Friday, November 24, 2023

Tim Wakefield

        
                     copyright here https://www.mlb.com/news/tim-wakefield-dies-at-57

·         1992-1993 pitched for the Pittsburgh Pirates.
·         1995-2011 Pitched for the Boston Red Sox.
·         Position(s):  Starting pitcher and First baseman.
·         Bats:  Right.
·         Throws:  Right.
·         Born:  8-2-1966 in Melbourne, FL
·         Died:  10-2-2023 (Age 57) in MA
·         Draft:  Drafted by Pirates in the 8th round of the 1988 MLB June Amateur Draft
·         High School:  Eau Gallie HS (Melbourne, FL)
·         College:  Florida Institute of Technology (Melbourne, FL)
·         Last Game:  9-25-2011 (Age 45) vs. Yankees 4.0 IP, 5 H, 4 SO, 5 BB, 3 ER, L
·         Rookie Status:  Exceeded rookie limits during 1992 season
·         Agents:  Barry Meister, Bill Moore
·         Full name:  Timothy Stephen Wakefield

Born in Melbourne, Florida on August 2, 1966, Timothy Stephen Wakefield attended public school, graduating from Eau Gallie High School in Melbourne.

At an early age, around 7 or 8, Tim was taught knuckleball by his father Steve.  His father was an active softball player who worked the morning shift 3A.M to 11A.M., at the Harris Corporation, an electronics company, and he designed circuits.  Tim’s mother Judy Wakefield, also worked for Harris as a purchaser and a professional assistant.  Tim’s parents also had another child, Tim’s sister Kelly.

Tim and his father would play catch for hours together.  After a while, Tim’s father decided to start throwing knuckleballs at him, to finally get Tim to go inside and take a break from playing catch.  Eventually, Tim gave in and said, “Ok, I’ve had enough.”  In doing this, Tim learned early that the knuckleball could be not only difficult to catch, but hit as well.  Tim admitted later that he saw it as a magic trick or party stunt, not a serious pitching tool.

He played T-ball and Little League, and growing up in Florida, he was able to play baseball every day.  His favorite team and player growing up was the Atlanta Braves and Outfielder, First Baseman, and Catcher, Dale Murphy.  He won a baseball scholarship to Brevard Community College, but the other players were so good that he quit the team before he ever got to play a game.  Not all was lost, the head coach of the Florida Institute of Technology saw his potential and recruited him.  Tim played first base for Florida Tech and did quite well.  He hit 22 home runs in one season, and in June 1988 was selected by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the eighth round of the draft.  He signed for a bonus of $15,000 and the commitment from the Pirates to pay for the remainder of his college tuition when he went back to school.

The Pirates then placed Wakefield on their Watertown (New York) affiliate in the New York-Penn League.  Where he played first base, appearing in 54 games.  Despite appearing 192 times at the plate, he only managed to scrape out a .189 batting average with 3 home runs and 20 RBIs, and striking out 57 times.  Being overmatched, he still had the discipline to draw 25 walks, bumping his on-base percentage to .328.

In 1989, he played on two different teams – a few with the Augusta Pirates in the South Atlantic League, a Class A team, and the Welland (Ontario) Pirates back in the NYPL.  Woody Huyke, his manager in extended spring training, saw him fooling around with the knuckleball while playing catch with one of his teammates and saw how difficult it was to catch.  At Welland, Wakefield was told to use the knuckleball, and he split his time between the infield and pitching (in 18 games).  He won and lost one recorded a 3.40 ERA, and went to the Instructional League in the Fall.  Knowing he wasn’t going to make it as a hitter, he realized developing the unusual pitch just might be his only road – not knowing if it was going to work – to make it to the big leagues.  Even though Wakefield wasn’t thrilled, he said “When they put an infielder on the mound, it’s most likely they’re putting you out to pasture.  They’re saying you don’t have what it takes to get to the big leagues.”

In his first season, 1990 he played exclusively as a pitcher, having an ERA of 4.73, and his record for last-place Salem (Virginia) Buccaneers was 10-14 (they had the worst record in the Carolina League.)  The Pirates moved him up to Double-A ball in 1991, pitching in Raleigh for the Carolina Mudcats in the Southern League.  There he had a very good year with a 15-8 season, a 2.90 ERA in 25 starts.  He pitched one game for Triple-A Buffalo and lost.

Halfway through the 1992 season, he was called up to the major leagues.  He’d been 10-3 (3.06) with Buffalo.  The Pirates were truly in need of good pitching.

On July 31, 1992, manager Jim Leyland put Wakefield on the mound for his major league debut.  Getting a complete-game win at Three Rivers Stadium against the visiting St. Louis Cardinals, the Pirates couldn’t have hoped for a better start.  Only allowing six hits, and walking five, he struck out 10/  Although allowing two runs, neither of them were earned.  The final was 3-2 Pirates over the Cardinals.  He told reporters, “Really, I wasn’t nervous except for the first pitch,” “I just stepped off the mound and looked around and saw Andy Van Slyke in center and Barry Bonds in left and Chico Lind at second…that always makes a pitcher feel better.”

His next three starts were superb, as well.  Over his first four starts, he only allowed five earned runs and he was 3-0 with a 1.32 ERA.  He lost one, 6-5 to the Giants in San Francisco, but didn’t give up more than three runs a game for the rest of the season, finishing 8-1 with a 2.15 ERA.  In 92 innings, he’d only given up 76 base hits.  Knuckleballers are rare.  When he was matched up against Dodgers pitcher Tom Candiotti on August 26, it was the first time National League knuckleball pitchers had met since September 13. 1982 (when Phil Niekro faced his brother Joe).  Wakefield threw a six-hit, 2-0 shutout.

Despite such a late start in the season, he came in third in Rookie of the Year voting – which was done before the postseason, in which Wakefield continued to shine.  The Pirates made it to the National League Championship Series (NLCS) and Pirates GM Ted Simmons said his rotation was going to be “Doug Drabek, Danny Jackson, and the Miracle.  That’s what Timmy has been for us since he came up.”  Wakefield had 2 decisions, both complete-game wins, in Game Three (3-2) and Six (13-4).  Unfortunately, the Braves beat the Pirates in Game Seven.  Wakefield’s postseason ERA was 3.00.

The 1993 season was a disappointing one after such a magical first season.  Wakefield was given the honor of being the Opening Day pitcher, and won the game, but walked nine batters.  He went 6-11 with a 5.61 ERA with the Pirates, “a model of inconsistency – looking sharp in one outing and struggling in the next.”

That inconsistency reflected the unpredictability of the pitch that he threw.  A couple years later, Wakefield said, “I have no idea where it’s going, the hitter doesn’t know where it’s going, and the catcher doesn’t know where it’s going.  I just try to throw it down the middle of the plate.”  Finally, it came to the point that Wakefield was demoted two levels midseason, to Raleigh and the Double-A Mudcats for a couple of months.  He put a good face on, choosing to look at it as something akin to a “rehabilitation assignment.”  Even in Double-A, however, he was 3-5 with a 6.99 ERA.

Working his way back to Triple-A Buffalo in 1994 for the full year, he still struggled.  His ERA was 5.84 with a 5-15 record.  It was mystifying at the time, but considering his performance simply reflected the most unpredictable two pitches: one really never knew when it would be “on” or “off.”  Phil Niekro, the masterful knuckleball pitcher who made it to Cooperstown (Baseball Hall of Fame), said, “Tim was so successful early, and then he just lost it.  That’s when it becomes tough mentally to throw a pitch everybody knows is coming.  I’ve told him that he’s got to keep learning, he got to eat, sleep, walk, and talk the knuckleball until it floats in his bloodstream like a spirit inside him.”

He also benefited from advice from other members of the knuckleball fraternity, including Charlie Hough and Candiotti, who taught him how to change speeds, pick spots with hitters, and be patient when it didn’t work.  Wakefield “paid it forward” to knuckleballers who came after him, notably R.A. Dickey.

April 20, 1995, just as the major-league season was about to begin (after the players’ strike had prematurely ended in 1994), the Pirates released Wakefield.  Not even a week later, the Boston Red Sox took a flyer and signed to a Triple-A contract.  Red Sox GM Dan Duquette had seen Wakefield pitch when Duquette was GM for the Montreal Expos.  He had a pitching staff in Boston that need a breath of fresh air.  Duquette’s appeal to Wakefield was based in part on an arrangement to hire Phil Niekro as a consultant and offer to set the young pitcher up with him.  Wakefield said, “Boston was the only team to make me a decent offer.”

He was called up in time to pitch on May 27, making back-to-back starts on May 27 and, on two days’ rest, May 30.  Wakefield had one of his best years with the Red Sox in 1995.  He finished the season with a 2.98 ERA, winning his first four starts – two of them complete games, allowing just two earned runs over 34 innings.  He just kept on winning – even taking a no-hitter into the eighth inning twice, on June 9th and July 9th – until the point he was 14-1 (1.65) in mid-August.

But the knuckleball teaches humility, he was 2-7 over the rest of the season, losing the last four games he started.  Even with the ups and downs, The Wall Street Journal wrote in late September that Wakefield was having “one of the best knuckleball seasons of all time.”  Boston finished first in the AL East but were swept in the Division Series by the Cleveland Indians.  Wakefield lost Game Three, 8-2.  His key contribution to getting the team to the postseason was recognized; he placed third in voting for the Cy Young Award.  He had been 16-8 (2.95), leading the team in victories.

There were a couple of years that were so-so.  In the 1996 season, he only went 14-13 (5.14), he then went to arbitration over salary differences with the Red Sox, and Wakefield prevailed. In 1997, a swollen elbow put him on the 15-day disabled list in April, he went 12-15, despite improving his ERA to 4.25.  His 15 losses were the worst in the American League (AL).

Having a great team around any pitcher is a big deal.  During the 1998 postseason, the Red Sox once again reached the postseason, and Wakefield’s ERA was 4.58, but his win-loss record was 17-8.  Boston faced the Indians again in the Division Series.  This time, Wakefield pitched in Game Two.  He was bombed for five runs, lasting only 1 1/3 innings, and took the loss.

During the 1999 season, closer Tom Gordon was injured, so the Red Sox used Wakefield as a swingman, where he would start in stretches and relieved in others.  As a closer, he saved 15 games in 18 opportunities.  On August 10, he tied a major-league record by striking out four batters in one inning (the 10th); unfortunately blowing a save in the game.

A big lesson he learned he said was, “Don’t pitch to the names.”  In other words, don’t worry about the strengths or weaknesses of the batter in the box.  Get the ball over the plate, and let the knuckleball’s flutter perform its magic.  Learning from Phil Niekro taught him that throwing the knuckleball did require a degree of psychological fortitude, along with maintaining self-confidence and faith.  Since no batter knew that the ball was going to flutter, use that to your advantage.”  Teammate Mike Greenwell noticed that when Wakefield was pressing himself, that he was throwing the ball too hard.  Greenwell told him, “Ease up a little.  Don’t put so much pressure on yourself.  You’re trying too hard…Try taking a little off.”

When the 1999 postseason rolled around, yet again the Red Sox made it in.  Wakefield pitched in two games in the Division Series, for a total of two innings, and giving up three earned runs.

When the 2000 season came around, Wakefield wasn’t pleased about being assigned to the bullpen, almost at the last minute.  “It’s hard to swallow two days before the season starts and all the work I’ve put in.  I don’t see any reasoning for it.”  In some key respects, Wakefield’s record in 2000 (6-10, 5.48) was almost a carbon copy of the 1999 season (6-11, 5.08).  In 2000, however, Derek Lowe became the full-time closer for Boston, and Wakefield received only one save opportunity and failed to convert it.

In 2001, Wakefield started 17 games for the third straight year.  He brought his ERA down to 3.90, with a record of 9-12.  He watched several managers come and go in Boston, and it felt that Jimy Williams was made a scapegoat for the dysfunctional clubhouse.  Joe Kerrigan who was the pitching coach, replaced Williams, and it was a short-term move that saw the club get worse.

Wakefield published an autobiography in 2011, and it is an exceptionally honest one, admitting to uncertainty and vulnerability.  Boston took advantage of his versatility, at times a bit too much.  Ballplayers tend to benefit from routines and with regard to the certainty of their role.  He went through various changes, managers, and roles, and even when the Henry/Werner/Lucchino group purchased the club in 2002.  In some ways, he felt, “My whole career has been in a state of flux.”

In 2002, Grady Little, the new manager told him that his season would be starting in the bullpen, Wakefield said, “I’m not upset about it, I accept it.”  “That’s the way things are around here.”  When it came down to brass tacks though, his first two appearances were starts.  By the end of the season, he started 15 games relieved in 30 others, and saved three in five chances.  Despite the three different roles, his ERA in 2002 was 2.81 and he boasted an 11-5 record.  The mixed roles during the 1999-2002 seasons may have cost him 20 or more wins, which would have secured his standing as with winningest pitcher in Red Sox history.

In November of 2002, he married Stacy Stover, whom he met in Massachusetts.  They have two children, Trevor and Brianna.  Stacy worked with Wakefield’s Warriors, a group associated with the Franciscan Hospital for Children in Boston which gave children the opportunity to come to Fenway Park, watch batting practice and meet some of the players.

In the 2003 season, Wakefield returned to starting, almost exclusively.  With rare exceptions and a bump in 2010, he remained a starter for the remainder of his career.  He never achieved better than his 4.09 ERA in 2003 over those final years.  He went 11-7 during the 2003 regular season, nine of those wins coming while starting.

After a three-year gap, the Red Sox got back to the postseason in 2003.  Wakefield started and lost Game One of the Division Series, but blossomed in the American League Championship Series (ALCS) against the Yankees.  Winning Game One, 5-2, working six innings as the starter, and also started and won Game Four, 3-2, giving up just one run in six innings.

Game Seven took place three days later, pitting Pedro Martinez (Boston) against Roger Clemens (Yankees).  After eight innings, the score was tied 5-5, and Mike Timlin got the Yankees 1-2-3 in the bottom of the ninth.  Boston’s manager (Little) called on Wakefield to pitch the bottom of the 10th and he got them 1-2-3.  In the bottom of the 11th, one pitch Wakefield threw, he wished he could take back.  Third baseman Aaron Boone hit a game-winning home run which sent the Yankees to the World Series and sent Boston home for the winter.  “It wasn’t supposed to end like this,” Wakefield said.  “It’s difficult, period.  We are brothers in here.  We have been family going on nine months and it hurts.”

Alluding to the team’s stunning loss in Game Six of the 1986 World Series, Wakefield also told Red Sox clubby Joe Cochran, “I just became Bill Buckner.”  Though he apologized to the Red Sox fans afterward, no one blamed or thought poorly of Wakefield.  At the Boston Baseball Writers dinner over the winter, Wakefield received a standing ovation from the thousand or more fans in attendance.

This was – almost – the nadir for Boston in the long rivalry between the Red Sox and the Yankees, right up there with the “Bucky Dent” single-game playoff loss for the AL East title in 1978.  Here it was 25 years later, and the Sox had still never beaten the Yankees in a high-stakes matchup.

The true nadir came a year later in the 2004 League Championship Series, after the Yankees took the first three games trouncing Boston in Game Three, 19-8.  Wakefield had been 12-10 during the regular season, eating innings again.  In Game Three, after New York had already scored nine times, he volunteered to relieve even though he had been slated to start Game Four.  He pitched 3 1/3 innings midgame, more than any Boston pitcher that day, and was touched for five runs.  In doing so, he took one for the team, foregoing his start.  Doug Mirabelli, Wakefield’s “personal catcher,” said, “You don’t want your bullpen to get blown out….For him to be able to get out there and suck up some innings for us, that was a huge help.”

When Game Four rolled around, the Red Sox pulled out a win with some magic in the ninth and then more magic in the 12th.  Game Five ran even longer, and Wakefield pitched the 12th, 13th, and 14th innings.  He was the winner when David Ortiz – for the second night in a row – delivered the game-ending hit.

The Red Sox not only won the next two games but also won the series.  That is the only one in MLB history to climb back from a 0-3 deficit in the playoffs.  One moment Wakefield treasured the most came along not long after the Red Sox won Game Seven and eliminated the Yankees.  As the celebration in the clubhouse was winding down, he was told he had a phone call.  It was the Yankees manager calling.  “He said, ‘Wake, this is Joe Torre.  I just wanted to congratulate you.  You’re one of the guys over there that I respect.  Just remember to have fun.  You guys deserve it.’  Afterward, I wrote him a note and told him how much that meant to me.  That’s one of the highest compliments you ever get from an opposing manager at that point…It really touched me deeply for him to call me.”

Boston then swept the World Series over the St. Louis Cardinals, breaking an 86-year-old “curse.”  Wakefield appeared only in Game One.  He started, and though the Red Sox supported him with seven runs, he gave up five in 3 2/3 innings and got no decision.  It was the last time pitched in 2004.

Wakefield was 16-12 (4.15) in the 2005 regular season, the winningest pitcher on the staff.  His best game was a complete-game 1-0 loss to the Yankees on September 11, a three-hitter in which he struck out a career-high 12 New Yorkers.  Boston returned, briefly, to postseason play, getting swept in the Division Series by the eventual World Series winners, the Chicago White Sox.  After the Red Sox lost the first two games on the road, Game Three was at Fenway Park.  Wakefield was the starter and loser; in the top of the sixth, Paul Konerko hit a two-run homer off him to give Chicago a 4-2 lead.  The final score was 5-3.

Experience had proven that it takes a certain talent to be able to corral the knuckleball – some handled Wakefield’s better than others.  Boston’s first-string catcher Jason Varitek, experienced considerable difficulty with the knuckler.  Other catchers caught Wakefield over the course of his career, and it was always a challenge.  Doug Mirabelli used an outside softball catcher’s glove.  Victor Martinez wound up using a first baseman’s mitt, the better to help him snare the ball.

Nonetheless, that December, the Red Sox traded Mirabelli to the San Diego Padres for Mark Loretta.  After Wakefield started the season 1-4, the Sox reacquired Mirabelli on May 1.  Thanks to a State Police escort from Logan Airport – Mirabelli changed into his catcher’s gear in the back seat of a car – the catcher arrived at Fenway Park just in time to handle Wakefield for a start against the Yankees.  The Sox won the game, but with four runs in the bottom of the eighth, just after Wakefield had left the game.  He won his next two starts but lost two months in the second half of the season to a stress fracture in his rib cage.  He finished the season losing his last three decisions and was 7-11 (4.63).

Though his ERA edged up to 4.76 in 2007, once again the team around a pitcher truly helps.  Wakefield was 17-12 that year, second in wins on the Red Sox only to Josh Beckett (20-7).  He became a World Series Champion again, as the Red Sox rolled over the Colorado Rockies with a sweep in the World Series.

Recurring problems in the back of his shoulder kept Wakefield inactive for nearly two weeks in August.  As a result, he was kept off the roster for the Division Series and the World Series.  His only appearance during the postseason was a start in Game Four of the ALCS against Cleveland.  He gave up five runs and bore the defeat.  Maybe he could have pitched once in the World Series, but he asked, “Are you going to get 100 percent of Tim Wakefield?  I don’t know that…It’s not fair to the rest of the 24 guys in that clubhouse for me to put them through that.”

He pitched in just one more postseason game.  In the 2008 regular season, though he brought his ERA down to 4.13, his win/loss record was 10-11, fourth in wins among the Red Sox starters behind Daisuke Matsuzaka, Jon Lester, and Beckett.  (That August, another Wakefield knuckleball disciple, Charlie Zink, pitched his lone major-league game for Boston.  Ironically, it came because Wakefield was on the DL (disabled list) again with a stiff shoulder.)  Wakefield’s one appearance in the playoffs was in Game Four of the ALCS against the Tampa Bay Rays.  He gave up five runs in 2 2/3 innings and lost the 13-4 game.  Including his two wins for the Pirates, this left him with a postseason record of 5-7 (6.75).

In 2009, once again Wakefield won in double digits for the Red Sox in the regular season, 11-5 (4.58).  only Beckett and Lester won more.  That year, Wakefield was named by Tampa Bay’s Joe Maddon to the American League All-Star team, the only year in which he earned the distinction.  He didn’t appear in the game, a 4-2 AL win.

Wakefield was below .500 in his final two seasons: 4-10 in 2010 and 7-8 in 2011.  Both years his ERA was over 5 (5.34 and 5.12).  After winning his 199th career game on August 24th, it took eight more starts until he won #200, his last, on September 13th.  Only six other knuckleballers have reached that milestone as of 2023.

Wakefield was just six wins short of the franchise record for wins, and during that final week of the season, he told Fox Sports that the fans “deserved” to see him break it.  However, the team’s new general manager Ben Cherington, said that while he respected the veteran, he had to be honest with him about his chance of making the team.  Wakefield decided it was time to call it a career, saying, “I’m still a competitor.  But ultimately I think this is what was best for the Red Sox and I think this is what is best for my family, and to be honest with you, seven wins isn’t going to make me a different person or a better man.  His total of 3,006 innings pitched for the Red Sox ranked first, 230 innings more than second-place Clemens.

Longevity of tenure had a lot to do with Wakefield racking up 186 wins for the Red Sox.  When he finished his career, he’d pitched 17 seasons for Boston.  He was one of only 19 pitchers in major-league history to have spent 15 or more seasons with a single franchise.

In 2010, he won baseball’s Roberto Clemente Award, given to the player who “best exemplifies the game of baseball, sportsman, community involvement and the individual’s contribution to his team.”

From June 2012, Wakefield worked as a studio analyst for the New England Sports Network (NESN) broadcasts of Red Sox games, frequently offering pregame and postgame commentary.  He is the Honorary Chairman of the Red Sox Foundation and hosts a number of events such as the foundation’s annual celebrity golf tournament.  He has also continued to help other knuckleballers develop their craft, notably Steven Wright, who became an AL All-Star in 2016 for Boston.

On October 1, 2023, Tim Wakefield passed away of brain cancer at just 57 years old.  Red Sox chairman Tom Werner was among many who offered tributes to the man who spent 29 years in the organization as a player, special assistant, and broadcaster.  “It’s one thing to be an outstanding athlete; it’s another to be an extraordinary human being.  Tim was both.  He was a role model on and off the field, giving endlessly to the Red Sox Foundation and being a force for good for everyone he encountered.”

 A major source for this biography was Tim Wakefield’s autobiography, Knuckler: My Life with Baseball’s Most Confounding Pitch. In addition to the sources noted in this biography, the author also accessed Retrosheet.org, Baseball-Reference.com, and the SABR Minor Leagues Database, accessed online at Baseball-Reference.com.

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Summersville Damn West Virginia


    Copyright and photography at https://theclio.com/entry/16129

Summersville Dam & The Town of Gad
Written and researched by Carrie Birdsong

Deep below the crystal-clear water of Summersville Lake once sat the small farming town of Gad.  However, in the early 1960s, the residents of the town were bought out to make way for the construction of a new dam and reservoir.  Flood control is the primary function of this dam in Nicholas County, West Virginia, with the added luxury of providing a fantastic recreational site in the form of a lake.  The reservoir has become a tourist destination and is among the most popular of West Virginia’s mountain lakes.  Additionally, the dam was retrofitted to produce hydroelectric energy.

Backstory and Context:

Constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the dam controls 803 square miles of water.  It is of earthen construction, built as a rock-filled dam, and the second largest of its type in the Eastern United States.  The height of the dam is 390 feet tall and 2,280 feet long.  The cost of building the dam was 48 million dollars.  By 1974 it had paid for itself by saving millions in potential damages that would have been caused by flooding along the Gauley River up to the Kanawha Valley.

Summersville Lake covers over 2,700 acres and provides 60 miles of shoreline.  Water released from the DM is controlled and released at a minimum of 100 cubic feet per second and a maximum of 18,000 cubic feet per second.  In September of each year, water releases turn Gauley River into a challenging, world-class whitewater rafting destination.

Construction of the new dam was authorized under the Flood Control Act of 1938, a crucial piece of legislation that allowed the development of most of West Virginia’s dams.  The actual work on the new project began in February of 1960 with a tunnel that diverted the flow of the Gauley River for the duration of the project.  The work on the actual dam and its spillway did not start until May of 1961 when crews began to work to move the 12 million cubic yards of rock and earth that compose the dam.  A hydroelectricity generating scheme was started in 2001 to harness the tremendous power from the water for the dam releases.  A pipe that is 28 feet in diameter has water gushing through it and generating large amounts of energy each year.  Humming generators have replaced the thunderous noise that accompanied the gushing water.

Upon its completion in 1966, a dedication ceremony was planned for the new dam, which at the time was the largest of its kind east of the Mississippi.  Although the dam was a modern marvel at the time, it possesses a more significant meaning than just flood control.  It represents an achievement of Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society.  The promised revenue from tourism provides an economic boost for nearby Summersville and Nicholas County.  U.S. Senator Jennings Randolph and U.S. Senator Robert C. Byrd had both pushed for the construction of the project in Congress.  At the dedication ceremony attended by the president and the entire West Virginia congressional delegation, LBJ made the following remarks:

     “Here today God has blessed you, and you are blessed, with one of the few successes.  As we look out at this magnificent new dam and reservoir to our backs, I have renewed hope that still other resources—the power of science and the determination of man—will, along with a little prayer and a good deal of dynamite, empower us to quench the thirst of generations to come.” [4]

The town of Gad once stood along the Gauley River but is now beneath the depths of Summersville Lake. In the early 1960s, the small farming village had to be flooded and submerged to complete the construction.  Traditionally, the Corps of Engineers named a dam after the nearest town or city.  The name “Gad Dam” was considered briefly.  However, given the potential controversy of that name, it was widely decided against in favor of the nearby town of Summersville.  People still have strong memories of the small town of Gad that they once called home.  (Information contributed by Jessica Rinehart)

Presently, Summersville Lake is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the entire state of West Virginia supporting a wide range of recreational activities like camping, fishing, boating, swimming, hiking, and even scuba diving.  Also, the lake is within a short drive from other tourist attractions such as the New River Gorge National River Carnifex Ferry State Park and the Civil War battlefield.

1.     WV State University et. al. "Summersville Dam & The
        
Town of Gad."
2.      Clio: Your Guide to History. May 13, 2018.
3.      Accessed September 2, 2022.   https://theclio.com/entry/16129

Sources:

1.     "Summersville Lake." Summersville Lake Retreat.
        Web. 22 June 2015.
2.     "SUMMERSVILLE_HISTORY." Summersville
        Convention & Visitors Bureau. Web. 22 June
        2015.
3.     "Summersville Dam." Gorges-to-Visit. Web.
        22 June 2015.
4.     Brumage, Jody. The Summersville Dam and
        Reservoir. Robert C. 1Byrd Center
        for Congressional History and Education.
        November 29, 2016. Accessed April 13, 2018. 
        https://www.byrdcenter.org/byrd-center
        -blog/the-summersville-dam-and-reservoir

5.     Johnson, Skip "Summersville Lake." e-WV: The
        West Virginia Encyclopedia. 05 November
        2010. Web. 29 April 2018.
6.     Summersville Lake. US Army Corps of Engineers
        Huntington District. . Accessed April 12, 2018.
        http://www.lrh.usace.army mil/Missions/Civil-
        Works Recreation/West-

7.     Lyndon B. Johnson: "Remarks at the Dedication
        of the Summersville Dam, Summersville, West
        Virginia, "September 3, 1966. Accessed April 11,
        2018. Online by Gerhard Peters and John T.
        Woolley, The American Presidency Project. 
        http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=27823.

Who Are We

The Roaming Photographer is a hybrid blog, but we are, first and foremost, a travel blog, but we will be sharing sports articles and travel destination information.  The tie-in is that Carrie Birdsong, the sports fan she is, will share sports information on teams, their states, players, managers, and so much more.  I will tie in some sports articles with articles about places, buildings, things to see, and events to experience should you want to travel to see a sports team.  I Will share other events and things to see while you are in that destination.


Over time, I will be writing and sharing information about the many travel destinations throughout our wonderful country and places around the world.  When I am able I will be sharing travel videos and photography from my own experiences and maybe even behind-the-scenes info.

We will also have a page for some fun articles.  We will share short stories, maybe some poetry, or other writings.

The Roaming Photographer staff is developing a photographic art page where we will sell digital fine art, digital stock photography, and other images that are captured and created by Michael A. Buccilli and Windows Photography.

I am going be writing other travel articles from various states in the United States and from other destinations around the world,

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Brooks Robinson


 Photo the copyright of ESPN on this link.
The Link To The Photo
Brooks Robinson (copied and pasted from sabr.org)

The stage was the fifth game of the World Series, on October 15, 1970. The Baltimore Orioles had taken a three-games-to-one Series lead over the Cincinnati Reds.  Brooks Robinson had already delivered a game-winning home run in the opener, robbed Tony Perez and Johnny Bench of base hits with a pair of diving catches in Game Three, and cracked a two-out RBI single in Game Four. Robinson did not play an offensive factor in the Orioles’ 9–3 lead in Game Five. In fact, he was called out on strikes in the eighth inning. As he returned to the dugout with his head hung, the fans “gave him a standing ovation for his dream series.”1

And why not? Robinson was batting .429 for the Series with 17 total bases and nine hits, including two doubles and two RBIs in Game Three. Meanwhile, the bulk of his 24 fielding chances occurred during key moments of the games. The Reds had one final chance in the top of the ninth, and leading off the inning was Johnny Bench, soon to be named his league’s Most Valuable Player. Bench lined a foul ball that appeared to be out of Robinson’s reach. Yet it was plays such as these for which Lee May nicknamed him Hoover the Vacuum Cleaner. Robinson dived headlong into the dirt in foul territory and miraculously snared the baseball, a startling and fitting finale to an extraordinary World Series performance. Compared with his catch, throwing out Pat Corrales on a soft bouncer to end the game and win the World Series appeared almost anticlimactic.

The lasting memory of Brooks Robinson for many, it is his wizardry in the 1970 World Series. But countless others will remember the man behind the statistics, records, and awards. “When fans ask Brooks Robinson for his autograph,” remembered the late Oriole broadcaster Chuck Thompson, “he complied while finding out how many kids you have, what your dad does, where you live, how old you are, and if you have a dog. … His only failing is that when the game ended if Brooks belonged to its story – usually he did – you better leave the booth at the end of the eighth inning. … By the time the press got [to the clubhouse] Brooks was in the parking lot signing autographs on his way home.”2

Success did not compromise the integrity or upstanding character of Brooks Calbert Robinson. Even into his eighth decade, he stayed as honest and genuine as the day he graduated from high school in Little Rock, Arkansas. He conducted himself with class throughout his 23 seasons in a major league uniform and fulfilled extraneous obligations with joy and enthusiasm. Robinson lived most of his married life in Baltimore, where he helped raise four children, endorsed local businesses, and was active in his family’s church. Brooks Robinson continued to greet total strangers with the familiarity of childhood neighbors.

Robinson was born in Little Rock on May 18, 1937, of mixed German-English extraction. His father was instrumental in the development of his baseball skills, even at a young age. “I was hardly big enough to hold a glove up when he taught me to catch a rubber baseball,” remembered Brooks. “And one of my earliest memories is the day he cut off an old broom, so the handle was about the right size for me to swing. … Mom and the neighbors could always tell where I was by the ping of the rocks against those old broomsticks.” When he was older, Robinson developed his fielding skills with a paper route of 150 customers, including Bill Dickey, the New York Yankees Hall of Fame catcher of an earlier era. Given an English composition assignment about his career ambition in the eighth grade, Robinson entitled his paper, “Why I Want to Play Professional Baseball.” More specifically, he wanted to play third base for the St. Louis Cardinals.3

Although he also played football and basketball in high school, baseball was the sport he most excelled at. One of many the scouts to observe the wunderkind and his glovework at American Legion games was Lindsay Deal, a former minor-league teammate of Baltimore manager/general manager Paul Richards. “He’s no speed demon,” wrote Deal to Richards, “but neither is he a truck horse. Brooks has a lot of power, baseball savvy, and is always cool when the chips are down.”4 After graduating from Central High School in 1955, Robinson and his parents considered several baseball offers before signing with Baltimore Orioles scout Arthur Ehlers for $4,000. The Orioles were a lowly organization at the time, just a season removed from their transfer from St. Louis. Ehlers used the organization’s position to convince Robinson that “with us, you have the chance to move up faster than with probably any other club.”5

Robinson began his professional career in York, Pennsylvania, with a reputation as a weak hitter. Even the public address announcer for the Piedmont League club did not take the prospect seriously, announcing him as Bob Robinson in his first plate appearance. Years later Robinson credited Paul Richards for seeing his “raw ability and for [refusing] to listen to the people that didn’t think I’d ever hit in the big leagues.”6 Robinson batted .091 (2-for-22) in a brief September call-up.


“I thought Paul was kidding when he had me watch the kid work out one day,” recalled teammate 
Gene Woodling. “He couldn’t hit, he couldn’t run, and his arm wasn’t that strong.” Robinson spent the next four years splitting time between the major and minor leagues. He was playing for San Antonio in May 1956 when he learned that the Orioles had acquired veteran third  

baseman 
George Kell from the Chicago White Sox. San Antonio manager Joe Schultz reassured Robinson that Kell was “a stopgap measure,” until the 19-year-old was ready for the major leagues.7 It took Robinson a few tries to finally stick in the major leagues. He hit .272 in 154 games for San Antonio in 1956 before another September recall (.227 in 15 games). He hit his first major-league home run on September 29 in Griffith Stadium off Senators pitcher Evelio Hernández. Robinson was the Orioles’ starting third baseman at the start of the 1957 season but returned to San Antonio after struggling—he wound up hitting .266 in the minors and .239 in the majors for the season.

His first full major league season was 1958 when he played 145 games but hit just .238 with three home runs. He hit just .232 in his first 216 major league games. He was returned to the minor leagues again early in the 1959 season, this time to Vancouver, British Columbia, of the Pacific Coast League. He hit well (.331 in 42 games), and he got back to Baltimore (for good, it turned out) in July. After one final difficult month (.183 in July), he hit over .340 in the final two months and claimed the job he would hold for another 16 years.

Robinson’s Vancouver manager, Charlie Metro, later recalled a freak accident that nearly ended his career. “Our dugout in Vancouver had a screen hanging over some hooks,” said Metro. “A guy took half the screen down but forgot the hooks. Robinson came over for a foul, slipped, and threw his arm up. A hook caught his arm at the right elbow. I grabbed his arm – he had a 24-inch cut. If he had fallen, he would have been done.”8


Robinson’s finest hour in 1959 came off the field. On August 26 he and his Orioles teammates boarded a flight in Kansas City bound for Boston. After taking his seat, he became mesmerized by one of the flight attendants and wisely asked for a glass of iced tea. After his third iced tea, possibly his fourth, Robinson followed the air hostess to the galley, offering that “all the rest [of the players] are married. So remember, if any of them try to talk to you, I’m the only single, eligible bachelor on the plane.”9 Robinson eventually collected enough confidence to ask the young lady’s name and she introduced herself as Connie Butcher from Detroit. After she accepted Robinson’s dinner invitation once the flight landed in Boston, the third baseman knew that Connie was the woman he wanted to marry.


After six noncompetitive seasons in the American League, the Orioles surprised almost everyone by challenging the New York Yankees for the pennant in 1960. Baltimore was tied for first as late as September 15, but the Yankees won their final 15 games to leave the Orioles behind. Despite his tender age of 23, Robinson emerged as a leader of the very young club. He had a fine individual season, hitting .294 with 14 home runs and 88 RBIs, and 
hitting for the cycle on July 15 in Chicago. His fine season earned him a trip to his first two All-Star games, his first Gold Glove, and his choice as the Orioles’ MVP. He finished third in the voting for league MVP, behind only Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle. Although he did not get to play in the World Series, he did marry Connie Butcher on October 8 at her family’s summer home in Windsor, Ontario.


The new bridegroom picked up right where he left off in 1961, batting .287 mainly in the leadoff position as the Orioles finished well behind the Yankees. The next year, under new manager 
Billy Hitchcock, Robinson set career highs with 23 home runs and 86 RBIs while batting .306. New teammate Robin Roberts reflected that Robinson was “quicker than [former teammate Willie] Jones and had the fastest reflexes I’ve ever seen.”10 Robinson fell off quite a bit in 1963, hitting just .251 with 11 home runs, and the team’s poor play cost Hitchcock his job. Hank Bauer took over for the 1964 season.


Robinson had perhaps his best season in 1964, and the Orioles were part of a summer-long scramble for the pennant, again won by the Yankees. Missing only two innings of the Orioles’ 163 games played, Robinson had 194 hits, 28 home runs, and a league-best 118 RBIs. He hit a torrid .464 in September to lift his average from .294 to .317. After the season Robinson was named the American League’s Most Valuable Player and also won his fifth consecutive Gold Glove (he eventually won 16 straight). The Yankees finally dropped back in 1965, and the Orioles won 94 games, but it was Minnesota that took advantage of the opening and won the pennant easily. Robinson suffered a broken thumb when hit by a 
Hank Aguirre fastball, and played 144 games (after missing just one game the previous four seasons), batting .297 with 18 home runs.

In the following off-season, the Orioles underwent some changes. Jerold Hoffberger, chairman of National Brewing Company, bought a majority stake in the team, and he hired Harry Dalton to be the general manager. As Brooks Robinson was the club’s only right-handed power threat, Dalton made a big deal with the Reds to acquire outfielder Frank Robinson. For the next six years the two Robinsons defined the franchise and led the team to its greatest run of success.


Many would have understood if Brooks Robinson felt threatened by the arrival of Frank Robinson, a great player and renowned leader. Frank was the first African American star in Baltimore and one of the first in the American League. Brooks, on the other hand, grew up in Little Rock, a city that had integrated its schools nine years earlier only with the help of the National Guard. Brooks was elated by the trade, declaring the new Oriole to be “exactly what we need.”11 If anything, Frank eased the burden on Brooks as a clubhouse motivator. As Hank Bauer recalled, Frank “was definitely the missing cog,” who “took away the pressure on Brooks and 
Boog [Powell]. He helped the young players just by talking to them.”12

More importantly, Frank’s presence greatly strengthened the Orioles’ offensive attack. On Opening Day in Boston, Frank was hit by a pitch. Brooks followed by belting a two-run homer, which proved to be just sufficient in a 13-inning 5–4 victory. Although Frank won the Triple Crown, Brooks also supplied valuable contributions to the team’s runaway pennant—the club’s lead was more than eight games every day after mid-July, and they eventually won by nine over the Twins. Robinson played the entire All-Star Game in St. Louis, and though the American League lost 2–1, his triple and two singles earned him the game’s MVP award.

The Orioles’ opponents in their first World Series were the heavily favored Los Angeles Dodgers, champions from 1963 and 1965. The upstart Orioles did not pay attention to the doubters and swept the Dodgers in four straight games. In Game One, both Brooks and Frank Robinson homered in the first inning to start the Orioles to their 5–2 victory. The Orioles finished the job with three straight complete-game shutouts from their pitchers. For Brooks Robinson, runner-up to Frank in the league’s MVP vote, the Series was a highly satisfying event. “You dream about signing a big-league contract,” he later wrote. “You dream about getting to the majors. And you dream about getting to the World Series. I remember thinking, ‘Now if you never win anything else again, at least you’ve done this.’”13

The Orioles fell back to sixth place in 1967, beset by injuries to pitchers Jim Palmer and Dave McNally and off years from several hitters. Robinson hit .269 with 22 home runs, fine production for the mid-1960s. Although the American League lost the All-Star Game once again, Robinson was responsible for the junior circuit’s only run, a round-tripper off Ferguson Jenkins. The Orioles moved up to second place the next year, although a midsummer slump cost manager Bauer his job in favor of Earl Weaver. Brooks received a favorable first impression of his new manager, describing him as “intense and just insecure enough to have us playing out all the time.”14

 

While 1969 marked an off-year for Robinson (.234 with 23 homers and 84 RBIs), the Orioles crushed American League opponents all season en route to a 109-53 record and a sweep of the Twins in the playoffs. Despite losing the World Series to the upstart New York Mets, the Orioles came back the next year and did it all again, this time sporting a record of 108-54 and another sweep of Minnesota. Three of Robinson’s 18 home runs were particularly noteworthy. He broke a 2–2 deadlock on May 9, hitting the 200th round-tripper of his career off Chicago’s Tommy John. On June 20, he delivered a three-run blast to eclipse a 2–2 tie against Washington’s Joe Coleman for his 2,000th hit. A walk-off home run off Boston’s Sparky Lyle, though not a career milestone, was exemplary of Robinson’s grit and tenacity. Earlier in the game he had sustained minor head injuries as starter Mike Nagy beaned him. Robinson brought his average back up to .276 and drove in 94 runs in the Orioles’ cause.


Robinson’s dominance of the 1970 World Series made him more famous than he ever had been before. Along with all the formidable defensive plays, he also hit .429 with two home runs (after having hit .583 in the Twins series). However, few remember that the memorable Game Five almost did not take place that day. As Phil Jackman of the 
Baltimore Evening Sun reported: “It was about 30 minutes before the fifth game … but it didn’t look as if the show would go on. It was pouring. Brooks Robinson walked into the dugout and Andy Etchebarren, sitting there, kiddingly said, ‘Brooksie, make it stop raining.’ Number 5, raising his eyes, said, ‘Stop raining.’ It did. ‘I’m getting out of here,’ Etchebarren said, scurrying towards the clubhouse.” Perhaps umpire Ed Hurley offered some validity with his remark that Robinson “came down from a higher league.”15 Teammates and adversaries alike offered their admiration of Brooks Robinson after the Series. Boog Powell supplied the ultimate compliment in the late innings of a tight ballgame, “I’d rather have him up there instead of me.” It was of little surprise to anyone that Robinson was named the 1970 World Series Most Valuable Player, receiving a new Dodge Charger. To this, Pete Rose of the vanquished Reds suggested, “If we knew he wanted a car so [badly], we’d have bought one for him ourselves.”16


How could the 34-year-old improve on his magnificent 1970? He could not, but the next year his 20 home runs, 92 RBIs, and .272 batting average were enough to earn him his fourth and final Most Valuable Oriole award. Baltimore ran away with the American League East again, racking up 101 wins and sweeping Oakland in the playoff series. Two of Robinson’s more memorable regular-season contests were against the Athletics. On July 18 in Oakland, his grand slam proved to be the difference in a 7–3 victory. On July 27 he beat 
Rollie Fingers with a two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth. The following night Robinson reminded everyone that he was mortal after all, committing three errors in one inning and hitting into two double plays.


Baltimore took a 2-0 lead over Pittsburgh in the World Series, as Robinson reached base five times in an 11–3 victory in Game Two. Fans at Memorial Stadium, if they opened page 44 of their World Series Program, could view a beautiful Norman Rockwell art print of Robinson used as an advertising piece for a sporting goods company. Entitled “Gee Thanks, Brooks,” it displayed the third baseman signing an autograph for a boy sitting in the first row of seats. Having autographed hundreds of examples of the portraits, Robinson became familiar with every detail in the painting, even showing which of the spectators was Rockwell himself. Despite winning the first two games, the Orioles lost the 1971 World Series to the Pirates, whose star 
Roberto Clemente had a World Series as memorable as Robinson’s had been the year before.


Shortly after returning from an 18-game barnstorming tour of Japan, the Orioles announced a trade that sent Frank Robinson to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Without their catalyst and fearless leader in the lineup, the Orioles reverted to the middle of the division in 1972 thanks to a collapsing offense. A lifetime .274 hitter to that point, Robinson batted only .250. The Orioles returned to their divisional apex in 1973 and 1974 but could not defeat Oakland in the Championship Series either year. Robinson retained his attitude as a team player, as was evident when the Orioles overcame a 4–0 deficit in Game Four of the 1973 Championship Series to win 5-4 on a pair of home runs by 
Bobby Grich and Andy Etchebarren, “I remember being out in the field thinking in the sixth inning that I’ll probably be home raking leaves the next day. Instead, we were playing the next day with a trip to the World Series on the line.”17


In 1975, the 38-year-old Robinson won his 16th consecutive Gold Glove Award, a fitting accomplishment for a player who committed only 263 errors in 9,165 chances. But he also hit .201, and just .211 in 71 games the following year. By the end of the 1976 season, 
Doug DeCinces had supplanted Robinson as the regular third baseman, and the end appeared imminent.  When Billy Hunter left Baltimore to become the manager of the Texas Rangers, Robinson replaced him on the coaching staff. Before he hung up his spikes, he saved one final moment in the sun – in the rain, actually – for Baltimore’s fans. On April 19, 1977, the Orioles trailed the Indians by three runs in the bottom of the 10th inning. After Lee May singled in one run, there remained two Orioles on base as Robinson emerged to pinch-hit for Larry Harlow. Dressed in the garish orange uniform of the era, he took the count to 3-2 against Dave LaRoche, he fouled several pitches before producing a game-ending home run for a 65 victory.  It was Robinson’s 268th and final home run.


The Orioles paid tribute to their retired star on September 18, 1977, as 
they celebrated Thanks Brooks Day. Before the game, Robinson was driven around the perimeter of the field in a 1955 Cadillac convertible as the crowd of 51,798 offered a standing ovation. Doug DeCinces ran on the field, removed third base from the dirt, and presented it to Robinson. The bitterness of losing Reggie Jackson to free agency remained a vivid memory when Gordon Beard wrote in his Associated Press column that “Brooks never asked anyone to name a candy bar after him. In Baltimore, they name their children after him.”18 Following the season, Brooks was selected, along with Frank Robinson, as a charter member of the Baltimore Orioles Hall of Fame.


In 1978 Robinson became an Orioles broadcaster. He also became a popular advertising representative, lending his name to products like Rawlings Sporting Goods, Mike Meagher’s All-Star Dodge, Crown Petroleum, and Esskay Hot Dogs. These were products used by families in the Baltimore area – much like his own family, which would grow to include sons Brooks David, Chris, and Michael, daughter Diana, and several grandchildren. As the autograph industry expanded in the 1980s, Robinson became a regular on the baseball card show circuit. Over the decades, Robinson has scrawled his signature on thousands of items, including some that collectors would not expect. In an interview with the 
Baltimore Sun, he admitted that on various occasions, he has been asked to sign a pet rock, an easter egg, a photo of Frank Robinson, and even a plane ticket.19


In 1983 Robinson was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Standing before a sea of black and orange from the podium in Cooperstown, Robinson paid homage to his teachers, Paul Richards and George Kell. Of his predecessor at the hot corner, he once offered that “George Kell taught me everything he knew about playing third. He also taught me how to conduct myself as a big leaguer, to be a role model, and someone kids and all fans could look up to.” Fittingly, fellow Arkansas native Kell was also enshrined in the Hall that very day. In his own speech, Kell remarked to Robinson that he found it “almost unbelievable that we have traveled the same path for so long with the same goals in mind. And we wind up here in Cooperstown on the same day.”20

Robinson stayed an Orioles broadcaster until 1993 when he and Connie retired to Southern California. In 1991 he was central to the closing ceremony at Memorial Stadium. He and Baltimore Colts’ Hall of Famer Johnny Unitas were invited to throw out the first pitches before the final game on October 6 against the Detroit Tigers – Unitas threw a football.

The Robinsons later returned to Maryland, and Brooks remained active in baseball as the part-owner of four minor-league teams, including the York Revolution in the independent Atlantic League. Early in the 2008 season, Robinson was honored by the Revolution as a life-size bronze statue of his likeness was unveiled. A few years ago, Robinson received a surprise Christmas gift from his son – the original Norman Rockwell portrait bearing his likeness. It was hung in the family recreation room in Timonium. Robinson received a health scare in early 2009 when he was diagnosed with prostate cancer but early treatment was successful.21

He stayed active with the Orioles organization until his death at the age of 86 on September 26, 2023.

Brooks Robinson once defined professional sports as “a good life that allows you to do what you love to do all the time and at the same time supply support for yourself and your family. But it is important to understand what goes on in a professional athlete’s mind during his brief playing career. To us, making money is secondary – we just want to play.”22 He played for parts of 23 seasons, and for most of that time established a standard for his position.

 1.     Ted Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles: Four Decades of Magic
         from 33rd Street to Camden Yards (Dallas: Taylor Publishing
         
Company, 2000) 117.
2.     Curt Smith, The Storytellers: From Mel Allen to Bob Costas – Sixty
        
Years of Baseball Tales from the Broadcast Booth (New York: 
        Macmillan, 1995), 204.
3.     Brooks Robinson and Jack Tobin, Third Base Is My Home (Waco,
        Texas: Word Books, 1974), 20-29.
4.     Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles, 40.
5.     Robinson and TobinThird Base Is My Home, 54-55.
6.     Rick Maese, “Yea for York,” Baltimore Sun, April 5, 2008; 
        Patterson, xi.
7.     Robinson and TobinThird Base Is My Home, 92.
8.     Larry Stone, “The Most Wonderful Days I Ever Had,” Rain 
        Check Baseball in the Pacific Northwest, Mark Armour, ed.
        (Cleveland: SABR, 2006), 106.
9.     Robinson, Third Base Is My Home, 126.
10.   C. Joseph Bride, Bob Brown, and Phil Itzoe, eds, Baltimore
        Orioles 1966 Yearbook (Baltimore: Baltimore Baseball Inc.,
        1966), 10.
11.  Tom Adelman, Black and Blue: Sandy Koufax, the Robinson Boys,
       
and the World Series That Stunned America (New York: Little,
       
Brown and Company, 2006), 13.
12.  Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles, 83.
13.  Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles, 87.
14.  Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles, xii.
15.  Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles, 117, 133.
16.  Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles, 117, 120.
17.  Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles, 125.
18.  Patterson, The Baltimore Orioles, 134; Richard Kucner, “1983:
       
Brooks Goes to Cooperstown,” Baltimore Orioles Official 1983
       Y
earbook (Baltimore: FATA Inc., 1983), 33, 36.
19.  “There’s Nothing Brooks Won’t Sign,” Baltimore Sun, April 19,
       
2009.
20.  Patterson, xi; George Kell and Dan Ewald, Hello Everybody, I’m
       
George Kell (Champaign, Illinois: Sports Publishing, 1998), 205.
21.  Peter Schmuck, “Brooks Robinson Was Treated for 
Cancer,”
       
Baltimore Sun, May 13, 2009.
22.  Kucner, “1983: Brooks Goes to Cooperstown,” 36-37.