Sunday, June 7, 2026

June 7, 1966: The Mets Draft Steve Chilcott -- Instead of Reggie Jackson

June 7, 1966, 60 years ago: Major League Baseball holds its 2nd annual Amateur Draft. The top pick goes to the team that had the worst record the season before: The New York Mets.

They chose Steve Chilcott, a 17-year-old catcher from Antelope Valley High School in the Los Angeles suburb of Lancaster, California.

What happened to Steve Chilcott? A baserunning blunder wrecked his throwing shoulder. He never reached the major leagues, and he played his last professional game in 1972, only 24 years old. He moved to Santa Barbara, and became a firefighter and a contractor. In a 2005 interview, he said, "I've had a good life, although, at first, it was hard for me to find things to do, because I had such a desire to be a professional athlete. I had to find my place in the world."

With the 2nd pick, the Kansas City Athletics chose Reggie Jackson, an outfielder from Arizona State University.
There were other good picks in that draft. The Houston Astros chose pitcher Wayne Twitchell. The Boston Red Sox chose pitcher Ken Brett. The Washington Senators chose outfielder Tom Grieve. The Cleveland Indians chose pitcher John Curtis. The Cincinnati Reds chose pitcher Gary Nolan. The Pittsburgh Pirates chose shortstop (later 3rd baseman) Richie Hebner. The Chicago White Sox chose outfielder Carlos May.

That was just in the 1st Round. In the 2nd Round, the White Sox chose catcher Johnny Oates. In the 3rd Round, the St. Louis Cardinals chose pitcher Clay Kirby, and the Minnesota Twins chose 3rd baseman Steve Garvey. (He didn't sign with them. Two years later, the Los Angeles Dodgers drafted him as a 1st baseman, and he signed with them.)

In the 5th Round, the Astros chose catcher Cliff Johnson, and the Pirates chose shortstop (later 2nd baseman) Dave Cash. In the 6th Round, the Pirates chose 2nd baseman Gene Clines. In the 8th Round, the Dodgers chose pitcher Charlie Hough. In the 9th Round, the California Angels chose pitcher Ken Forsch, and the Dodgers chose outfielder (later shortstop) Bill Russell.

With perhaps the most interesting pick in the draft, in the 10th Round, the New York Yankees chose a lefthanded pitcher from the University of Alabama: Ken Stabler. Instead of baseball, he chose football, and became a Hall of Fame quarterback with the Oakland Raiders. (John Elway, who later actually did play one season in the Yankee system, followed the same path.)

In the 15th Round, the Dodgers chose catcher (later 2nd baseman) Ted Sizemore. In the 19th Round, the Dodgers chose 3rd baseman Ron Cey. In the 20th Round, the Angels chose pitcher Dave LaRoche. In the 31st Round, the Chicago Cubs chose pitcher Bill Stoneman, and the Angels chose pitcher Bill Bonham. And in the 32nd Round, the Mets chose 2nd baseman Kurt Bevacqua.

So while Reggie turned out to be the best player in that Draft, he was far from the only good player who the Mets overlooked. But why did they overlook him? Arizona State head coach Bobby Winkles, who later managed the A's after Reggie left them, told him that the Mets were concerned that he was a black man with a white girlfriend. This was in 1966, a year before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that all laws against interracial marriage were unconstitutional.

In fact, Reggie's girlfriend, Jennie Campos, was a Mexican-American, who faced prejudice as well. Reggie and Jennie married, but it didn't last, as Reggie's wandering eye was as active as his batting eye. But he has managed to keep his private life mostly private. There have been no public stories about him mistreating women.

We can say that, as usual, the dumb Mets were so dumb in not taking Reggie. But the catcher they ended up with was Jerry Grote. How do we know a healthy Chilcott would have done better than Grote? We don't. So this is more about who they didn't take than about who they did.

With Reggie, the A's moved to Oakland in 1968, won 5 straight American League Western Division titles from 1971 to 1975, and won 3 straight World Series from 1972 to 1974. He signed with the Yankees for the 1977 season, and led them to back-to-back World Series wins, also winning an AL Eastern Division title in 1980 and an AL Pennant in 1981. After his relationship with team owner George Steinbrenner went from great to terrible, he signed with the Angels, and helped them to AL West titles in 1982 and 1986.

He retired with 563 career home runs, reached the postseason 11 times in 21 seasons, won 6 Pennants and 5 World Series, including the Series Most Valuable Player award twice, and was a 1st-year-of-eligibility electee to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Having Reggie wouldn't have helped the Mets much. Maybe it would have been better for Cub fans in 1969, since they probably wouldn't have had a big lead to blow, so it's less painful for them. And it would have reversed the result of the 1973 World Series, when Reggie homered in Game 7, and the A's beat the Mets.

But just as the A's players took their earliest possible chances to bolt from team owner Charlie Finley, his cheapness, and his micromanaging, the opposite happened with the similarly cheap president of the Mets, M. Donald Grant: He got rid of his good players before they demanded "too much." Can you imagine George Steinbrenner seeing Reggie Jackson playing the 1976 season for a National League team, and then going after a Mets legend, and making him a bigger star with the Yankees? So, having Reggie on their team might have ended up actually being more painful for Met fans. 

Friday, June 5, 2026

Yankees Struggle vs. Guardians, Face Red Sox

The Yankees played a midweek series at home, against the Cleveland Guardians. With both Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton sidelined due to injury, runs were expected to be harder to come by.

They were. Though I didn't expect our worst output to provide our best result.

On Tuesday night, Cam Schlittler had the worst start of his career. Not a terrible one, just a weak one: 4 1/3rd innings, 5 runs (4 earned) on 5 hits, although no walks, 3 strikeouts. He might have gotten away with it, had not the bullpen been bad, as Tim Hill allowed a run, and Camilo Doval allowed 3.

But the Yankees just couldn't get going and sustain it. Paul Goldschmidt went 3-for-4 with 4 RBIs, including his 379th career home run, surpassing Matt Williams on the all-time list, and tying him with Orlando Cepeda and Tony Pérez. But the rest of the Yankees only got 5 hits and no RBIs, and they lost, 9-4.

Gerrit Cole made his 3rd post-injury start on Wednesday night, but while his control was all right, he was hit hard: 5 1/3rd innings, 4 runs on 6 hits, although only 1 walk, and 2 strikeouts. Jazz Chisholm Jr. and José Caballero hit home runs, but, other than that, the Yankees had just 3 hits and a walk, and lost, 5-4.

Thursday afternoon, the dreaded day game after a night game. It turned out to be a dandy of a pitcher's duel between Carlos Rodón and Cleveland's Slade Cecconi. (Cliché Alert: Those names don't go together.) Through 6 innings, each had allowed just 1 run, and was looking like he wouldn't allow any more.

In the top of the 7th, Aaron Boone brought in Brent Headrick, and I cringed. But he got through the innings with no hits, and just a walk. Which brings up another Cliché Alert: Walks can kill you. Guardians manager Stephen Vogt brought Codi Heuer in, and, with 1 out, he walked Chisholm. He got Cabellero out, but Chisholm stole 2nd, and Heuer threw a wild pitch that got him to 3rd. Ryan McMahon, not known for his bat, singled Chisholm home. That proved to be the last run: Yankees 2, Guardians 1.

Things were looking up. The Yankees ended the day just half a game behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Eastern Division, although 2 back in the loss column. And they had done this despite all their injuries.

But, at night, came the bombshell: Judge, who had missed the entire series, had a broken rib, and would be out at least 4 to 6 weeks -- through the All-Star Break, and a little bit beyond.

If you have any "George Carlin words" to offer, now would be a good time.

And tonight, we start a series with The Scum themselves, the Boston Red Sox. Without Judge, without Stanton, without Max Fried, without Clarke Schmidt, all due to injury -- and without Cole, since his turn in the rotation will be skipped.

Here's the projected pitching matchups:

* Tonight, first pitch scheduled for 7:05, on YES: Ryan Weathers vs. Sonny Gray, who seems to be able to pitch well for any team except when he was with the Yankees.

* Tomorrow, 7:35, on Fox: Will Warren vs. Ranger Suarez.

* Sunday, 1:35, on YES: Schlittler vs. Connelly Early.

I'm not lookin' forward to this.

Thursday, June 4, 2026

June 4, 1976: Triple Overtime at the Boston Garden

Gar Heard's shot

June 4, 1976, 50 years ago: Game 5 of the 1976 NBA Finals is played at the Boston Garden. It’s been called the greatest game in NBA history.

The Boston Celtics made Paul Westphal the 10th pick in the 1972 NBA Draft. In his rookie season, 1972-73, the Celtics went 68-14, still the best record in team history. But they lost the Eastern Conference Finals to the New York Knicks. In 1974, coached by former Celtic star Tommy Heinsohn, they went all the way, beating the Milwaukee Bucks in the Finals. Westphal had a ring in his 2nd season.

But he would not have a place on the Celtics. In 1975, they traded him and a pair of 2nd round draft picks to the Phoenix Suns for Charlie Scott. With a starting five of Westphal and Ricky Sobers at guard, Garfield Heard and Curtis Perry at forward, and Alvan Adams at center, with guard Dick Van Arsdale and center Dennis Awtrey coming off the bench, coach John MacLeod's Suns made the Playoffs for only the 2nd time in team history, beating the Seattle SuperSonics and the defending NBA Champion Golden State Warriors, and advancing to their 1st NBA Finals.

And the Finals would be against Westphal's former team, the Celtics. Heinsohn had a starting five of guards Scott and Jo Jo White, forwards John Havlicek (who'd been with the Celtics since the 1962-63 title) and Paul Silas, and center Dave Cowens, and a bench that included forward Don Nelson, who'd been with them since their 1966 title, Heinsohn's team was strong and battle-hardened.

Surprising no one, the 1st 4 games were all won by the home teams: The Celtics won Games 1 and 2 at the Boston Garden, 98-87 and 105-90; while the Suns won Games 3 and 4, the 1st finals games in Arizona in any sport, at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum, the 1st saddle-roofed arena in North America, 105-98 and 109-107.

Game 5, at the Boston Garden, has gone down in legend. The Celtics jumped out to a 36-18 lead after 1 quarter, and led 61-45 at the half. But the Suns came back, closed to within 77-72 after 3 quarters, and regulation ended 95-95.

The 1st overtime could not find a winner, ending 101-101. Havlicek appeared to have hit a game-winning shot at the end of the 2nd overtime, making it 111-110 Boston. The fans incorrectly thought the game was over, and stormed the court. When referee Richie Powers tried to get it cleared, a Celtic fan assaulted him. The fan was arrested.

Westphal knew he had 2 seconds left. The recently-folded American Basketball Association had the 3-point field goal, but the NBA would not adopt it until 1979. And the Suns had to inbound the ball under their own basket, and get the ball all the way down the court, 94 feet.
Paul Westphal

Westphal called timeout -- knowing that the Suns didn't have any left. This resulted in a technical foul, giving the Celtics a single free throw, which White made, making it 112-110 Boston. But now, the Suns could inbound at halfcourt, in the hope of trying the game. It was the basketball equivalent of the football tactic of running the ball out of your own end zone, giving the other team 2 points for a safety, but giving your punter more room. It was the kind of tactic that would later make Scottish soccer manager George Graham say, "If it works, you're a hero. And if it doesn't work, you're a villain."

Perry made the inbound pass to Heard, who fired a turnaround jumper at the top of the key, over Nelson. He made it, sending the game to a 3rd overtime. Broadcasting the game on CBS, Brent Musberger yelled, "I don't believe it!" Even after the Bill Russell era, seasoned observers were not used to seeing the Celtics pushed this hard on their own parquet floor.
Gar Heard

But the Suns were exhausted, despite the Celtics' starting 5 averaging 50 minutes, to the Suns' 46, with Heard topping out at 61 minutes out of the 63. The Celtics took control from the opening tipoff of the 3rd overtime, taking a 128-122 lead. The Suns closed to 128-126, but that was as close as they got.

Scoring for the Celtics: White 33, Cowens 26, Havlicek 22, Silas 17, Jim Ard and Glenn McDonald each with 8, Nelson and Steve Kuberski each with 4, and Kevin Stacom played 3 minutes without attempting a shot.
Jo Jo White

For the Suns: Westphal and Sobers each scored 25, Perry 23, Adams 20, Heard 17, Awtrey 7, Van Arsdale 5, Nate Hawthorne 4, and Phil Lumpkin and Keith Erickson did not score, although Lumpkin had 4 assists and a rebound, and Erickson had an assist. Pat Riley, who, like Erickson, had been a reserve on the Los Angeles Lakers' 1972 title, did not get into the game, despite it lasting 63 minutes.

Emotionally drained, the Suns did not recover, and lost Game 6 at home, 87-80, and the Celtics were World Champions again.

Maybe both teams were drained: No player on either roster ever won another title, Havlicek retiring in 1978 with 8. The Celtics got old in a hurry, and needed a serious rebuild. If Kuberski's name doesn't mean anything to you, note this: He was the last Celtic to wear Number 33 before Larry Bird.

The Suns missed the Playoffs the next season, but they didn't need as much tinkering as the Celtics did. They made the Playoffs every season from 1978 to 1985, including returns to the Conference Finals in 1979 and 1984. In 1993, Westphal would coach them to the Western Conference title, but they lost the NBA Finals to the Chicago Bulls. That Finals, too, would have a triple-overtime game, Game 3 in Chicago. That one, the Suns won. So 2 NBA Finals games have gone to three overtimes, and the Phoenix Suns have been in both of them. 

Westphal, Havlicek, Cowens, Scott and White would be elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame. So would the Suns' Riley and the Celtics' Nelson, each as coaches.

The Suns reached the NBA Finals again in 2021, but none of the games went to overtime. They lost to the Milwaukee Bucks. The Celtics have since been to 9 Finals, winning in 1981, 1984, 1986, 2008 and 2024; and losing in 1985, 1987, 2010 and 2022.

Referee Richie Powers died in 1998, Nate Hawthorne in 2005, Celtic backup guard Jerome Anderson (who did not play in this game) and Phil Lumpkin in 2009, Jo Jo White in 2018, John MacLeod and John Havlicek in 2019, Tommy Heinsohn in 2020, Paul Westphal in 2021, Paul Silas in 2022, and Dick Van Arsdale in 2024.

Still alive from this game, 50 years later: Celtic players Dave Cowens, Don Nelson, Charlie Scott (also known by his Muslim name, Shaheed Abdul-Aleem), Jim Ard, Tom Boswell, Steve Kuberski, Glenn MacDonald, Ed Searcy and Kevin Stacom; and Suns players Pat Riley, Gar Heard, Alvan Adams, Dennis Awtrey, Ricky Sobers, Curtis Perry, Keith Erickson and John Wetzel.

Monday, June 1, 2026

Raymond Berry, 1933-2026

Jerry Rice is now generally regarded as the greatest receiver in football history. Before he started racking up records, there were 2 serious contenders for that title: Don Hutson of the 1930s and '40s Green Bay Packers, and Raymond Berry.

Raymond Emmett Berry Jr. was born on February 27, 1933 in Corpus Christi, Texas, and grew up outside Dallas in Paris, Texas. Raymond Sr. was the head football coach at Paris High School, and yet Raymond Jr. did not start until he was a senior. (Gene Stallings, who coached Alabama to the 1992 National Championship, also graduated from Paris High.)

Raymond Jr. went to junior college for a year, and then transferred to Southern Methodist University in Dallas. In 3 seasons, he caught just 33 passes. There was no indication that he would become an all-time legend. But then, it was a different game then: The NFL was just beginning to have great quarterbacks, such as Otto Graham of the Cleveland Browns, Norm Van Brocklin of the Los Angeles Rams, Bobby Layne of the Detroit Lions, and Y.A. Tittle of the San Francisco 49ers. The college game wasn't full of star quarterbacks. As Berry later said, "I didn't catch many passes, because not many were thrown."

The Baltimore Colts drafted him in the 20th round of the 1954 NFL Draft. At the time, the Draft was held at the end of the season in the same calendar year, not before it. So his rookie year was 1955. With George Shaw as the regular quarterback, Berry only caught 13 passes. The next year, the Colts signed Johnny Unitas, and he and Berry replaced Graham and Dante Lavelli, or perhaps Van Brocklin and Tom Fears, as the greatest passer-receiver combination in football.

In 1957, Berry led the NFL with 800 receiving yards. In 1958, he led with 56 catches and 9 touchdowns. In 1959, he led with 66 catches, 959 yards, 80 yards per game, and 14 touchdowns. In 1960, he led with 74 catches, 1,298 yards, and 108 yards per game. In 1961, he led with a career-high 75 catches. From 1957 to 1960, Unitas set a record with 47 consecutive games with a touchdown pass, many of them to Berry. (The record stood until 2012, broken by Drew Brees.)

In 1958, with 6 future members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame -- Unitas, Berry, running back Lenny Moore, guard Jim Parker, defensive tackle Art Donovan and defensive end Gino Marchetti, 7 counting head coach Wilbur "Weeb" Ewbank -- the Colts reached the NFL Championship Game, and beat the New York Giants in overtime, 23-17 at Yankee Stadium. It became known as "The Greatest Game Ever Played." Berry caught 12 passes for 178 yards and a touchdown.

In 1959, the Colts and Giants met in the NFL Championship Game again, this time at Memorial Stadium in Baltimore, as the title game then alternated between the home fields of the East Division Champions and the West Division Champions. (The Colts were placed in the West simply because there weren't yet enough NFL teams in the Western U.S.) Again, the Colts won, 31-16, though Berry only caught 5 passes for 68 yards.

For the rest of his career, Berry, like the Colts overall, remained good but not at championship level. He retired after the 1967 season with 631 receptions and 9,275 receiving yards, both then NFL career records. He was not a part of the Colt teams that lost Super Bowl III and won Super Bowl V.

*

He went into coaching. It made sense that he went back to North Texas, becoming the wide receivers coach for the Dallas Cowboys in the 1968 and 1969 seasons. He then held the same job at the University of Arkansas in 1970, 1971 and 1972; with the Detroit Lions in 1973, 1974 and 1975; the Cleveland Browns in 1976 and 1977; and the New England Patriots starting in 1978.

In 1984, Patriots owner Billy Sullivan named Berry the Pats' head coach. In 1985, he coached them to their 1st AFC Championship, becoming the 1st NFL team ever to win 3 road Playoff games in a season: They beat the New York Jets at the Meadowlands, the Los Angeles Raiders at the L.A. Coliseum, and the Miami Dolphins at the Orange Bowl. He got the Patriots to their 1st Super Bowl, and he never had to cheat. But they got clobbered by the Chicago Bears in Super Bowl XX. 
He remained with the Patriots through the 1989 season. He served as quarterbacks coach for the Detroit Lions in 1991, and for the Denver Broncos in 1992.

He was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1973. He was named to the NFL's 50th, 75th and 100th Anniversary Teams, in 1969, 1994 and 2019, respectively; and its 1950s All-Decade Team. The Colts retired his Number 82, and the Baltimore Ravens (as part of their recognition of Colts greatest from their Baltimore years) and the Patriots elected him to their team Halls of Fame. In 1999, The Sporting News named its 100 Greatest Football Players, and Berry was ranked 40th. In 2010, the NFL Network named its 100 Greatest Players, and he actually rose to 36th.

Raymond Berry died in Murfreesboro, Tennessee on May 25, 1939, at the age of 93. e is survived by his wife of 65 years, Sally, and 3 children and 9 grandchildren. 
 
With his death, there are now only 2 surviving players from the 1958 NFL Champion Baltimore Colts: Hall of Fame running back Lenny Moore and running back Jack Call. There are 2 surviving players from the 1959 NFL Champion Baltimore Colts: Moore and tight end Dave Sherer.

There are 3 surviving players from the 1958 NFL Championship Game: Moore, Call, and Giants defensive end Roosevelt "Rosey" Grier. And Moore is the last surviving player from the NFL's 1950s All-Decade Team.

Yankees Enter June With Good Record, But Not In Good Shape

The Yankees played a weekend series away to the Athletics, in their temporary home of Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento, California. On Friday night, Carlos Rodón had easily his best start since coming off the Injured List, going 6 innings, allowing 1 run on 4 hits and 2 walks, striking out 3.

In contrast, former Yankee Luis Severino was taken out after giving up 4 runs in 1 inning, including a 3-run home run by Paul Goldschmidt. It was his 378th career home run.

A Ben Rice single brought another run home in the 2nd, a Ryan McMahon homer another in the 3rd, an Aaron Judge groundout another in the 4th, and a Rice homer another in the 7th. The A's got a consolation run in the 9th. Yankees 8, A's 2.

Ryan Weathers started on Saturday, and struck out 10, but he faltered in the 7th inning. The Yankees only got 6 hits, 2 of them by McMahon. A comeback in the top of the 9th fell a little short, and the A's won, 6-4.

Yesterday, counting all innings but the 3rd, the Yankees trailed 8-0, and only had 1 baserunner, a walk that was erased on a double play. The A's faced the minimum 24 batters.

About that 3rd inning: It lasted 43 minutes, the Yankees sent 18 men to the plate, they faced 75 pitches, and they scored 13 runs, 1 off the team single-inning record set in 1920. The inning began with the A's leading, 3-0. Here's the litany:

* Anthony Volpe led off against starting pitcher Jacob Lopez. He singled to center. He stole 2nd.

* Max Schuemann drew a walk

* Austin Wells also drew a walk, loading the bases with nobody out. Cliché Alert: Walks can kill you.

* Goldschmidt grounded to 1st, but, because the infield was in, the defense was botched, and Lops was unable to cover 1st base. Goldschmidt reached safely, Wells and Schuemann oved up, and Volpe scored. 3-1.

* Rice doubled to right, scoring Schuemann and Wells. 3-3.

* Judge dropped a looper into short center field, which 3 players all seemed to not want to catch, and didn't. Goldschmidt scored. 4-3.

* Cody Bellinger singled. This loaded the bases. There was still nobody out.

* A's manager Mark Kotsay took Jacob Lopez out, and brought in Michael Kelly. Yankee broadcaster Michael Kay announced it on the YES Network, and, with his Bronx accent and fast talking, it sounded like he was announcing his own name.

José Caballero drew a walk, forcing Rice home. 5-3.

* Trent Grisham singled Judge and Bellinger home. 7-3.

* Volpe came up for the 2nd time, as the Yankees had batted around the order. Caballero stole 2nd. Volpe singled him home. 8-3.

* Schuemann came up. Volpe stole 2nd. Schuemann doubled Grisham and Volpe home. 10-3. Ten runs, and no outs. At this point, on YES, David Cone asked, "Where's Phil Rizzuto when you need him?" In other words, it was time to say, "Holy cow, these Yankees are unbelievable!"

Wells drew a walk.

* Finally, the A's got an out, when Kelly fanned Goldschmidt.

* Rice made him pay for that, nearly hitting one out, off the wall, driving Schuemann and Wells home, and sliding into 3rd with a triple. 12-3.

* Judge struck out. The biggest hitter in the game today, and in the biggest inning any team has had all season, he had just a looper that should have been caught but wasn't, and a srikeout.

* Bellinger singled Rice home. 13-3.

* Kotsay had seen enough of Kelly. He brought Jack Perkins in.

* Perkins finally ended the inning by getting Grisham to fly out.

Ten runs on 11 hits and 4 walks. Amazingly, no errors. Equally amazingly, no home runs.

It was more than enough for Will Warren, who went 6 innings, allowing 3 runs, none of them earned. The bullpen was a bit shaky, though: Tim Hill allowed 4 runs in the 7th, Fernando Cruz 1 in the 8th, and David Bednar got into trouble in the 9th, but got out of it with no runs. Yankees 13, A's 8. The Yankees got 2 out of 3 on the series. Counting the previous sweep in Kansas City, it was 5 out of 6 on the roadtrip.

*

So here we are, on June 1, 36 percent of the way through the season, more than one-third. The Yankees are 36-23, for a .610 winning percentage, on a pace to go 99-63. Sounds great.

Except they're a game and a half behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Eastern Division, 3 games back in, Cliché Alert, the all-important loss column. The Toronto Blue Jays are 9 games back, the Baltimore Orioles 10, and the Boston Red Sox 12. If the current standings hold to the end of the season, the Yankees will have the 4th seed in the AL Playoffs.

The Good News: They've basically done this despite missing 3/5ths of their starting rotation for most of the season, with Rodón, Gerrit Cole and Clarke Schmidt all being out until about 2 weeks ago, and now 2/5ths of it, with Max Fried having joined Schmidt on the Injured list; despite not having a real closer, as David Bednar hasn't been great, and nobody else looks ready to step into the role; and despite several key guys basically not hitting. Judge and Rice each have 17 home runs. Rice is leading the AL in RBIs, slugging percentage and OPS.

Good OPS+'s, keeping in mind that 100 is exactly average: Rice, 192; Schuemann, 176 (but that's in only 24 plate appearances); Judge, 153; Bellinger, 140; Goldschmidt, 137; Rosario, 133; Volpe, 121; Giancarlo Stanton, 102.

Among the starters: Cam Schlittler is 7-2, Warren is 7-1, Fried is 4-3, and, in just 2 games, Cole is 1-0. ERAs: Cole 0.00, Schlittler leads the AL pitchers with enough innings to qualify with 1.50, Fried 3.21, Warren 3.22, Rodón 3.32, Weathers 3.52. WHIPs: Cole, 0.771; Schlittler leads the AL qualifiers, with 0.847; Fried 1.005; Weathers 1.141; Warren 1.197; Rodón 1.316.

Good ERAs among the relievers: Brent Headrick, 2.00; Fernando Cruz, 2.19. Good WHIPs among the relievers: Camilo Doval, 1.031; Ryan Yarbrough, 1.119; Tim Hill, 1.209; Cruz, 1.297.

The Bad News: As I said, Fried and Schmidt are currently injured. Stanton and Jasson Domínguez are also injured. As I said, there is no "shutdown closer." And, as I said, some guys still aren't hitting. Bad OPS+'s: Highly-touted rookie Spencer Jones, 23 (but that's in only 27 plate appearances); J.C. Escarra, 46; Randal Grichuk, 49; Wells, 62; Domínguez, 72; McMahon, 73; Jazz Chisholm, 96; Grisham, 98; Caballero, 98. And, despite his other figures being as solid as ever, Judge is still batting just .248.

Bad records for starters: Weathers is 2-3, Rodón is 1-2, Luis Gil is 1-2. Bad for a closer: Bednar is 1-3. Bad ERAs among the relievers: Paul Blackburn, 3.33; Yarbrough, 3.66; Tim Hill, 4.03; Bednar, 4.50; Jake Bird, 5.00; Doval, 5.06. Bad WHIPs among the relievers: Gil, 1.345; Headrick, 1.370; Blackburn, 1.438; Bednar, 1.583; Bird, 1.846. All other Yankee pitchers have 13 innings pitched or fewer.

Rosario is out on Paternity Leave, as he's about to become a father. Presumably, of the players who are currently unavailable, he will come back first. Domínguez could begin his minor-league rehab assignment next week, which suggests he will be back in the 2nd half of June.

Stanton "has begun running outside," according to team management. Fried "played catch" last Monday. Based on those statements, I'm not expecting Stanton or Fried back before the All-Star Break. No statement on Gil has been made for a while, so he will likely be out that long as well. Schmidt might take even longer, until August.

The Yankees have tonight off, and begin a home series with the Cleveland Guardians tomorrow night.

June 1, 1946: Assault Wins the Triple Crown

June 1, 1946, 80 years ago: We tend to think of horse racing as a sport with grace, rather than a contact sport full of violence. Yet, on this day, a horse named Assault won the Triple Crown.

Assault was foaled at King Ranch in south Texas, a son of 1936 Kentucky Derby and Preakness States winner Bold Venture. His maternal grandfather was Equipoise, the 1932 and 1933 Horse of the Year despite not winning any of the Triple Crown races. And he was a great-grandson of a sister of Man o' War, making him a cousin of both War Admiral and Seabiscuit.

Perhaps the true "assault" was the amount of injuries inflicted on him as a foal. He stepped on what was believed to have been a surveyor's stake, driving it through his front right hoof. The hoof was permanently deformed, and the colt developed a limp to accommodate the odd shape of his foot. However, the "Club-footed Comet," as he was later dubbed, showed no signs of abnormality when he was at a full gallop. Throughout his career, Assault also overcame kidney, splint bone, fetlock, knee and bleeding problems.

Trained by Max Hirsch, and ridden by Warren Mehrtens, he won only 2 races as a 2-year-old. One of them was a genuine rarity, a four-horse photo finish, in the perhaps aptly-named Flash Stakes at Saratoga Race Course in Upstate New York.

As a 3-year-old, he won the Wood Memorial, one of the major prep races for the Kentucky Derby, at Aqueduct Racetrack in New York's Queens, but ran badly in the Derby Trial Stakes, and was not considered a favorite for the 1946 Kentucky Derby, run on May 4.

Yet he ran "the Run for the Roses" in 2 minutes, 6 and 3/5ths seconds, and tied what was then the race record by winning by 8 lengths. The Preakness was run a week later, on May 11. With a furlong (1/8th of a mile) to go, he led by 4 lengths, but he tired, and ended up winning by only a neck over Lord Boswell.

At a mile and a half, the longest major stakes race in America, the Belmont Stakes is known as "The True Test of Champions." Although it had happened only once to that point -- Pensive finished 2nd in 1944 -- no fewer than 19 horses have won the Derby and the Preakness, but come up short in the Belmont between then and 2014. (From 1932 to 2026, 3 other Triple Crown potentials did not run in the Belmont due to injury concerns.)

So it was thought by racing experts that Assault would not hold up in the long distance at Belmont Park, just outside New York City in Elmont, Long Island, and Lord Boswell was the betting favorite for the Stakes on June 1.

The experts were wrong: Almost the exact opposite of what they expected happened. Assault stumbled out of the gate, and trailed almost the whole way. But it was the other 6 horses in the race that got tired, and Assault made a run with 200 yards to go, and won by 3 lengths, in 2:30 and 4/5ths. Natchez finished 2nd, and Lord Boswell faded to 5th. Assault had won the Triple Crown.

Injuries and illness troubled Assault for the rest of the year. Hirsch replaced Mehrtens with Eddie Arcaro, and he rode Assault to victory in both the Pimlico Special back in Baltimore and the Westchester Stakes at Belmont. He won 5 out out his 7 races as a 4-year-old, and, unusual for a major thoroughbred, was raced until he was 7.

Assault failed at stud, and lived until 1971. Jockey Warren Mehrtens lived until 1997. 

June 1, 1926: Marilyn and Andy

June 1, 1926, 100 years ago: Norma Jeane Mortenson is born in Los Angeles. We knew her as Marilyn Monroe. Then again, we really didn't know her at all.

Some women have tried to copy her -- and some were hired with the intent to copy her. Jayne Mansfield. Mamie Van Doren. Sheree North. Anita Ekberg. None pulled it off. Anna Nicole Smith came closer than most, with hair bleaching, the name change, the troubled marriages, and, sadly, the too-soon death.

To paraphrase Elton John: I would've liked to have known her, but I wasn't born yet. Her candle may have burned out, but the world never will forget.

On the exact same day: Andy Samuel Griffith (not "Andrew") is born in Mount Airy, North Carolina, just south of the Virginia State Line. Mount Airy became the basis for the fictional town of Mayberry on The Andy Griffith Show.
One of the statues commissioned by the nostalgia network TV Land is in Mount Airy, showing Griffith as the show's Sheriff Andy Taylor, and Ron Howard, then billed as "Ronny Howard," as his son, Opie, walking toward "the ol' fishin' hole."

While Andy and Marilyn were both acting at the same time, there is no record of them ever having met. There is, however, a record of Andy meeting Marilyn's ex-husband, baseball legend Joe DiMaggio. They crossed paths at a celebrity golf tournament in the 1970s or early 1980s, where DiMaggio playfully complimented Griffith on his acting.

It would have been nice to turn on the TV in 1986, and see a 60-year-old Marilyn playing an innocent woman defended by Ben on Matlock -- or even to have her be the actual killer, and have Ben expose her as such.

Alas, Marilyn died on August 4, 1962, at the age of 36, at her home in Los Angeles, 18 miles west of her birthplace, from a barbiturate overdose that may or may not have been accidental. For 20 years after her death, DiMaggio left flowers at her grave 3 times a week, until he found out that people were stealing them and selling them.

Andy died on July 3, 2012, at 86, at his home -- in Manteo, North Carolina, in the Outer Banks, 325 miles east of Mount Airy, and a short drive from where the Wright Brothers first flew.