. If you look at all the photos, it's true that only during the speech was JFK hatless.
But what snopes doesn't mention (or didn't realize) are three key facts:
1. It was witches-titcold in DC that day.
2. The vast majority of people who saw Kennedy that day on TV saw him during the speech. During the parade, the cameras were mostly focusing on the marchers
3. And right before Kennedy's speech, Robert Frost delivered a poem and appeared to be visibly affected by the windy cold, a point noticed by the TV commentators
Put those three facts together, and it's not surprising that JFK's hatlessness on the podium stood out in many people's minds as a symbol of youthful vigor. And you know how youthful vigor is never really out of season among the fashion-aware.
And besides, JFK was wearing a top hat, not a homburg. Old man Ike frequently was seen in a homburg, but nobody ever saw JFK wear one. And it was the homburg that disappeared in the 60's. Top hats were only ever worn on special occasions.
The homburg and the fedora. And the disappearance took place roughly between 1955 and 1965.
Hopefully, a lesson on the distinction between image and reality.
And as for Ford -- the most athletic president of the second half of the 20th century? Who in the first half compares? Who in the history of the office? Washington, maybe?
Falling down in public on numerous occasions will do that for you.
I've read that although Kennedy rarely wore a hat, he often carried one. Don't know if that's BS or not, but I find the hats on the railing in the photo interesting for this reason.
First half of the twentieth century? I dunno, maybe TR?
Good call, but I don't think Bush's status as a college baseball player compares with Ford's as a college football player. Ford was a serious star.
I dunno, maybe TR?
Obviously it's hard to compare riding-and-roping athleticsm with ball-sports athleticsm ... but I don't know how accurate this is, but my sense of TR is that he was an eager participant in physical stuff, but not an especially accomplished one.
It is?
I think the largest ridicule was for the absurdly short left field porch that was used in some exhibition games. The stadium was designed so that the seating sections in left field would pivot and telescope under the seats on the third base side for baseball games and back out for football. After years of mechanical disuse through the 70s, those seats were rusted in place when the Cracker Jack Old Timers games were played. I believe even some exhibitions in the 90s were played with the short porch. It allowed Luke Appling to hit a homer in his 70s, though.
Other than that, RFK was the most pleasant of the cookie-cutter parks that I attended. That maybe buoyed by it being vacant for the turf era, and so, always having natural turf (that could be ripped up with two-outs in the 9th whenever the fans desired).
Two days before this AS game, Musial hit homers in three consecutive ABs vs. the Mets at the Polo Grounds. With a homer in his final at-bat on Saturday, it gave him a record-tying four homers in four ABs. At age 41.
Before the AS game, Kennedy summoned Musial over for a visit. Musial had supported Kennedy*, and Kennedy wanted to remind him of their only other meeting, in the spring of 1960 when Kennedy was running for office and told Musial, "They tell me you're told old to play baseball and I'm too young to be president. Maybe we can fool them."
* - possibly a Catholic connection, since Musial, AFAIK, tended to range between apolitical and conservative.
His poor eyesight would not have served him well in athletics. He was also sickly (severe asthma) as a boy, but overcame that to be a vigorous, robust adult.
Other than baseball caps, 99% of the people I've ever seen wear a hat in the last 50 years are bald. What's funny is that they never take them off indoors, kind of like the old school junkies who always wore long sleeved shirts in the middle of the Summer.
--------------------
It's widely agreed that RFK was a horrible ballpark for baseball. (I never attended a game there. My question to those who've read about it or perhaps some (Andy?) went to ballgames at it is: Was Griffith Stadium, which was replaced by RFK in 1962, a good baseball park? I would imagine, because it was quite small, Griffith was good for fans to see the game. I know it was very old by 1961. I think Griffith was built in the 19th Century. Was it so run down that it had to be replaced for that reason?
I went to about 100-150 games at Griffith Stadium from 1952 to 1961, both football and baseball. The three worst things about it were its primitive facilities (in 30 seconds you were permeated with the smell of piss and cigars), its godawful food (one part coke to ten parts ice), and its near-barren playing field, which consisted of a few patches of outfield grass amidst a general field of dirt. And in its last years, it was one block north of DC's biggest shooting gallery, even though I never had any problem coming or going to night games.
All that said, it was a great place for a kid to go to a lot of games, not just a few a year. The seats were dirt cheap (75 cents for the ninth row of reserved seats behind the plate, and you could move up after the first few innings), the sightlines were excellent (the foul territory was tiny, and those poles only were in play on Opening Day, since that was always the only sellout of the year), it was no more than 30 minutes from anywhere in the DC area (and with good and cheap public transportation), and the crowds consisted mostly of real fans (who else would ever want to see the Senators?), rather than pseudo-fans on expense accounts. And without the sort of crime paranoia you have today, it was commonplace for kids like us to go to games alone as soon as we got to be about 9 or 10 years old.
So maybe it's just misplaced nostalgia, but overall I'd take it in a blink over any park today. All it needed was a Major League ballclub to have made it a perfect experience---but that was what the Yankees and Indians were for.
For football it was even better, because the crowds were far bigger and the atmosphere was much more electric, even though the Redskins were usually as bad or worse as the Nats. And a midfield season ticket was all of $25.20. They tore it down because of its small size (31,000-36,000 capacity), age and location, and understandably so, but at least for baseball, it was a big comedown.
-------------------
It is?
It was. Too symmetrical; the ball didn't carry well; its enclosed nature made it a super sweatbox during Summer day games; and its light colored seats made for a terrible fielding background during day games with its typically small crowds.
OTOH it was ridiculously easy to sneak into, since the stadium police were nowhere to be seen until the gates actually opened. It was even true for Redskins games prior to the Lombardi and Allen eras, and IMO that was its saving grace until the Redskins finally came of age in the 70's.
Dwight Eisenhower: MIGHT have played some semi-pro ball under a assumed name before he went to West Point. Played Football at the Academy and once tackled Jim Thorpe. Avid golfer during time in Office.
Abe Lincoln (seriously!): Was quite the wrestler in his youth, Champion Handball player.
Teddy Roosevelt: Born a sickly child, his athletic manliness as an adult are well known.
H.W. Bush: Captain of the Yale baseball team (and some believe he might have had the skills to go pro), Youngest Naval Aviator in the US Navy in WWII, survived crash in Pacific and was rescued by a submarine. Still goes skydiving.
George W. Bush: Mediocre Baseball player, better Rugby player, Head cheerleader. Greatest first pitch of all time.
Obama: Reasonably good Basketball player, but smokes. So-so first pitch.
Andrew Jackson: Duelist. Soldier.
Come now, Steve--William Howard Taft was an entire offensive line by himself...and his trip to Japan in 1905, while usually parsed in political terms (the Russo-Japanese Wsr), had a simply massive effect on revitalizing the art of sumo wrestling.
The point of those stories was that Ford had a drinking problem.
Whizzer White is undisputed Supreme Court most athletic.
He was a bit of a runt, and athletic activity was, for him, more of a palliative for physical ailments than something he was especially good at. He did do reasonably well at boxing while in college, though I leave it to you how stiff the competition was at Harvard in the late 19th Century.
Several Presidents, notably Washington and Jackson, have been exceptional horsemen. Lincoln was enormously tall for his time -- I'm having trouble finding a source, but the average man of the mid-19th century would be something of a shortarse by today's standards, and Lincoln is still the tallest President in American history -- and though he's thought of today as gentle, ugly, and benign old philosopher, he was a rough man of the west in his youth, and there are famous (though possibly apocryphal) stories of him mixing it up with unsavory sorts who harrassed his supporters early in his political career; he may be the country's most pugilistic President.
Don't forget Wilmer Mizell.
He was also on serious prescription meds that may or may not have affected his judgment and led to his risk-taking behaviors.
The young people especially, they do not know to take the hats off indoors. It's a small thing, but when I see a kid in a porkpie hat (or whatever) take it off as he comes inside, at least I know he has some clue about how the hat thing is supposed to work.
I think this warrants a "whatever".
I remember hearing the author of this book on NPR a few years ago talk about the subject of the disappearance of the wearing of the hat. Informative and tantalizing he was, especially about the associated industries and services that revolved around men's dress hats (like hat check services) that you wouldn't normally think about.
JFK definitely had very little to do with it, he held. He more or less followed the trend rather than instigating anything. For some men, of course, that someone like the President didn't wear it made them stop, I guess, but some also kept on for a few more years, too. Cary Grant didn't wear a hat in North By Northwest. Indeed, I don't think he wore any in any of his mid to late 50's stuff, although he did in his forties movies. OTOH, James Stewart in Vertigo was rarely without one. There was a history of the decline of the use of the chapeau.It started years before Kennedy and was in full, in the early twentieth century, and by the time of JFK's bursting on the scene in 1960, it was definitely already moribund. My father, I remember, born the same year as JFK, had a fedora, but I have few memories of him wearing it, and none by the time of the late fifties. To me, it was no longer derigeur by the fifties but entirely optional and greatly dependent on mere individual taste rather than societal mores--how you looked with or without one. Grant/JFK looked better without one, so they didn't wear it much when it no longer mattered that you do.
Ike and baseball
Same source as preceding.
There's a longish section in Phillip Roth's I Married A Communist about the decline of the woman's glove. I think Jacqueline Kennedy may even played a bit part in the discussion. The whole glove industry discussion in that novel turned out to be much more interesting than I would have suspected.
Bob Matthias says hi.
Those things can be fascinationg, yes. Something seemingly trivial with untold reverberating social effects that don't readily come to mind, that one takes for granted.
Along these lines, and what brought the comparison to Grant and JFK to mind, was a rather arch but amusing segment on NPR yesterday that I only caught midway through by someone whose name I didn't catch. It was all about how North By Northwest was really all about Cary Grant's suit. Really a detailed analysis along those lines, if laying on the "drab, '50's conformity" label a little too thick.
I'm disappointed--no homosexual subtext? Landau and Mason just left dangling. Need to somehow bring Cary into it to make the cosmic harpstrings hum. Again it's suit--cunnilingus, maybe; fellatio and sodomy in that suit--nevah!
Nancy Pelosi'sjust about anyone's butt in the Mile.Re: Teddy Roosevelt's athleticism -- I recommend reading David McCullough's bio of young TR called Mornings on Horseback. You'll get a sense of how he was physically. (My favorite recollection from that book was that McCullough* counted the actual days when TR had bouts of asthma as a child. He found that TR was asthmatic something like 2/3rds of the time on Sundays, 1/3rd on all the other days combined. His father's reaction to his asthma was to give him a cigar and make him do vigorous physical exercise, like climb a mountain or ride long-distance on a horse. As a result of Sunday asthma, TR did not have to go to church. Psychosomatic illness?)
I've read a dozen TR bios. My take is that he shouldn't be mistaken for any kind of great athlete. However, he had incredible physical endurance and willpower. He had no trouble starting out on a morning hike and completing a 30 mile trip on foot in a day.
*Perhaps McCullough was reporting someone else's research on the days of the week. I read that book 20 years ago, so forgive me if my recollection is a bit off on that point.
I think you mean American Pastoral. I Married a Communist is on-topic, though, since it features a professional Abe Lincoln impersonator.
Quite right. I read them back-to-back. Swde Lvov was in the glove business.
The first clue about what Bob Short was all about came in the first year (1969) he owned the Senators. In 1968, a $1.50 general admission ticket let you sit nine rows back in the grandstand seats, anywhere in the lower deck. When Short bought the team, he raised the general admission price to $2.25 and moved it to those very seats you're talking about---the upper deck in centerfield. The lower deck became exclusively reserved, and now cost $3.50, a 133% increase in just one year. That was the last time I ever walked into that stadium for anything but football. From that point I realized that it was a much better deal to drive up to Baltimore and see a real team for half the price.
That seems a curious assessment given that President Roosevelt wore out his protective detail with his constant activity including hikes hither and yon, diving into whatever river was handy no matter the time of season and pretty much going nonstop 15 hours a day.
I don't know how folks necessarily term "athletic", but serious dollars to donuts Roosevelt had the stamina and endurance like few others. And by most accounts he was a pretty strong grown man where only the near disaster in South America finally sapping him.
I don't, either, and there have been more than a few BTF threads that have argued which sport requires the most "athleticism" or "skill," and we've never come up with an agreement on definitions. But I've never heard it argued that an ability to walk 50 miles is in and of itself a sign of being "athletic."
In terms of congressmen, bobblehead came up with the winner in Bob Mathias. It's hard to compete with a two time Olympics decathlon winner, especially one who didn't even know the rules of several of the events at the time of the first one he entered, and who won the event on raw talent.
I don't dispute that he was exceptionally energetic. I just don't think he was very athletically gifted in the sense of being able to run fast or jump high. He was short and squat. Find a sport that requires less agility or raw speed and more endurance -- the ultra-marathon comes to mind -- and he would probably excel. But competing against larger, quicker men like Ford, Bush, Lincoln or Washington, he would be outclassed in most of what we today call athletics.
I just had one of those moments where I took a step back, thought about what I was talking about, and could hardly believe it. *shakes head vigrously*
EDIT: For instance, take Roosevelt's boxing career. He finished second in a tournament at Harvard, despite being of just average height and probably less-than-average weight. This would take extraordinary tenacity and probaby a great deal of training. But he finished second in a boxing tournament at Harvard. An extraordinary achievement for a boy who had been sickly for almost the entirety of his youth; not an extraordinary achievement in absolute athletic terms. That Roosevelt pushed himself far with a limited body cannot be questioned; that he was limited by size and illness is also pretty much unquestionable.
In the end, and I can't believe I'm about to say this, I think that Lincoln could have licked TR good, given a square go in the primes of their respective youths.
He could have kicked any of our asses
Thanks for stating it. Figured it had to come from someone closer to BBTF's demographic.
Though I will suggest that given the commonalities between the President's favorite pasttimes and my own I believe we would have scrapped to a draw. That and thanks to years getting in fights I have a few tricks.........
He could have kicked any of our asses
You're only saying that because Kevin's not around any more.
I've heard Bush described as a good-field, no-hit first baseman. He'd have to be the bastard son of Hal Chase and Keith Hernandez to make the minors if he couldn't hit at Yale.
That was before T. S. Eliot boxed for Harvard,though.
I'm disappointed--no homosexual subtext?
Well now, that's depends, doesn't it?
the first clue about what Bob Short was all about came in the first year (1969) he owned the Senators.
Really? It wasn't that he bought and moved the Lakers in 3 years, and then sold them at a profit?
He was a good-field, no-hit first baseman, all right, but in Bush's junior and senior years, when he was captain of the team, Yale was the runnerup in the College World Series. (Even in football, the Ivy League was quite competitive on a national level, believe it or not, until the mid-50's. Princeton was in the top 10 as late as 1951.) He may well have been Ford's equal as an athlete, considering that Ford was a center and not at one of the skill positions.
--------------------------
the first clue about what Bob Short was all about came in the first year (1969) he owned the Senators.
Really? It wasn't that he bought and moved the Lakers in 3 years, and then sold them at a profit?
I guess I should have added "for most Washington baseball fans," few of whom had followed the Minneapolis Lakers, and even fewer of whom would have held it against any owner if he'd screwed Minneapolis for any reason, given what happened to the first Washington baseball franchise.
In this shot you can clearly see HHH right behind JFK with hand arms folded across his chest. The Little Leaguers, of course, are Kevin Bacon and William Jonathan Drayton Jr.
No debate there. Who gives better head than Mt. Rushmore?
He'd have to find his way into our mothers' basements first!
Having ridden a few horses, I won't contest that.
That's defiinitely Johnson in the black suit under Jack's right arm, as I think was noted upthread. It's a characteristic pose and expression, and the hairline matches. Given the whiteyness and the flannel suityness of the surrounding people, I'd be willing to bet you've got a couple of politicians and/or Cabinet members there. The picture is notable, to me, for its lack of Secret Service -- I see only four likely candidates: Sunglasses, one row behind and two men to Kennedy's left (stage right), though he has his hands in his pockets, so I'm a little skeptical; white shirt, face partially obscured, between Kennedy and Johnson (stage left); the man in sunglasses whose head protrudes at the bottom of the frame, stage left; and, most obviously, the man in the black or blue jacket who is directly above the head at the bottom of the frame. My guess, as the first two men I described are both facing the field and not the crowd, is that we've got a maximum of two Secret Service officers in this picture. I wonder what gate security was like that day.
And that is clearly LBJ.
I had simply assumed you were the champion of that Harvard tournament in which TR finished second, Harvey.
Larry O'Brien
Yep, as pointed out in #20.
It does look like him.
Eve Kendall: I tipped the steward five dollars to seat you here if you should come in.
Roger Thornhill: Is that a proposition?
Eve Kendall: I never discuss love on an empty stomach.
Roger Thornhill: You've already eaten!
Eve Kendall: But you haven't.
------------------------------------
Take a shot for every reference to that particular sex act. You will be drunk before the climax!
D'oh! Of course.
I'm reading Lincoln's biography right now, and he claims to have wielded and axe pretty much continuously (clearing farmland) from age seven until he left home. That would be a very transferable skill for baseball.
Of the movie, or the sex act?
Ironic that this picture in a stadium that in less than seven years, would be named after his younger brother after both of them had been assassinated.
I heard, Mickey Vernon I think, say that both teams would stand near the President's box, hoping to catch the ball, then fight each other for it. Kind of like the stereotype of fighting for the bouquet at the wedding. Vernon said he avoided the scrum to keep from getting injured.
In about five years from the mid 1980s to the early 1990s, the ordinary first pitch ceremony changed. I'm talking about the head of a big group attending that gets to throw out the pitch on an ordinary day. In that short period of time, I saw the first pitch go from the stands to the mound.
The first sign that Bob Short wanted to move the Senators was when their last exhibition of 1969 was played in the same stadium in Arlington, TX that would be their home in 1972.
C - Vic Correll
1B - Lu Blue
2B - Don Money
3B - Art Devlin
SS - Maury Wills
OF - Bubba Morton, Milt Thompson, Danny Sothern
SP - Doc White, Johnny Klippstein, Clay Kirby, Fred Talbot
RP - Brendan Donnelly
Yep.
This actually isn't exactly true. The average native born white American male is today only something like an inch taller than he was in 1776. Europeans were generally very short (in 1789 the average French male was, IIRC, something like 5-4), but Americans, thanks to the colonial farmer's diet of 5,000 calories a day, grew. Lower average heights in the past were usually the result of a larger percentage of immigrants, and also first generation Americans, because it takes a couple of generations for height to catch up with the locals -- bigger women have bigger babies, bigger babies become bigger adults, repeat.
I didn't hear this, but I'm sure this was a reading of "Cary Grant's Suit" by Todd McEwen, originally published in Granta in 2006. It's great.
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