Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Hail to the champs

The Phillies recently made history by losing their 10,000th game as a franchise. But they do have one World Series victory to their credit, and here's a rundown of the men who made it possible (please scroll down):









































































































The 1980 Phillies: World Champions



Bob Boone, C. When Boone retired in 1990 at age 42, he had caught 2,225 games, more than anyone in history to that point. (The White Sox let Carlton Fisk hang on until he broke the record by one, then they released him.) Boone had a decent bat and was steady behind the plate, although at one point Steve Carlton opted for Tim McCarver as his personal catcher. In '80, Boone hit only .229 following four straight .280-plus seasons, and the Phillies shipped him off to California after a .211 showing in '81. That seemed like kind of a sad ending in Philadelphia for a three-time All-Star.




Larry Bowa, SS. Early in his career, Bowa was regarded as a light hitter whose glove kept him in the lineup. Then he started hiking up his average, and the Phillies started posting winning records. The five-time All-Star left Philadelphia after the 1981 season in what may have been one of the worst trades in history: He and an unproven Ryne Sandberg went to the Cubs for Ivan DeJesus, who was coming off .194 season. Ouch. As for Bowa, he returned to manage the Phillies in 2001 but was shown the door after four seasons after failing to lead them to the postseason.




Warren Brusstar, RP. The Phillies always seemed to have a decent bullpen during the mid-'70s through mid-'80s, and Brusstar is a prime example of a pitcher who turned in a couple of decent seasons. As a rookie in 1977, the righthander endeared himself to Philadelphia fans with a 7-2 record and 2.33 ERA; he followed that in '78 with 6-3, 2.33. Unfortunately, he was belted around quite a bit in '79 and pitched for the Phillies only part of the World Championship season, going 2-2 with a 3.72 ERA. The Phils sold him to the White Sox in the middle of the '82 season.




Marty Bystrom, SP. One of the main reasons the Phillies won the NL East title in 1980 was the pitching of Bystrom, a 21-year-old September callup who was pitching for the first time in the majors. He pitched a five-hit shutout in his first start, then won each of his next four starts, compiling a 1.50 ERA. Unfortunately, his early promise fizzled in subsequent years, and the Phillies ended up trading him to the Yankees for Shane Rawley in mid-1984. Following his 5-0 start, his career record in Philadelphia was just 19-22, and he pitched just 15 games with New York before his major-career ended at age 26.




Steve Carlton, SP. Phillies fans didn't know what to make when the team traded its best hurler, Rick Wise, to St. Louis for Carlton just before the belated start of the 1972 season. Carlton, who'd won 20 with the Cardinals, proceeded to turn in perhaps the most amazing season ever by a pitcher, going 27-10 for a squad that won just 59 games. The rest was history: a then-record four Cy Young Awards for the Phils, including 1980, when he won 24 games and became the last pitcher in major-league history to work more than 300 innings, although on one knew that at the time. With 329 career victories, he was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1994.




Larry Christenson, SP. Oh, what might have been … Christenson broke into the majors with a bang, winning a 7-1 complete game over the Mets in April 1973 as a 19-year-old. He wowed Phillies fans, but that proved to be his only win of the year. He recovered to post four straight double-digit-win seasons starting in 1975, with a high of 19 in '77. Prior to the 1979 season, he broke his collarbone in a charity bicycling event, and he never again was an effective pitcher. He went 5-1 in 1980 and earned himself postseason starts, but against the Royals in the Series, he gave up four runs while getting just one out. The Phillies hung onto him until more injuries ended his career in '83.




Mark Davis, P. The Phillies' first pick in the 1979 amateur draft, Davis debuted in the majors in September '80, about a month before his 20th birthday. He pitched two shutout innings of relief in his first appearance, then made his first career start on the last day of the season, giving up two runs in five innings in an eventual loss to Montreal. Davis was hit hard when the Phils called him up in the summer of '81, and they traded him to the Giants in the deal that brought Joe Morgan to Philadelphia. Later, as a reliever for the Padres, Davis won himself a Cy Young Award and a lucrative free-agent contract with Kansas City, which saw extremely little return on its investment.




Nino Espinosa, SP. The Phillies made an effort to bolster their starting rotation in 1979 by acquiring Espinosa from the Mets for an aging Richie Hebner, and Nino responded by winning 14 games. Injuries kept him off the field, though, in the first half of 1980, and he won only three games, his best start being a complete-game five-hitter against his former team. The Phillies left him off the postseason roster, and despite a decent start the following season, his ERA eventually ballooned to 6.11. Philadelphia released him, and he appeared in one more game with Toronto before his career ended. He died of a heart attack in 1987 at age 34.




Greg Gross, OF. In a full decade with the Phillies, Gross hit exactly one home run: on May 27, 1987, off the Padres' Lance McCullers. But he still was a fan favorite, hailing from nearby York, Pa. Plus, even if he wasn't hitting the ball over the fence, he was putting it in play; his lifetime batting average is .287. Gross helped the Phillies in their '80 playoff victory over Houston, with three hits in four at bats, including an RBI single that provided a cushion in Philadelphia's 3-1 win in the opener. Coincidentally, Gross started his career with the Astros, finishing second to future Phillies teammate Bake McBride in the 1974 NL Rookie of the Year vote.




Randy Lerch, SP. When the left-handed Lerch broke in with the Phillies, many fans confused him with Barry Lersch, who had spent five less-than-successful seasons in Philadelphia. Lerch (without the "s") fared a little bit better, winning 10 games twice and 11 games once from 1977-79. In '80, though, he turned in perhaps the poorest performance ever for a member of a starting rotation on a World Series winner: 4-14, 5.16 ERA. Manager Dallas Green finally took him out of the rotation in August, and Lerch was left off the postseason roster. He was shipped to Milwaukee prior to the '81 season for journeyman outfielder Dick Davis.




Greg Luzinski, OF. For about half a decade, Luzinski and Mike Schmidt formed one of the most feared slugging tandems in baseball. Luzinski hit for average, too, turning in three straight .300-plus seasons. His apex came in 1977, when he set career highs with .309, 39 homers and 130 RBI, and was second to George Foster in the NL MVP vote. Just 26 at the time, Luzinski looked to be headed for a long, productive career. But his productivity started slipping, and by 1980 his batting average fell to .228. His swan song with the Phillies came in the World Series, when he failed to get a hit in nine at bats. He finished his career as designated hitter for the White Sox.




Garry Maddox, OF. An acknowledged master of patroling center field - his nickname was the Secretary of Defense - Maddox was rewarded with eight consecutive Rawlings Gold Glove awards. He was a fine hitter, too, peaking at .330 (and finishing fifth in the NL MVP vote) in 1976, the year after he came to Philadelphia in exchange for the popular Willie Montanez. Injuries started catching up with Maddox after he turned 30, and he retired a few weeks into the 1986 season, hanging around long enough to garner that year's Roberto Clemente Award, which honors players based on their values.




Bake McBride, OF. One of the most savvy deals made by Phillies general manager Paul Owens was acquiring Arnold Ray McBride on the day of the trading deadline in 1977, basically giving up pitcher Tom Underwood. Why the Cardinals gave up on McBride, then 28, seems to be a mystery: The 1974 NL Rookie of the Year had hit over .300 in each of his first three full seasons. He continued to hit well with the Phillies, posting a .339 average the rest of the way in '77 and batting .309 in '80. Following an injury-plagued '81, the Phillies decided to ship him to Cleveland. where he wrapped up his career with a lifetime average of .299.




Tim McCarver, C. Prior to 1980, only a handful of players had appeared in the major leagues in four different decades. McCarver, who debuted in 1959 at age 17, added his name to the list when he joined the Phillies' active roster in September '80. He appeared in half a dozen games and netted his final major-league hit, No. 1,501, in the final game of the season; his double drove in two runs. Interestingly, he entered the game pinch-running for Pete Rose, who is about six months older than McCarver. In his two stints with the Phillies, McCarver's best season was in 1977, when he hit .320 in part-time duty, including serving as Steve Carlton's personal catcher.




Tug McGraw, RP. When Frank Edwin McGraw Jr. died Jan. 5, 2004, baseball lost one of its most colorful personalities. Tug first made a name for himself as a brash youngster for the Mets on Aug. 26, 1965, when he jumped off the mound clicking his heels after beating a fellow lefty named Sandy Koufax. Eight years later, he led the Mets' unlikely charge to the World Series with the rallying cry of "Ya gotta believe!" The Mets were unimpressed with his 6-11 record in '74 and dealth him to Philadelphia, where he regained his status as a top relief pitcher. And of course, he recorded the final out in the Phillies' one and only Series victory.




Keith Moreland, C. By 1980, longtime Phillies catcher Bob Boone's batting average had tailed off significantly. In stepped rookie Moreland, who hit .314 as primarily a backstop, and he went 4-for-12 in the World Series. In 1981, Moreland saw even more action behind the plate, but his average fell nearly 60 points. After the season, Moreland was shipped to the Cubs in a package deal that brought starting pitcher Mike Krukow to Philadelphia. Chicago made Moreland a starting outfielder, and he responded with several strong seasons, including .307-14-106 in 1985, when he showed up among the players receiving MVP votes.




Dickie Noles, RP. In July 1979, the three-time defending NL East champion Phillies were sputtering, mired in fourth place and playing barely above .500. To bolster a starting rotation that was temporarily missing an injured Dick Ruthven, the Phils called up righthander Noles for his first trip to the majors. He responded somewhat impressively, compiling a 1.98 ERA in his first four starts, including seven innings of shutout ball vs. the Dodgers. But there were warning signs: He walked nine Giants despite winning his second start. Noles ended up 3-4 with a 3.80 ERA in 14 starts, but found himself in the bullpen the following year, contributing six saves.




Ron Reed, RP. Back in the days before every team had a one-inning closer, the bullpen duties were shifted around quite a bit among competent arms. From 1976 through '83, the Phillies had an exceptional righty-lefty relief tandem of Reed and Tug McGraw. Although McGraw usually led the team in saves, Reed notched double digits in four seasons, and in 1979 he won 13 games in relief. The following season, he went 7-5 with nine save to help the champions' cause. A forward for the NBA's Detroit Pistons in the mid-'60s, Reed possessed one of the biggest shoe sizes in baseball.




Pete Rose, 1B. When the Phillies signed Rose as a free agent in December 1978, he was one of the two most popular players in baseball, along with Reggie Jackson. Rose didn't disappoint, hitting over .300 in two of his first three seasons in Philadelphia, and some sources credit him with the '81 NL batting championship. Perhaps if the Phils would have made him player-manager after 1983, instead of releasing him, history would have worked out differently and the Hit King would have his plaque in Cooperstown. But of course, people do place bets in the City of Brotherly Love, too.




Dick Ruthven, SP. When the Phillies shipped Ruthven to the White Sox in a trade that brought Jim Kaat to town, fans generally liked the deal. From 1973-75, Ruthven had compiled a lackluster 17-24 record, with an ERA over 4. He ended up in Atlanta, where he didn't fare much better, so it came as a surprise when Philadelphia reacquired him at the deadline in '78, in exchange for popular reliever Gene Garber. Ruthven, though, was a different pitcher during the last half of the season, going 13-5 for the Phillies as a major contributor to the team's division championship. Following an injury-riddled '79s season, he won 17 games in '80 as the No. 2 starter behind Lefty Carlton.




Kevin Saucier, RP. Another fixture in the Phillies bullpen in 1980, Saucier went 7-4 in 40 games and added an inning and a third of scoreless ball during the postseason. A few weeks after the World Series, he started a whirlwind journey: The Phils sent him to Texas as the player to be named in the deal that brought Sparky Lyle to Philadelphia for the stretch drive. Three weeks later, the Rangers shipped Saucier to Detroit, where he excelled in '81, posting a 1.65 ERA and 13 saves. He pitched only one more year, though, leaving the game reportedly because of a fear of hitting and seriously injuring batters.




Mike Schmidt, 3B. By 1980, Schmidt had captured three home run titles, was named to four All-Star teams and won four Rawlings Gold Glove awards, but he wasn't anywhere near being acknowledged as the greatest third baseman in history. The perception started tilting in his favor in '80, when he hit 48 homers, then a record for third sackers, on his way to being voted the unanimous NL MVP, then the MVP in the World Series. Two more MVP awards followed, and by the time he retired, he had totaled 548 home runs, among the top 10 in the pre-steroid era. His Hall of Fame induction came in 1995, his first year of eligibility, of course.




Lonnie Smith, OF. Following a few cups of coffee with the Phillies in 1978 and '79, Smith played semi-regularly in 1980, often spelling the notoriously poor-fielding Greg Luzinski in left field. Smith provided an element of excitement by hitting .339 and stealing a team-leading 33 bases. The 24-year-old then hit .333 in the postseason. He followed up with a .324 mark in '81, including a 23-game hitting streak to conclude the season, but the Phillies decided to deal him away in a three-team trade that netted catcher Bo Diaz. Smith ended up in St. Louis, where he hit .307 and was second in the NL MVP balloting for the '82 World Series winners.




Manny Trillo, 2B. In 1974, the Phillies traded pitcher Ken Brett to Pittsburgh for second baseman Dave Cash, who provided the spark the team needed to start making runs for division titles. After Cash left as a free agent following '76, Philadelphia struggled to fill the void at the keystone sack, relying on the likes of Ted Sizemore, Bud Harrelson and Jim Morrison. Prior to the '79 season, the Phils pulled off an eight-player deal with the Cubs, including Trillo as part of the package. He was an integral part of the '80 championship, hitting .294 and winning the Sporting News Silver Slugger award at his position. Trillo was part of the five-for-one deal for Von Hayes in late '82.




Del Unser, OF. The Phillies first acquired the slick-fielding center fielder in late 1972. During two seasons, Unser established himself as a fan favorite, but he was dispatched to the Mets in the Tug McGraw deal. When Unser returned to the Phillies as a free agent in 1979, he was used primarily as a pinch-hitter and flourished in the role in '80; for example, his pinch-single in the 10th inning vs. the Mets on Sept. 24 set up the only run in a 1-0 victory that kept the Phils a half-game behind the Expos. Unser stayed in Philadelphia in 1981, getting only 9 hits in 59 at bats, and was released in June 1982 after starting the season 0-for-14.




Bob Walk, SP. He's the answer to one of my favorite baseball trivia questions: Who was the second pitcher to win a World Series game for the Phillies, after Grover Cleveland Alexander? Walk, a rookie, gave up six runs in the '80 Series opener, but Philadelplhia provided him with enough support for the victory. After a few shaky outings to begin his career, Walk improved to 9-2 by mid-August before leveling off at 11-7 in his only season in Philadelphia. He bounced from Atlanta to Pittsburgh, where he made the All-Star team in 1988, pitched a complete-game victory in the '92 playoffs and has worked as a Pirates announcer for 14 years.

No comments: