Showing posts with label Carrie'sSportsWorld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carrie'sSportsWorld. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

The New York Islanders


The New York Islanders (colloquially known as the Isles) are a professional ice hockey team based in Elmont, New York. They compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Metropolitan Division in the Eastern Conference, and UBS Arena. They are one of three franchises in the New York metropolitan area, along with the New Jersey Devils, and New York Rangers, and their fanbase resides primarily on Long Island. In the fall of 1972, the emerging World Hockey Association (WHA) planned to place its New York team, the New York Raiders, in Nassau County’s brand-new Nassau Veterans Memorial Stadium. County officials did not consider the WHA a major league and wanted to keep the Raiders out. William Shea, who had helped bring Major League Baseball’s New York Mets to the area a decade earlier, was enlisted to bring an NHL team to Long Island. Although Shea had previously worked with upstart rival leagues including the aborted Continental League (baseball), the American Football League, and the American Basketball Association, his ultimate goal in these efforts had always been to try to persuade the established leagues to grant second franchises to New York as had been the case with the Mets (and also the New York Jets (NFL) and New York Nets (NBA), as a result of those teams’ leagues merging with their established rivals)

        photo credit:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Islanders 

In contrast, Shea decided there was no need to work with the WHA since unlike the initial results of his previous approaches to established leagues in the other major sports, Shea immediately found NHL president Clarence Campbell to be receptive to adding a second team in New York. Nevertheless, the Islanders’ bid faced opposition from the New York Rangers who did not want additional competition in the New York area. Eventually, Campbell and Shea persuaded the Rangers’ owners, Madison Square Garden, to reconsider. Rangers’ president Bill Jennings weighed the pros and cons. Another local NHL team would be compelled to compensate the Rangers for sharing the New York area. On the other hand, a WHA team would owe the Rangers nothing unless it was included in a potential NHL-WHA merger, a prospect to which both Campbell and Shea were adamantly opposed. Finally, consenting to the establishment of an NHL franchise in suburban Nassau County would help to ensure the vast majority of the Rangers fanbase within New York City proper would continue to support the older franchise, and reduce the prospect of a rival league eventually establishing a team and fanbase there.

Despite expanding to 14 teams just two years prior, the NHL awarded a Long Island-based franchise to clothing manufacturer Roy Boe, owner of the American Basketball Association’s New York Nets, on November 8, 1971. (https://books.google.com/books?id=no8-Q-ZE1z0C) The terms included a $6 million ($41.98 million in 2022 dollars) franchise fee plus a $5 million ($34.98 million in 2022 dollars) territorial fee to the Rangers. An expansion franchise was also given to Atlanta (the Flames) to keep the schedule balanced and to prevent the WHA from entering the growing market at the newly built Omni Coliseum.


The New York Islanders name was unveiled by the franchise on February 15, 1972, at a press conference held across the street from Roosevelt Raceway (https://www.nytimes.com/1972/02/16/archives/li-hockey-club-hires-exoakland-aide.html) at a restaurant owned by Burt Bacharach. Many expected it to use the “Long Island Ducks”, after the Eastern Hockey League team that played there from 1959 to 1973. The team was soon named the “Isles” by the local newspapers. The Islander's arrival effectively doomed the Raiders, who played in Madison Square Garden under difficult lease terms and were forced to move to Cherry Hill, New Jersey in the middle of their second season (https://web.archive.org/web/20150419111503/http://www.whahockey.com/raiders.html).

Former California Golden Seals executive vice president Bill Torrey was named as the team’s general manager at the same press conference as the franchise’s name unveiling (https://www.nytimes.com/1972/02/16/archives/li-hockey-club-hires-exoakland-aide.html). The Islanders secured veteran forward Ed Westfall, defensemen Gerry Hart, and goaltender Billy Smith in the 1972 Expansion Draft, along with junior hockey stars Billy Harris, Lorne Henning, and Bobby Nystrom in the 1972 Amateur Draft. Soon after the draft, Phil Goyette was named as the team’s first head coach, however, he was fired halfway through the season and replaced by Earl Ingarfield and assistant coach Aut Erickson. Unlike most other expansion teams’ general managers, Torrey made few trades for veteran players in the early years, as he was committed to building the team through the draft.

By September 1972, the Islanders were waiting for the Nassau Coliseum to be completed as well as their practice facility “The Royal Ice Rink” in Kings Park. The team was forced to practice as late as October 6th, the day before their first game, at the Rangers practice rink in New Hyde Park (https://www.nytimes.com/1972/10/07/archives/islanders-make-debut-tonight-in-li-rink-rangers-at-wings.html).

Friday, April 5, 2024

The Washington Capitals

The NHL awarded an expansion franchise to the city of Washington on June 8, 1972, and the Capitals joined the NHL as an expansion team for the 1974 -1975 season along with the Kansas City Scouts.  The Capitals were owned by Abe Pollin (also the owner of the NBA’s Washington Bullets/Wizards).  Pollin had built the Capital Centre in suburban Landover, Maryland, to house both the Bullets (who formerly played in Baltimore) and the Capitals.  His first act as owner was to hire Hall of Famer Milt Schmidt as general manager.

With a combined 30 teams between the NHL and the World Hockey Association (WHA), the available talent was stretched thin.  The Capitals had few players with professional experience and were at a disadvantage against the long-standing teams that were stocked with veteran players.

The Capitals’ inaugural season was dreadful, even by expansion standards.  They finished with the worst record in the league at 8-67-5; their 21 points were half that of their expansion brethren, the Scouts.  The eight wins are the fewest for an NHL team playing at least 70 games, and the .131 winning percentage is still the worst in NHL history.  They also set records for most road losses (39 out of 40), most consecutive road losses (37), and most consecutive losses (17).  Head coach Jim Anderson said, “I’d rather find out my wife was cheating on me than keep losing like this.  At least I could tell my wife to cut it out.”  Schmidt himself had to take over the coaching reins late in the season.

In 1975 – 1976, Washington went 25 straight games without a win and allowed 394 goals en route to another horrendous record: 11-59-10 (32 points).  In the middle of the season, Schmidt was replaced as general manager by Max McNab and as head coach by Tom McVie.  For the rest of the 1970s and early 1980s, the Capitals alternated between dreadful seasons and finishing only a few points out of the Stanley Cup playoffs; in 1980 and 1981, for instance, they were in playoff contention until the last day of the season.  The one bright spot during these years of futility was that many of McNab’s draft picks (e.g. Rick Green, Ryan Walter, Mike Gartner, Bengt Gustafsson, Gaetan Duchesne, and Bobby Carpenter) would impact the team for years to come, either as important members of the roster or as crucial pieces in major trades.

Pollin stuck it out through the Capitals’ first decade, even though they were usually barely competitive.  This stood in contrast to the Scouts; they were forced to move to Denver after only two years because their original owners did not have the resources or patience to withstand the struggles of an expansion team.  By the summer of 1982, however, there was serious talk of the team moving out of the U.S. capital, and a “Save the Caps” campaign was underway.

Gartner-Langway era (1982 – 1993)

In August 1982, the team hired David Polie as general manager (https://www.nhl.com/capitals/news/caps-history-the-hiring-of-david-poile-286255168).  As his first move, Polie pulled off one of the largest trades in franchise history on September 9th, 1982, when he dealt longtime regulars Ryan Walter and Rick Green to the Montreal Canadiens in exchange for Rod Langway (named captain only a few weeks later)), Brian Engblom, Doug Jarvis, and Craig Laughlin.  This move turned the franchise around, as Langway’s solid defense helped the team to dramatically reduce its goals-against, the explosive goal-scoring of Dennis Maruk, Mike Gartner, and Bobby Carpenter fueled the offensive attack.  Another significant move was the drafting of defenseman Scott Stevens during the 1982 NHL Entry Draft (the pick was made by interim general manager Roger Crozier, prior to Poile’s hiring).  The result was a 29-point jump, a third place finish in the powerful Patrick Division, which had teams such as the high-powered Islanders, Flyers, and Rangers.  Another result was the team’s first playoff appearance in 1983.  Although they were eliminated by the three-time defending (and eventual) Stanley Cup champion New York Islanders (three games to one), the Caps’ dramatic turnaround ended any talk of the club leaving Washington.

 Fourteen consecutive playoff appearances (1983 – 1996)

The Capitals would make the playoffs for each of the next 14 years in a row, becoming known for starting slow before catching fire in January and February.  However, regular season success did not carry into the playoffs.  Despite a continuous march of stars like Gartner, Carpenter, Langway, Gustafsson, Stevens, Mike Ridley, Dave Christian, Dino Ciccarelli, Larry Murphy, and Kevin Hatcher, Washington was knocked out in either the first or second round seven years in a row.  In 1985 – 1986, for instance, the Caps finished with 107 points and won 50 games for the first time in franchise history, good enough for the third-best record in the NHL.  They defeated the Islanders in the first round but were eliminated in the second round by the New York Rangers.

The 1986 – 1987 season brought even more heartbreak, with a loss to the Islanders in the Patrick Division Semifinals.  This series was capped off by the classic Easter Epic game, which ended at 1:56 am on Easter Sunday 1987.  The Capitals had thoroughly dominated most of the game, outshooting the Islanders 75-52, but lost in overtime when goaltender Bob Mason was beaten on a Pat LaFontaine shot from the blue line.  For the 1989 playoff push, Gartner and Murphy were traded to the Minnesota North Stars in exchange for Ciccarelli and defenseman Bob Rouse.  However, the goaltending once again faltered and they were eliminated in the first round by the Philadelphia Flyers.  The Capitals finally made the Wales Conference Finals in 1990 but went down in a four-game sweep at the hands of the first-place Boston Bruins.

Bondra-Gonchar era (1993 – 2005)

From 1991 to 1996, the Capitals would lose in either the first or second round of the playoffs.  They would eliminate the Rangers in the first round but lost the second round to the Pittsburgh Penguins in 1991.  In 1992 and 1993, they would lose in the first round to the Penguins and the Islanders respectively.  In 1994, they won their first-round series against the Penguins but lost in the second round to the Rangers.  In 1995 and 1996, they lost in the first round both times to the Penguins.  They would miss the playoffs in 1997 but came close to winning their first Stanley Cup one year later.

 First Stanley Cup Finals Appearance (1998)

In 1998, as the Caps opened MCI Center, Peter Bondra’s 52 goals led the team, veterans Dale Hunter, Joe Juneau, and Adam Oates returned to old form, and Olaf Kolzig had a solid .920 save percentage as the Caps got past the Boston Bruins, Ottawa Senators and Buffalo Sabres (the latter on a dramatic overtime win in game six on a goal by Joe Juneau) en route to the team’s first Stanley Cup Finals appearance.  The Capitals won six overtime games, three in each of their series against the Bruins and Sabres.  However, the team was outmatched by defending champions, the Detroit Red Wings, who won in a four-game sweep.  That same season, Oates, Phil Housley, and Hunter all scored their 1,000th career point, the only time in NHL history that one team had three players reach that same milestone in a single season.

 Disappointments and rebuilding (1998 – 2004)

After their 1998 championship run, the Capitals finished the 1998 – 1999 season with a record of 31-45-6 and failed to qualify for the playoffs.  During the season, the team was sold to a group headed by AOL executive Ted Leonsis.  The Capitals went on to win back-to-back Southwest Division titles in 2000 and 2001, yet both years lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Penguins.  After the 2000 – 2001 season, Adam Oates demanded a trade but management refused and stripped him of his team captaincy.

In the summer of 2001, the Capitals landed five-time Art Ross Trophy winner Jarmoir Jagr, by trading three young prospects to the Pittsburgh Penguins.  Jagr was signed to the largest contract ever in NHL history -- $77 million over seven years at an average salary of $11 million per year (over $134,000 per game), with an option for an eighth year.  However, after Adam Oates was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers, the Capitals failed to defend their division title and missed the playoffs in 2002 despite a winning record.  Still, the 2001 – 2002 season marked the highest attendance in franchise history, drawing in 710,990 fans and 17,341 per game.

Before the 2002 – 2003 season, the Caps made more roster changes, including the signing of highly regarded Robert Lang as a free agent, a linemate of Jagr’s from Pittsburgh.  Washington returned to the playoffs in 2003, but disappointed fans again by losing in six games to the Tampa Bay Lightning after starting off with a two-game lead in the best-of-seven first-round series.  The series is well-remembered for the three-overtime Game 6 at the then-MCI Center.  At the time it was the longest game in the building’s history and was eventually decided by a power-play goal by Tampa Bay.

In the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, the Capitals won the Draft Lottery, moving ahead of the Pittsburgh Penguins, who held the NHL’s worst record, and selected Alexander Ovechkin first overall.  During the NHL labor dispute of 2004 – 2005, which cost the NHL its entire season, Ovechkin stayed in Russia, playing for Dynamo Moscow.  Several other Capitals played part or all of the lost season in Europe, including Olaf Kolzig, Brendan Witt, Jeff Halpern, and Alexander Semin.  The Capitals’ 2005 off-season consisted of making D.C.-area native Halpern the team’s captain, signing Andrew Cassels, Ben Clymer, Mathieu Biron and Jamie Heward,  and acquiring Chris Clark and Jeff Friesen via trade.

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

The Buffalo Sabres

Photo Credit: https://1000logos.net/buffalo-sabres-logo/

The Sabres along with the Vancouver Canucks, joined the NHL in the 1970-1971 season.  Their first owners were Seymour H. Knox and Northrup Knox, scions of a family long prominent in Western New York and grandsons of the Woolworth’s variety store chain; along with Robert O. Swados, a Buffalo attorney.  On the team’s inaugural board of directors were Robert E. Rich Jr., later the owner of the Buffalo Bisons minor league baseball team; and Geroge W. Strawbridge Jr., an heir to the Campbell Soup Company fortune.  Buffalo had a history of professional hockey; immediately before the Sabres’ establishment, the Buffalo Bisons were a pillar of the American Hockey League (AHL), having existed since 1940 (and before that, another Bisons hockey team played from 1928 to 1936), winning the Calder Cup in their final season. (https://web.archive.org/web/20110307143201/http://forty.sabres.nhl.com/history.asp?year=1967)

Wanting a name other than “bison” (a generic stock name used by Buffalo sports teams for decades), the Knoxes commissioned a name-the-team contest.  With names like “Mugwumps”, “Buzzing Bees” and “Flying Zepplins” being entered, (https://www.nhl.com/news/nhl-team-nickname-origins-explained-283976168) the winning choice, “Sabres”, was chosen because Seymour Knox felt a sabre was a weapon carried by a leader, and could be effective on both offence and defense.  The Knoxes tried twice before to get an NHL team, first when the NHL expanded in 1967, and again when they attempted to purchase the Oakland Seals with the intent of moving them to Buffalo.  Their first attempt was thwarted when Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney persuaded his horse racing friends James and Bruce Norris to select Pittsburgh over Buffalo, while the second attempt was due to the NHL not wanting an expansion market to give on a team so soon, nor isolate the Los Angeles Kings (the only NHL team other than the Seals west of St. Louis at the time) from the rest of the NHL entirely.  At the time of their creation, the Sabres exercised their option to create their own AHL farm team, the Cincinnati Swords.  Former Toronto Maple Leafs general manager and head coach Punch Imlach was hired in the same capacity with the Sabres.

The year the Sabres debuted (1970) was an important year for major league sports in Buffalo.  In addition to the Sabres’ debut, the Buffalo Bills officially joined the National Football League (NFL), and the National Basketball Association’s (NBA) Buffalo Braves also began to play, sharing the Memorial Auditorium with the Sabres.  The city of Buffalo went from having no teams in the established major professional sports leagues to three in one off-season, a situation that proved to be unsustainable.  Between the Braves and the Sabres, the Sabres would prove to be by far the more successful of the two; Paul Snyder, the nouveau riche Braves owner, publicly feuded with the old-money Knoxes and the local college basketball scene, eventually losing those feuds and being forced to sell his team in 1976.  Subsequent owners of the Braves, in a series of convoluted transactions tied to the ABA-NBA merger, moved the team out of Buffalo.

When the Sabres debuted as an expansion team, they took to the ice to Aram Khachaturian’s Armenian dance, “Sabre Dance”. (https://artvoice.com/2017/11/hockey-sin-city-andrew-kulyk-peter-farrell/#.Ws-U_YjwZuU)  The music has been associated with the team as an unofficial anthem ever since. (https://as.com/videos/2016/07/06/en/1467824254_902709.html)  It is often played between periods and after goals.

The consensus was that the first pick in the 1970 NHL Amateur Draft would be junior phenomenon, Gilbert Perreault.  Either the Sabres or the Canucks would get the first pick, to be determined with the spin of a wheel of fortune.  Perreault was available to the Sabres and Canucks as this was the first year the Montreal Canadiens did not have a priority right to draft Quebec-born junior players.

The Canucks were allocated numbers 1 – 10 on the wheel, while the Sabres had 11 – 20.  When the league president Clarence Campbell spun the wheel, he initially thought the pointer landed on one.  While Campbell was congratulating the Vancouver delegation, Imlach asked Campbell to check again.  As it turned, the pointer was on 11, effectively handing Perreault to the Sabres. (https://archive.org/details/hockeychronicles00tren)  Perreault scored 38 goals in his rookie season of 1970-1971, at the time a record for most goals scored by an NHL rookie, and he received the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL’s rookie of the year.  Despite Perreault’s play, the Sabres finished well out of playoff contention.

In the team’s second season, 1971-1972, rookie Rick Martin, drafted fifth overall by Buffalo in 1971, and Rene Robert, acquired in a late-season trade from the Pittsburgh Penguins, joined Perreault and would become one of the league’s top forward lines in the 1970s.  Martin broke Perreault’s record at once with 44 rookie goals.  They were nicknamed “The French Connection” after the movie of the same name and in homage to their French-Canadian roots.  The Sabres made the playoff for the first time in 1972-1973, just the team’s third year in the league, but lost in the quarterfinals in six games to the eventual Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens.

After a subpar year in 1974 that saw them miss the playoffs (as well as ageing defenseman Tim Horton’s death in a DUI-induced car accident), the Sabres tied for the best record in the NHL in the 1974-1975 regular season.  Buffalo advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in team history to play against the rough Philadelphia Flyers (who had been recently named the “Broad Street Bullies”), a series which included the legendary Fog Game (Game 3 of the series).  Due to the unusual heat in Buffalo in May 1975 and the lack of air conditioning in the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, parts of the game were played in heavy fog that made players, officials, and the puck invisible to many spectators.  During a face-off and through the fog, Sabres centre Jim Lorentz spotted a bat flying across the rink, and swung at it with his stick, killing it.  It was the only time that any player killed an animal during an NHL game.  The Sabres won that game thanks to Rene Robert’s goal in overtime.  However, the Flyers would wind up taking the Stanley Cup in six games, winning the series 4-2.

 Here are some photos to go with some of the names mentioned above:













The Philadelphia Flyers

The NHL in Philadelphia before 1967

Before 1967, Philadelphia had only iced a team in the NHL in the 1930-1931 season, when the financially struggling Pittsburgh Pirates relocated in 1930 as the Philadelphia Quakers, playing at The Arena at 46th and Market Streets. The club, garbed in orange and black like today’s Flyers, was coached by Cooper Smeaton, who was to be elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame 30 years later, for his far more notable role as an NHL referee. Among the young Quakers’ skaters in 1930-1931 was another future Hall of Famer 19-year-old rookie center Syd Howe. The Quakers’ only “claim to fame” was to establish a single-season NHL record for futility which has stood ever since, by compiling a dismal record of 4-36-4, still the fewest ever won in a season by an NHL club. The Quakers quietly suspended operations after that single dreadful campaign to again leave the Can-Am League’s Philadelphia Arrows as Philadelphia’s lone hockey team. The Quakers’ dormant NHL franchise was finally canceled by the league in 1936 (https://hockeyscoop.net/ahlphl/index.html#Quakers) (https://www.nytimes.com/1931/09/27/archives/two-sextets-out-of-hockey-league-ottawa-and-philadelphia-agree-to.html).

In 1946, a group led by Montreal and Philadelphia sportsman Len Peto announced plans to put another NHL team in Philadelphia, to build a 2.5 million dollar rink to seat 20,000 where the Phillies’ former ballpark (the Baker Bowl) stood at Broad and Huntingdon Streets, and to acquire the franchise of the old Montreal Maroons ("Peto Sure He Can Build Arena in Time; National Hockey League Weighs Club Here". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. March 31, 1946. p. 31.). The latter was held by the Canadian Arena Company, owner of the Montreal Canadiens. However, Peto’s group was unable to raise funding for the new arena project by the league-imposed deadline, and the NHL canceled the Maroons franchise.

While attending a basketball game on November 29th, 1964, at the Boston Garden, Ed Snider, the then-vice-president of the Philadelphia Eagles, observed a crowd of Boston Bruins fans lining up to purchase tickets to see a last-place hockey team (https://flyershistory.net/cgi-bin/hofprof.cgi?005). He began making plans for a new arena upon hearing the NHL was looking to expand due to fears of a competing league taking hold on the West Coast and the desire for a new television contract in the United States. Snider made his proposal to the league, which chose the Philadelphia group – including Snider, Bill Putnam, Jerome Schiff, and Philadelphia Eagles owner Jerry Wolman – over the Baltimore group.

The Early Years (1967-1971)

The new teams were hampered by restrictive rules that kept all major talent with the “Original Six” teams. In the NHL Expansion Draft, most of the players available were either aging veterans or career minor-leaguers before expansion occurred. Among the Flyers’ 20 selections were Bernie Parent, Doug Favell, Bill Sutherland, Ed Van Impe, Joe Watson, Lou Angotti, Leon Rochefort, and Gary Dornhoefer. Having purchased the minor-league Quebec Aces, the team had a distinctly francophone flavor in its early years, with Parent, Rochefort, Andre Lacroix, Serge Bernier, Jean-Guy Gendron, Simon Nolet, and Rosaire Paiement among others. Beginning play in 1967 – 1968, the Philadelphia Flyers made their debut on October 11, 1967, losing 5-1 on the road to the California Seals (https://www.flyershistory.net/cgi-bin/hm.cgi?001hm). They won their first game a week later, defeating the St. Louis Blues on the road. 2-1 (https://www.flyershistory.net/cgi-bin/hm.cgi?002hm). The Flyers made their home debut in front of a crowd of 7,812, shutting out their intrastate rivals, the Pittsburgh Penguins, 1-0 on October 19 (https://www.flyershistory.net/cgi-bin/hm.cgi?003hm). Lou Angotti was named the first captain in Flyers history, while Rochefort was the Flyers' top goal scorer after netting a total of 21 goals. With all six expansion teams grouped into the same division, the Flyers were able to win the division with a sub-.500 record despite being forced to play their last seven home games on the road due to a storm blowing parts of the Spectrum’s roof off. However, playoff success did not come so quickly, as the Flyers were upset by St. Louis in a first-round, seven-game series.

Angotti left the team in the off-season, being replaced by Van Impe as team captain. Led by Van Impe and the team-leading 24 goals of Andre Lacroix, the Flyers struggled during their sophomore season by finishing 15 games under .500. Despite their poor regular season showing in 1968 – 1969, the made the playoffs. They lost again to St. Louis, this time being dispatched in a four-game sweep. Not wanting his team to be physically outmatched again, majority owner Ed Snider instructed general manager Bud Polie to acquire bigger, tougher players. While head coach Keith Allen soon after replaced Polie as general manager, this mandate eventually led to one of the most feared teams to ever take the ice in the NHL. The keystone of those teams was acquired when the Flyers took a chance on a 19-year-old diabetic from Flin Flon, Manitoba, Bobby Clarke, with their second draft pick, 17th overall, in the 1969 NHL Amateur Draft. Keeping Snider’s mandate, the team also drafted future enforcer Dave Schultz 52nd overall.

By the time training camp came around, it was clear that Clarke was the team’s best player, and he quickly became a fan favorite. His 15 goals and 31 assists in his rookie season earned him a trip to the NHL All-Star Game. Despite his arrival, the team struggled in 1969 – 1970, recording only 17 wins – the fewest in franchise history and setting the NHL team record for the most ties in a season (24). They lost the tiebreaker for the final playoff spot to the Oakland Seals, missing the playoffs for the first time.

Here are the first-round draft picks from 1967 – 2023:

· 1967: Serge Bernier (5th overall)
· 1968: Lew Morrison (8th overall)
· 1969: Bob Currier (6th overall)
· 1971: Larry Wright (8th overall) & Pierre Plante
             (9th overall).
· 1972: Bill Barber (7th overall)
· 1975: Mel Bridgman (1st overall)
· 1976: Mark Suzor (17th overall)
· 1977: Kevin McCarthy (17th overall)
· 1978: Behn Wilson (6th overall) & Ken Linseman
            (7th overall) & Danny Lucas (14th overall)
· 1979: Brian Propp (14th overall)
· 1980: Mike Stothers (21st overall)
· 1981: Steve Smith (16th overall)
· 1982: Ron Sutter (4th overall)
· 1985: Glen Seabrooke (21st overall)
· 1986: Kerry Huffman (20th overall)
· 1987: Darren Rumble (20th overall)
· 1988: Claude Boivin (14th overall)
· 1990: Mike Ricci (4th overall)
· 1991: Peter Forsberg (6th overall)
· 1992: Ryan Sittler (7th overall)
· 1995: Brian Boucher (22nd overall)
· 1996: Dainius Zubrus (15th overall)
· 1998: Simon Gagne (22nd overall)
· 1999: Maxime Ouellet (22nd overall)
· 2000: Justin Williams (28th overall)
· 2001: Jeff Woywitka (27th overall)
· 2002: Joni Pitkanen (4th overall)
· 2003: Jeff Carter (11th overall) & Mike Richards
            (24th overall)
· 2005: Steve Downie (29th overall)
· 2006: Claude Giroux (22nd overall)
· 2007: James van Riemsdyk (2nd overall)
· 2008: Luca Sbisa (19th overall)
· 2011: Sean Couturier (8th overall)
· 2012: Scott Laughton (20th overall)
· 2013: Samuel Morin (11th overall)
· 2014: Travis Sanheim (17th overall)
· 2015: Ivan Provorov (7th overall) & Travis Konecny
            (24th overall)
· 2016: German Rubtsov (22nd overall)
· 2017: Nolan Patrick (2nd overall) & Morgan Frost
            (27th overall)
· 2018: Joel Farabee (14th overall) & Jay O'Brien
            (19th overall)
· 2019: Cam York (14th overall)
· 2020: Tyson Foerster (23rd overall)
· 2022: Cutter Gauthier (5th overall)
· 2023: Matvei Michkov (7th overall) & Oliver Bonk
            (22nd overall).

Friday, March 29, 2024

Colubus Blue Jackets

https://www.amazon.com/Columbus-Jackets-National-Sticker-Scrapbook/dp/B09KM5LQMC

The Columbus Blue Jackets (often referred to as the Jackets) are a professional hockey team based in Columbus, Ohio, and they compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Metropolitan Division of the Eastern Conference and began play as an expansion team in 2000.

The Blue Jackets struggled in their initial years, failing to win 30 games in a season until 2005 – 2006.  The team qualified for the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time in 2009 but was swept by the Detroit Red Wings.  Columbus ultimately notched their first playoff game victory in the 2014 playoffs and won their first playoff series in the 2019 playoffs against the Tampa Bay Lightning, becoming the first team in NHL history to sweep a Presidents’ Trophy winner in the first round.  Along with the Seattle Kraken, the Blue Jackets are one of only two teams in the league who have yet to appear in the conference finals.

The Blue Jackets name and logos are inspired by Ohio’s Civil War History.  The Blue Jackets play their home games at Nationwide Arena in downtown Columbus, which opened in 2000.  They are affiliated with the Cleveland Monsters of the American Hockey League (AHL).

Before the establishment of the Blue Jackets, the last NHL team in the state of Ohio was the Cleveland Barons, who played from 1976 to 1978.  In Columbus, the Blue Jackets replaced the Columbus Chill of the East Coast Hockey League (ECHL), who played in the city from 1991 to 1999.  The Chill played at the Ohio Expo Center Coliseum, where they set a minor league hockey record by selling out 83 consecutive games.

In November 1996, five investors formed a partnership called Columbus Hockey Limited, which then submitted an application and a $100,000 fee to the NHL office.( http://bluejackets.nhl.com/club/page.htm?id=48071)  The voters of Columbus were considering a referendum to build a publicly financed arena, a major step toward approval of their NHL bid. (https://archive.today/20081205174510/http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/VA-news/VA-Pilot/issues/1997/vp970114/01140201.htm)  When League Commissioner Gary Bettman visited Columbus to meet with the community’s leaders about the franchise proposal, there was concern that the voters might not pass the needed referendum.  The civic leaders told Bettman that they would not be willing to foot the bill for the team if the referendum failed.  However, just after the meeting adjourned, John H. McConnell (one of those who entered the bid) privately guaranteed Bettman that an area would be built, referendum or not. (https://www.usatoday.com/sports/hockey/2008-05-07-2296661618_x.htm)

Columbus’ hopes for the bid dimmed when the May referendum failed.  However, Nationwide (Insurance company) announced on May 31, 1997, that it would finance the $150-million arena.  Subsequently, on June 25, 1997, the NHL announced that Columbus would receive a new franchise.  Afterward, a “Name the Team” contest was held with the help of Wendy’s throughout central Ohio during August of 1997.  The franchise received 14,000 entries and, with help from the NHL, narrowed the list down to 10 names.  Then, with the information received from owner McConnell regarding Columbus’ history, the league and the franchise narrowed the list of potential names down to two – Blue Jackets and Justice.  The former, which referenced Ohio’s contributions to the American Civil War, was eventually announced as the team name in November.(https://web.archive.org/web/20150223041742/http://bluejackets.nhl.com/club/news.htm?id=479316)

On June 23, 2000, the NHL’s two newest teams, the Blue Jackets and the Minnesota Wild, took part in the 2000 NHL Expansion Draft in Calgary, Alberta.  Under the draft’s rules, 26 of the NHL’s active 28 teams were allowed to protect one goaltender, five defensemen, and nine forwards, or two goaltenders, three defensemen, and seven forwards.  The Atlanta Thrashers and Nashville Predators both had their full rosters protected because they were the two newest teams, only being in existence for one and two years, respectively.  Both the Blue Jackets and Wild had to use their first 24 selections on three goaltenders, eight defensemen, and thirteen forwards.  Their final two picks could be players of any position.

With the first overall choice, the Blue Jackets selected goaltender Rick Tabaracci from the Colorado Avalanche.  Throughout the draft, Columbus picked up goaltender Dwyane Roloson, defensemen Lyle Odelein and Mathieu Schneider, and forwards Geoff Sanderson, Turner Stevenson, and Dallas Drake, among others.  Instead of joining Columbus, Roloson signed with the American Hockey League’s Worchester IceCats, Schnieder left of the Los Angeles Kings, and the St. Louis Blues signed Drake.  Columbus also traded Stevenson to the New Jersey Devils to complete an earlier transaction.

 Logos and Jerseys


Photo Credit (https://www.pinterest.com/pin/297870962860508555/)

 The team logo is a stylized version of the flag of Ohio, which is a burgee (i.e., swallowtail pennant), in the form of a “C” wrapped around a star, representing both patriotism and Columbus’s status as the state capital.  (https://web.archive.org/web/20150223041742/http://bluejackets.nhl.com/club/news.htm?id=479316).  Previously used as an alternate logo starting in 2003, it became the primary logo as part of a Reebok-sponsored redesign for the 2007—2008 season.  The original logo had a red ribbon with 13 stars representing the Thirteen Colonies, unfurled in the shape of the team’s initials, CBJ, with an electric gold hockey stick cutting through the center to represent the “J.”  An additional star atop the stick represented Columbus’s status as state capital.  From 2003 to 2015, the team’s jerseys featured an alternate logo, a Civil War cap with crossed hockey sticks, on the shoulders.


Photo Credit (https://www.pinterest.com/pin/666673551067142035/)

Since their inception, the Blue Jackets have worn navy and white jerseys with red pants.  The jerseys have been tweaked several times over the years, mainly in the crest and striping treatment.

The Blue Jackets unveiled a new third jersey in the 2010—2011 season, using a vintage hockey jersey design.  In the spirit of its Civil War theme, it sports a Union blue base with white stripes on the sleeves and on the shoulder padding.  The crest features the team’s Civil War-era cannon.  It honors the team’s founder John H. McConnell, with his initials on the neckline, as well as its slogan “We fight, we march!” on the inside of the collar.  During the 2015 NHL Draft, it was revealed that the cannon crest had replaced the hat logo on the shoulders of the home and away jerseys, with a color change to match the jersey’s color scheme.

Photo credit: https://www.reddit.com/r/hockeyjerseys/comments/kbcdx9/heres_my_complete_columbus_blue_jackets_jersey/                                             

Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Ted Williams


The original article was written by Bill Nowlin
Any argument as to the greatest hitter of all time always involves Ted Williams. It’s an argument that can never be definitively answered, but that it always involves Williams says a lot. One could probably count the legitimate contenders on the fingers of one hand. Most would narrow the field to just two players, Babe Ruth being the other. One could make a case for Lou Gehrig and a very small handful of others. Ted himself, ranked Ruth, Gehrig, Jimmie Foxx, Rogers Hornsby, and Joe DiMaggio as the top five (he elected not to include himself in any such ranking).[1]

If the name of the game is getting on base, no one ranks above Williams.  His lifetime on-base percentage was .482, and think what that means.  He reached base safely 48.2% of the time he came up to bat – almost half the time.  Ruth comes in second, at .474.  One of the reasons Williams ranked first was his self-discipline; he refused to swing at pitches outside the strike zone.  In time, he developed such a reputation that more than one catcher complaining about a pitch being called a ball was told by the umpire, “If Mr. Williams didn’t swing at it, it wasn’t a strike.”  But The Kid had the strike zone down cold from the first.  Even in 1939, his rookie year, Ted walked 107 times, ranking second in the American League (he led the league that first year in total bases – by a big margin).  Across his entire career, which touched four decades (1939-1960).  Williams had a walk percentage of 20.75.  More than one out of every five times, he took a walk.

Even with a pitch in the strike zone, he wouldn’t take a cut at it unless he felt it was a pitch he could drive.  “Get a good pitch to hit” – the philosophy imparted to Ted in Minneapolis by hitting instructor Rogers Hornsby meant more than just a pitch in the strike zone.  If the pitcher dropped in a good curveball low and away (which he knew was the most vulnerable spot in the zone), he would figuratively tip his cap, take the strike, and wait for a better pitch.  Unless there were two strikes on him, he would take his chances that there was a better pitch coming.

Ted had strong opinions about what made for a great hitter, and it involved hitting for a combination of average and power.  Had he been willing to sacrifice power for batting average, one suspects, he could have ranked right at the top instead of just fifth among “modern era: (post-1901) players.  Had he been willing to sacrifice average and just swing for the fences, he would have hit more than 521 home runs.  As a young man, he knew what he wanted.  At age 20, he said, “All I want out of life is that when I walk down the street folks will say, ‘There goes the greatest hitter that ever lived,’”[2]  In a conversation late in life, when someone asked whether he thought he’d accomplished that, he simply said he didn’t know but that it was a great honor just to hear his name in the same sentence as a Ruth or Gehrig.

Becoming a great hitter was a goal Ted set for himself at a very early age.  Born in San Diego on August 30, 1918, he was the first-born son of professional photographer (and former U.S. cavalryman) Samuel Williams and his wife, a Mexican-American who dedicated her life to Salvation Army work, May Venzor Williams.  For a detailed look at the aspect of Ted Williams’ life, see Bill Nowlin, Ted Williams: First Latino in the Baseball Hall of Fame (Burlington, Massachusetts; Rounder Books, 2018.)  it wasn’t the happiest of marriages and both parents were frequently out of the home, often leaving Ted and his brother Danny (two years younger), to fend from themselves.  Fortunately, neighbors welcomed Ted in, but he spent endless hours playing ball on the North Park Playground in the Southern California city where the climate allowed one to play pickup ball all year round.  A dedicated playground director, Rod Luscomb, saw Ted’s drive and took him under his wing.  By the time Ted reached high school, he was an exceptional player who attracted the attention and support of coach Wofford “Wos” Caldwell.[3]

It was his bat that first caught coach Caldwell’s eye, but Ted excelled as a pitcher for the Hoover High Cardinals.  He often struck out a dozen or more batters in a game, but he hit well, too, and found a place in the lineup for every game.  Even while still a high school player, Ted signed his first professional contract – with the locally based San Diego Padres of the Pacific Coast League.  With the Padres, Ted got his feet wet in 1936, hitting a modest .271 but without even one home run in the regular season.  Ted completed high school and then played for the Padres again in 1937, upping his average to .291 and showing some power with 23 homers.  Boston Red Sox general manager Eddie Collins had spotted Ted while looking over a couple of Padres players and shook hands with owner Bill Lane on an option to sign the young player, which he exercised in time for Ted to go to the big-league training camp in Florida in the spring of 1938.

Williams was a brash and cocky young kid who was deemed to need a full year in the minors and he was assigned to the Minneapolis Millers, where he proceeded to win the American Association Triple Crown with a .366 average, 43 home runs, and 142 RBIs.  There was no question that he would be with the Red Sox in 1939, and the buildup in Boston’s newspapers was unprecedented.  The Kid was all that had been promised, and then some.  Playing right field, he hit 31 home runs and batted .327.  Not only did he lead the league in extra-base hits and total bases, he also led the league in runs batted in, in his rookie year with 145, setting a major-league rookie record that has never been beaten.  His fresh and evident love of the game won the hearts of many Boston fans.

The following year, 1940, Williams switched permanently to left field and improved his average to .344, though he dipped a bit in home runs (23) and RBIs (113).  He placed first in both on-base percentage and runs scored.  It was the first of 12 seasons that he led the league in on-base percentage; remarkably, he led in OBP every year through 1958 in which he was eligible.  From his very first trip across the country to spring training in 1938, Ted became known for his relentless questioning of other players about situational baseball – what was Ted Lyons’ “out pitch” to a left-handed hitter late in the game with runners on base?  What would Bobo Newsom start you out on first time up?  Williams seemed to live and breathe baseball and it rang true when he later acquired the nickname “Teddy Ballgame.”

Maybe he seemed just too good to be true.  After a brief honeymoon with the press in the highly competitive newspaper town that was Boston, the critical stories began to come out.  Taking on Ted sold newspapers, and writers like Dave Egan and Austen Lake could get under Ted’s skin, sometimes provoking a story where none had existed before.  He was easy to mock, taking imaginary swings out in the field and letting a fly ball drop in.  in was so cocksure that he turned off some of the crusting ink-stained wretches, and a little sanctimonious – declining an interview with one of the deans of the press corps, columnist Bill Cunningham, because the writer had been drinking.[4]  Some of the writers had it in for Ted, and let him have it.  There commenced a feud with the writers that lasted Ted’s whole career, and beyond.  He enjoyed barring the scribes from the Boston clubhouse, sniffing the air distastefully as one walked by, and more than once spit toward the press box in contempt.  He earned some other monikers – “Terrible Ted” and the “Splendid Spitter” – the latter being a reference to his widely-known nickname as a lanky, gangly kid – The Splendid Splinter.

Some fans enjoyed effing Ted on, too, and during this second season, he turned against the fickle fans.  He later admitted he had “rabbit’s ears” and could hear the one loud detractor over the hundreds of cheering fans, and he let it get to him.   He admitted he was “never very coy, never very diplomatic.   As a result, I would get myself in a wringer. …I was impetuous, I was tempestuous.  I blew up.  Not acting, but reacting.  I’d be so damned mad, throw bats, kick the columns in the dugout so that sparks flew, team out the plumbing, knock out the light and damn near kill myself.  Scream, I’d scream out my frustration.”[5]  He just could not abide the fair-weather fans who’d be for him one day and against him the next.  One thing he determined never to do was tip his cap to the fans; even though there were days that he truly wanted to he just couldn’t bring himself to do so.  He was a complicated man and yet, despite all the tumult and turmoil, he never showed up as an umpire by arguing a call and never once got tossed from a game.   And, though he preferred to keep to himself, he got along fine with other ballplayers, both on his own team and on opposing teams.

It was in 1941 that The Kid had a season for the ages – batting .406 despite the sacrifice fly counting against the hitter’s average.  Few players had achieved the .400 mark, and no one has done so since.  Ted also set a single-season on-base percentage mark (.553) that was never topped in the 20th century.  (Barry Bonds now holds the highest mark.)  Williams led the American League in runs and home runs.  Two months after the season ended, Japanese warplanes attacked Pearl Harbor.

As the sole supporter of his mother (his parents had divorced), Ted was exempt but that didn’t prevent some from questioning his courage when he chose to play baseball (and pay off an annuity he’d purchased for his mother) in 1942.  He had already achieved national stature as a star baseball player at a time when baseball was unrivaled by any other sport.  This made him a convenient target for criticism, but servicemen attending ball games cheered for Williams.  Once he’d made his point, he signed up in the Navy’s V-5 program to begin training as a naval aviator when the season was over.  In his fourth year of the major-league ball, Ted hit for the Triple Crown in the major leagues, leading both leagues, as it happened, in average (.356, down a full 50 points from the prior year), home runs (36) and RBIs (137).  And then it was off to serve.  For the second year in a row, Williams came in second in MVP voting.

Ted Williams spent three prime years training and becoming a Navy (and then Marine Corps) pilot – and becoming so good at flight and gunnery that he was made an instructor and served the war training other pilots.  The day he received his commission, he married Doris Soule – the first of three marriages.  He kept active to some extent, playing a little baseball on base teams but only as time permitted given his primary duties.  Lt. T.S. Williams ended his stretch at Pearl Harbor and never saw combat.[6]

After the war, Ted returned to the Red Sox and received his first MVP award from the baseball writers, helping lead Boston into its first World Series since 1918.  He led the league in OBP, total bases, and runs, but an injury to his elbow while playing in an exhibition game to keep loose for the upcoming Series hampered his ability to compete effectively in the fall classic.  Boston lost to the Cardinals in seven games, and Ted’s weak hitting helped cost them the championship.

In 1947, Ted had his second Triple Crown year, leading the A.L. with .343, 32, and 114.  The Red Sox didn’t come close to the Yankees that year, and in each of the next two years, they lost the pennant on the final day of the season.  Williams led the league in both average and slugging both seasons, among other categories.  In 1949, he earned his second Most Valuable Player award – and only missed an unprecedented third Triple Crown by the narrowest of margins.  He led in homers and RBIs, but George Kell edged him by one ten-thousandth of a point in batting average.

The year 1950 might have been on tap to become his best ever – he already had hit 25 homers and driven in 83 runs when he shattered his elbow crashing into the wall during the All-Star Game.  He missed most of the rest of the season, and said he never fully recovered as a hitter – though one would hardly know it to look at the stats he posted.  In 1951, he led the league once more in OBP and slugging.

Come 1952, as the war in Korea mounted, the Marines recalled a number of pilots to active duty.  Among them was the less-than-pleased T.S. Williams, now a captain in the Reserve.  He was to turn 34 that August, and Doris and he had a young daughter, Barbara Joyce (Bobby-Jo.)  When it was clear there was no choice but to comply, Ted determined to do his best.  He requested training on jets and was ultimately assigned to Marine Corps squadron VMF-311 which flew dive bombing missions out of base K-3 in South Korea.  Capt. Williams flew some 39 combat missions, though he barely escaped with his life on the third one when his Panther jet was hit and had to crash-land.  The plane burned to an irretrievable crisp but Williams was up on another mission at 8:08 the next morning.  It truly was an elite squadron to which Williams was assigned; on more than half a dozen missions, Williams served as wingman to squadron mate John Glenn.

A series of ear infections consigned him to sick bay for two stretches and when it was obvious the war would be over in a matter of weeks, Williams was sent back Stateside and mustered out – in time to be an honored guest at the 1953 All-Star Game.  He threw himself into preparation to play and go in 91 at-bats before the season was over – batting .407 in the process.

Ted broke his collarbone in spring training in 1954 and missed so many games at the start of the season that come season’s end, he fell 14 at-bats short of having the requisite 400 to qualify for the batting crown he would have otherwise won with his .345 average.  Ted appeared in only 117 games but still drew enough walks to lead the league (136).  The walks hurt him, though, since the batting title was based on “official” at-bats alone, this seemed too unfair that the criteria were changed in later years to be based on plate appearances.  After the 1954 season, he “retired” (the term is placed in quotation marks because it seemed as though retirement was a strategic move in a divorce_ and did not make the start in the 1955 season until May 28.  He completed the year with 320 at-bats but hadn’t lost his touch as indicated by his .356 average and 83 RBIs in the two-thirds of a season he played.  In 1956, he had what by Williams's standards seemed like a pedestrian, even somewhat lackluster year, accumulating an even 400 at-bats with 24 homers, but still hit at a .345 clip.  A.L. pitchers were no fools; he drew over 100 walks and led the league in on-base percentage.

The year 1957 is what was arguably the year in which Ted Williams proved what a great hitter he truly was.  No longer the Kid who turned 23 while hitting .406 back in 1941, Ted entered his 40th year in that season.  He might have been “splendid” but he was no splinter.  He’d filled out his physique, gone through war and divorce, and suffered broken bones and pneumonia.  Despite all the accumulated adversity.  Ted hit .388 (just six more hits would have given him .400 again, hits that a younger man might have legged out) and led the league by 23 points over Mickey Mantle.  His .526 OBP was the second-highest of his career and so was his .731 slugging average.  So, too, were the 38 home runs he hit.  It was truly a golden year.

His final three seasons saw a decline, though batting .328 as he did in 1958 would for almost any other player be spectacular.  In fact, it was enough to win Ted the batting championship even if it was some 16 points below his ultimate .344 lifetime average.  The batting title was his seventh, not counting 1954 as per the rules of the day.  1959 was his one really bad year; he developed a very troublesome stiff neck during spring training that saw him wear a neck brace and have a very difficult time trying to overcome it.  He never truly got on track and batted a disappointing .254 with only 10 homers and 43 RBIs in 272 at-bats.  It was sentiment alone that placed him on the All-Star squad, on of 18 times he was accorded the honor.  Everyone expected him to retire; even Red Sox owner Tom Yawkey, with whom Williams had a good if distant relationship, suggested it might be time.

Ted Williams didn’t want to leave with a season like 1959 wrapping up his career.  He came back for a swan song season but insisted that he be given a 30 percent pay cut because of his underperformance in 1959.  He felt he hadn’t earned the money he was being paid at the time – as it had been for many years – just about the highest salary in all of baseball, understood to be around $125,000.  Williams had hard work in 1960 but he produced, batting .316 with 29 home runs – the last of which was hit in what had been announced as his very last at-bat in the major leagues.

In his latter years, Williams had played for a Red Sox team that offered him little support in the lineup, had not much in the way of pitching, and didn’t draw many fans.  Even Ted’s final home game drew just over 10,000 fans to Fenway Park.  How much better he would have done had he played in a part with a friendlier right field, like Tiger Stadium or Yankee Stadium, remains unknowable.  How much better he might have done had he a Lou Gehrig hitting behind him in the lineup, or he had not missed five seasons of military service, remains unknowable.

Leaving on such a high note, Williams couldn’t resist a final shot at the Boston press corps with whom he had so frequently feuded since his second year with the Red Sox.  The “knights of the keyboard” wouldn’t have Williams to kick around anymore.  And Ted Williams left town, though instead of any farewell dinners he quietly, and without publicity, stopped to pay a visit to a dying child stricken with leukemia.  Teddy Ballgame, as he was known, had been the leading spokesman for Boston’s “Jimmy Fund” for many years.  Ted had appeared on behalf of Dr. Sidney Farber’s children’s cancer research efforts since the late 1940s, in fact before Dr. Farber (the “father of chemotherapy”) first achieved remission in leukemia.  Today, over 85 percent of children with leukemia are cured.

save for appearances for the Jimmy Fund, Ted took time off and spent the next several years catching up on his fishing while bringing in some endorsement income through a long association with Sears Roebuck, which produced an extensive line of Ted Williams brand sporting equipment – all of which Ted insisted on testing personally, right down the tents and sleeping bags that would bear his name.  Ted married a second time, to Lee Howard of Chicago in September 1961.  It was a short-lived marriage, perhaps in part because Ted had already met the woman who was perhaps his soulmate in life, Louise Kaufman.  Though they never married, she loved Ted through both his second and third marriages (the third, to Dolores Wettach, occurred in 1968, when she was apparently pregnant with the son who became John-Henry Williams.)  Dolores and Ted later had a daughter, Claudia Franc Williams, born shortly after Ted and Dolores separated a few years into the marriage.  Always in the background was Lou Kaufman, who – though six years older than Ted – was a fishing champion in her own right and apparently had enough salt to spar with Ted with the sort of banter he liked to dish out.  There were other women, of course.  In many ways, Ted Williams was a “man’s man” and perhaps didn’t have the patience for a relationship.  Visiting one afternoon in the late 1990s at Ted’s house in Florida, this author was presented with a blunt, candid, and unanswerable remark when – out of the blue – Ted declared, “Yeah, I guess I was a great hitter, but I was a lousy husband and a crummy father.”

After the requisite five years following his playing career, Ted Williams was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility.  When he was inducted in the summer of 1966, Williams wrote out his speech by hand the evening before (the original is in the Hall of Fame) and after thanking those who helped him on his way, he devoted part of the core of his speech to an impassioned plea that the Hall of Fame recognize the many Negro League ballplayers who had not been allowed to play in the segregated leagues before 1947,

He wrote in his autobiography My Turn At Bat (published in 1969) of his Mexican-American mother, “If I had had my mother’s name, there is no doubt that I would have run into problems in those days, the prejudices people had in Southern California.”  One can speculate that his own awareness of prejudice may have informed his remarks at the Hall of Fame.  The first African American in the American League, Larry Doby, says that Williams went out of his way to make him feel welcome – not grandstanding but with the simplest of private gestures on the field.  When the Red Sox finally integrated by adding Pumpsie Green to the big-league roster in 1959, Ted chose Pumpsie as his throwing partner before games.

In the same year as his remarkably self-revealing autobiography was published, Williams became manager of Bob Short’s Washington Senators ball club.  The team showed a fairly dramatic improvement in team batting his very first year and, while on safari in Africa, Ted received word that he had been named Manager of the Year.  It was good timing for Ted’s second book (written as had been the first with author John Underwood) – The Science of Hitting.  The book demonstrated the Ted Williams approach to the game and, as with My Turn At Bat, has remained in print ever since – no small feat in the world of books.  Even in the 21st century, The Sciences of Hitting is often the book of choice for aspiring batters.

Ted had signed on as manager for five years, but he lost interest after the Senators failed to further improve (and some of the ballplayers chafed under his regime to the point of near-insubordination).[7]  Ted traveled to Texas with the franchise and served as the first manager of the Texas Rangers in 1972 but he begged out of the fifth and final year of the deal.

Throughout his years as a player and as a manager, he was always a colorful “larger than life” figure with a booming voice and a presence that defined charisma.  He was often a lightning rod of sorts, loved or hated by fans, and a reliable source of controversial copy for sportswriters and reporters.  He was loud and boisterous, but as he admitted in his autobiography, he was “never very diplomatic…I did a lot of yakking, partly to hide a rather large inferiority complex.”[8]

After leaving full-time employment in baseball for good, Ted served for years and years as a “special assignment instructor” with the Boston Red Sox.  Typically, this meant he would show up at spring training for a few weeks and look over the younger hitters, occasionally taking a player aside later in the year as well.  When Carl Yastrzemski was struggling in his first year of trying to fill Ted’s shoes as Boston’s left fielder, the team flew Williams in from where he was fishing in Canada and he spent a few days working with Yaz.  Yastrzemski says, “He really didn’t say anything; he was just trying to build me up mentally.  He says, “You’ve got a great swing – just go out and use it.”  Yastrzemski realized he was trying too hard to emulate Williams as a home run hitter, but Ted helped him settle down and helped him become himself.  Over time, Yaz says, “I think the big thing that I learned from him, which he talked about, was the strike zone, strike zone, strike zone. [9]

For many years, Ted lived in a small but comfortable cabin on New Brunswick’s Miramichi River where he was able to fish for his beloved Atlantic salmon, a fish he so admired that he became a leader in the fight to preserve the species from overfishing and other encroachments on its habitat.  An annual “Ted Williams Award” is presented to others who have joined the cause.  Ted enjoyed the companionship of Lou Kaufman in his later years.

Ted Williams was active on the Hall of Fame’s Veterans Committee (and sometimes criticized for being too vocal an advocate for players he championed such as Phil Rizzuto and Dominic DiMaggio).  As he grew older, many of the hard attitudes toward Ted softened and, in the words of Doris Kearns Goodwin, “It seemed like his stature…his stature was always there – I don’t think anyone ever disputed how great he was – but the kind of emotions he generated in the fans got stronger as time went by rather than weaker, which is really nice.  I’m glad he’s lived to see all that.  It seems to have mellowed and made him a happier person, too.”[10]

He always engendered strong opinions and harbored many of his own.  This was a man of many interests and an intellectual curiosity perhaps surprising in a ballplayer, a man whom his Marine Corps instructor could conceive of as a Shakespearean scholar and whom Tommy Henrich of the New York Yankees could envision as a brain surgeon or nuclear scientist.[11]  Biographer David Halberstam once said that Ted “won 33,277 arguments in a row…the undisputed champion of contentiousness” – but then went on to write a book about the friendship between Ted, Bobby Doerr, Dominic DiMaggio, and Johnny Pesky that endured for six decades.[12]

For the last several years of his life, Ted became active in the memorabilia market, attracting very large sums to appear for occasional signings at industry shows.  Some took advantage of his natural generosity and in one case Ted pursued a man who defrauded him, the case becoming an episode on the America’s Most Wanted television show.  Ted’s son, John-Henry Williams, took over management of the marketing of his father with mixed success.  Many criticized John Henry for being too zealous on his father’s behalf and for some of his business schemes, but there was no doubt that Ted very much loved his son and was prepared to turn a blind eye to any faults.  Ted suffered a stroke and a subsequent heart operation sapped his health, and he entered a period of decline that ended with his passing on July 5, 2002.  In death, as in life, controversy swirled around Ted Williams as two of his three children had his body cryonically frozen for the possibility of some later revival if science someday learns a way to restore life to those who have been so preserved.  Many of Ted’s closest friends were aghast but efforts by his eldest daughter to reverse the decision were in vain.  An outpouring of more than 20,000 people attended a memorial at Boston’s Fenway Park later in July 2002 and the memory of the man they called The Kid lives on.

This biography was published in “1972 Texas Rangers: The Team that Couldn’t Hit” (SABR, 2019), edited by Steve West and Bill Nowlin.

Notes

1.     See Williams’ ranking, and his system, in Ted
        Williams and Jim Prime, Ted Williams’ Hit
        List (Indianapolis: Masters Press, 1996),
        reissued by McGraw-Hill, 2003.

2.     One place where he made a similar statement
        is in his autobiography, written with John
        Underwood. See My Turn At Bat (New York:
        Firestone, 1988), 7.

3.     In 2005, nine members of the Society for
        American Baseball Researchers collaborated
        to tell the story of Ted Williams’ family and
        life growing up in San Diego. See Bill Nowlin,
        ed., The Kid: Ted Williams in San Diego
        (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Rounder Books,
        2005).

4.     See Jim Prime and Bill Nowlin, Ted
        Williams: The Pursuit of Perfection
        (Champaign: Sports
        Publishing, 2002), 57.

5.     My Turn At Bat, 11.

6.     The story of Williams’ military years, both in
         World War II. and the Korean War is told in
         Bill Nowlin, Ted Williams at War
         (Burlington, Massachusetts: Rounder
         Books), 2007.

7.     For a look at the start of his time with the
        Senators, see Ted Leavengood, Ted
        Williams, and the 1969 Washington Senators
        (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland, 2009).

8.     My Turn At Bat, 13.

9.     Author interview with Carl Yastrzemski,
        August 31, 1977.

10.   Author interview with Doris Kearns Goodwin,
        May 3, 1997.

11.   Bill Churchman was the Marine Corps
        instructor in question. See his remarks in Ted
        Williams: The Pursuit of Perfection, 81, and
        those of Tommy Henrich in the same volume
        on page 103.

12.   David Halberstam, The Teammates (New York:
        Hyperion, 2003). The best biographies of Ted
        Williams are Ed Linn, Hitter: The Life and
        Turmoils of Ted Williams (New York: Harcourt,
        Brace, 1993), Leigh Montville Ted Williams: A
        Biography of An American Hero (New York:
        Doubleday, 2004), and Ben Bradlee, Jr., The
        Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams (New
        York: Little, Brown, 2013).

Full Name:  Theodore Samuel Williams

Born:  August 30, 1918 San Diego, CA (USA)

Died:  July 5, 2002 at Inverness, FL (USA).