Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Miami's All-Time Baseball Team

Considering how much talent is in Florida from Tampa and St. Petersburg on north, it's a little surprising that South Florida isn't nearly as loaded. In fact, it's particularly weak in pitching, aside from an ace who is still the best lefthanded pitcher I've ever seen -- and another who could have been, if only.

Which reminds me of another really good lefty, Mike Cuellar. Which reminds me that, no, if a player grew up in Cuba and then lived in or around Miami after Castro took over, you can't count him for this team. Not Cuellar, not Luis Tiant, not Pedro Ramos. They have to have grown up, or at least played high-school ball, south of Lake Okeechobee.

Which would qualify Jose Canseco, born in Havana but grew up in Miami and attended the city's Coral Park High School. But for admitting his steroid use, frankly, I don't care what he achieved, he ain't gettin' on this list.

It would also qualify Rafael Palmeiro, born in Havana but grew up in Miami and attended the city's Andrew Jackson High School. Not that Palmeiro is going to make this team: For using steroids, and then so forcefully lying about it, he can take his 132 career OPS+, his 3,020 hits, his 569 home runs, and his 1,835 RBIs, and stick 'em all where he stuck his needle.

And then there's Alex Rodriguez, born in New York, but grew up (for want of a better choice of words) in Miami, attending Westminster Christian H.S. and the University of Miami. The debate I had in my head (a rough place, I know) was both whether to put A-Rod on any list (because of steroids) and where -- not just what city, but what position, shortstop or 3rd base.

But after getting the biggest PED-related suspension ever, marking the 2nd time he's been caught using steroids (or so they say), I've had enough of him, and am dropping him from this team. Meaning I need a new starting 3rd baseman.

18. Miami's All-Time Baseball Team

To be eligible, a player has to have been trained to play baseball in one of the following Counties in the State of Florida: Broward, Collier, Dade, Lee, Martin, Monroe, Palm Beach and St. Lucie. 

I'll start this team with a 1st baseman who, unlike Palmeiro, was naturally big, and didn't need steroids to hit home runs for the Baltimore Orioles. And he didn't need the bandbox that is Oriole Park at Camden Yards, either.

1B John "Boog" Powell of Key West. He may not be as easily associated with the southernmost point in the Lower 48 States as Ernest Hemingway and Jimmy Buffett, but his hitting was as intense as the former's writing, and his personal style is as relaxing as the latter's songs.

The 4-time All-Star was very nearly the Most Valuable Player of the American League in 1966 and '69, before winning it in '70. The Orioles won Pennants all of those years, and in '71, and also had a near-miss in '64 and AL Eastern Division titles in '73 and '74. He hit 339 home runs and had 3 100-RBI seasons and a career OPS+ of 134. Despite his size, he held his own among the great fielders on that Baltimore squad.

Since the opening of Camden Yards in 1992, he has run Boog's Barbecue on the Eutaw Street promenade between the right-field stands and the B&O Warehouse, starting a trend of ex-stars hosting barbecue stands at new ballparks that now includes Greg Luzinski in Philadelphia, Gorman Thomas in Milwaukee, Manny Sanguillen in Pittsburgh and Randy Jones in San Diego (plus Luis Tiant at the not-at-all-new Fenway Park).

If Boog could hit 303 home runs while playing his home games at Memorial Stadium (he hit 36 after leaving the O's), what could he have done in that bandbox on the Inner Harbor?

2B Robby Thompson of West Palm Beach. He finished 2nd in the National League's 1986 Rookie of the Year balloting to Todd Worrell, was an All-Star twice and a Gold Glove winner once, and hit 238 doubles despite playing the equivalent of just 9 full seasons. He led the NL in triples in 1989, helping the San Francisco Giants win their 1st Pennant in 27 years.

SS Bucky Dent of Hialeah. Okay, he'll never be considered a heavy hitter. But he got hits when they mattered, particularly between October 2 and 17, 1978, when he saved the Yankees' bacon in the AL East Playoff with the Red Sox and was the MVP of the World Series against the Dodgers. And he was a really good fielder, forming a fantastic double-play triad with Willie Randolph and Chris Chambliss.

Whatever they call him in New England, the man born Russell Earl O'Dey will always be Bucky Blessed Dent to me.

3B Lenny Harris of Andrew Jackson H.S. in Miami. A classic utility player, only once was he a regular starter (at 3rd base with the 1991 Los Angeles Dodgers, who nearly won the NL West). But over his 18-year career, he played every position except catcher: 485 games at 3B, 300 at 2B, 161 in RF, 157 in LF, 87 at 1B, 52 at SS, 3 in CF, and he even pitched a scoreless inning for the Cincinnati Reds in 1993.

He reached the postseason with 4 different teams, the 1995 NL Central Champion Reds, the 1999 NL West Champion Arizona Diamondbacks, the 2000 NL Champion Mets, and for his (eventual) hometown team, the 2003 World Champion Florida Marlins (his only ring).

Despite being a somewhat chunky utility player, he stole 131 bases. He is the all-time leader in pinch hits with 212, and is now a coach in the Marlins' system. Current Oriole hot-corner man Manny Machado might replace him on this team someday, but it's a little soon for that.

LF Mike Greenwell of Fort Myers. Ted Williams, Carl Yastrzemski, Jim Rice, Mike Greenwell, Manny Ramirez... As they used to sing on Sesame Street, "One of these things just doesn't belong here." (Yeah, and it's Manny, who couldn't field, looked ridiculous, and used steroids.)

While Greeny may have been only the 5th-best left fielder in Red Sox history (if anyone is old enough to remember Duffy Lewis and wants to bump him ahead of Greenwell, be my guest), he was a 2-time All-Star who came up as a late-season callup in the 1986 Pennant season, and helped them reach the postseason in 1988, '90 and '95. He batted .303 lifetime with a 120 OPS+, before injuries cut his career short at age 32.

In 1988, when the Red Sox won the AL East, he batted .325, hit 22 homers and had 119 RBIs, and finished 2nd in the AL MVP voting to Jose Canseco. When Canseco admitted his steroid use, Greenwell demanded that Canseco forfeit the MVP. So far, Canseco has refused. Greenwell is right, and for me to stick up for a Red Sock says a lot.

Honorable Mention to Warren Cromartie of Andrew Jackson H.S. in Miami. When he got good, starting in 1977 at age 23, the Montreal Expos got good. His hitting and fielding kept them in the NL East race every year through 1983, including the 1981 Division title. When Reggie Jackson's 1977 World Series performance led to the introduction the next season of the Reggie Bar, Cro joked that he wanted a candy bar, too. He got it: The CroBar, almonds in chocolate. It was sold at the Montreal Olympic Stadium, with the proceeds going to the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation.

But, in a precursor to the economic conditions – or, perhaps, to the attitude toward them – that would led the Expos to leave Montreal, they didn't offer him a new contract, and at age 30 he went to Japan and signed with that country’s most successful team, the Tokyo-based Yomiyuri Giants. In 1989, he was named MVP of Japan's Central League. He had a brief U.S. comeback with the Kansas City Royals in 1991, batting .313 as a 37-year-old pinch-hitter. A lifetime .281 hitter in the North American major leagues, he deserved better.

He now hosts a talk show on Miami all-sports radio station WAXY, and founded the Montreal Baseball Project, a group trying to get MLB back in the city -- ironically, considering it was Jeffrey Loria who ultimately led to the Expos getting moved when he stripped the organization and essentially moved its business operations to... Miami, when he bought the Marlins.

CF John Milton "Mickey" Rivers of Miami. Roger Kahn, one of the most literary-minded of all sportswriters, once noted the name of the epic poet of 17th Century Britain, and wrote that Mick the Quick "may be the only man named John Milton who has never heard of Paradise Lost."

But he stole 75 bases for the California Angels in 1975, and was obtained by the Yankees to be their new center fielder and leadoff hitter. In 3 full seasons in Pinstripes, he won 3 Pennants and 2 World Series. His .326 batting average led the 1977 World Champions, and he got all kinds of big hits for the Bronx Bombers, particularly against the Red Sox in the regular season and the Royals and Dodgers in the postseason. And that speed made him one of the finest defensive outfielders of his time.

Like his fellow Yankee Legends Casey Stengel and Yogi Berra, he said a lot of things that suggested he was walking a fine line between genius and madness, but ain't no sense worryin' about that.

Somewhat Honorable Mention to Deion Sanders of Fort Myers. We'll never know what "Prime Time" could have done if he'd stuck with baseball, although he was certainly better off trying to play both that and football than Bo Jackson turned out to be.

It's hard to believe, but he started out as a Yankee. (I wonder what George Steinbrenner thought of his off-the-field dress.) He played for the Atlanta Braves in their 1991 and '92 Pennant-winning seasons and in the 1992 World Series, alternating with the Falcons, Atlanta's NFL team, which he also helped to reach the Playoffs. That 1992 season was his best in baseball, batting .304 with 8 homers, 28 RBIs and 26 steals, and leading the NL with 14 triples in only 97 games.

On January 29, 1995, he played for the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XXIX, topping Jackie Jensen and Chuck Essegian (who had played in the World Series and the Rose Bowl) by became the 1st (and still only) man to play in both the World Series and the Super Bowl (but only winning the latter). But after 1995, he would play in only 2 more major-league seasons.

He'll never be in the Baseball Hall of Fame, but he's now in the College Football and Pro Football versions. He's also a member of the Falcons's Ring of Honor, but not yet the Cowboys' version.

RF Andre Dawson of Southwest H.S. in Miami. He finally got elected to the Hall of Fame on his 9th try, and that was at least 6 too many. It hurt him -- in more ways than one -- to play his 1st 10 full seasons in Montreal, a city where baseball is the 3rd sport behind hockey and Canadian-style football, in a flying saucer they call the Olympic Stadium, with its rock-hard astroturf that wrecked his knees. 

Then came 8 seasons in real ballparks in actual "baseball cities," 6 at Wrigley Field in Chicago and 2 at Fenway Park in Boston, where he burnished his legend (I know, that sounds dirty), before closing his career with 2 seasons with his hometown Marlins.

"The Hawk" was NL Rookie of the Year in 1977, and MVP in 1987, leading the League with 49 homers, most in the NL between 1977 and 1998 (remember, at Wrigley, the wind blows out half the time and in the other half), and 137 RBIs. He was an All-Star and a Gold Glove winner 8 times each, and finished his career with a 119 OPS+, 2,774 hits, 503 doubles, 438 homers, and 314 stolen bases. The only players with at least as many stolen bases as Dawson who had more homers than he did are Willie Mays, Barry Bonds and Alex Rodriguez. And only Mays did it honestly.

How could anyone say this guy didn't belong in the Hall? If he'd spent his entire career in Chicago, or at least the time he spent with the Expos and Cubs combined being all with the Cubs, he would've been in sooner. Unfortunately, while he played in 2 NLCS, in with the 1981 Expos and the 1989 Cubs, he never reached the World Series.

On a personal note, on August 2, 1991, I was at Shea Stadium to see the Mets play the Cubs. The game went to extra innings, and Dwight Gooden was lifted after 9 strong. The reliever, Alejandro Pena, served one up, and Ryne Sandberg hit it into the Picnic Area, and 35,361 people got up to leave. (I guess Bud Harrelson, then managing the Mets, should've foreseen Lady Gaga: "Don't call my name, Alejandro." Pena would soon go to the Braves and give up the winning run in the World Series.) I turned back, as I so often do when leaving a stadium or arena, to get one last look (hey, you never know), just in time to see Andre Dawson crank one to dead center for the final score of Cubs 4, Mets 2.

And on May 14, 1994, I was in Boston, and saw Dawson hit a grand slam practically onto the Mass Pike, giving the Red Sox the lead in what turned out to be an 11-2 demolition of the Toronto Blue Jays. Why was I at these games? Those are stories for another time.

Honorable Mention to Dante Bichette of West Palm Beach. It's true that 201 of his 274 career home runs came while playing home games at altitude for the Colorado Rockies, but he also had seasons of at least 15 homers for the Angels, Brewers and Reds, none of whom played in hitters' parks. And he did have a .299 lifetime batting average, leading the NL in hits twice, 1995 and 1998.

Honorable Mention to Danny Tartabull of Carol City. Born in Puerto Rico as the son of Cuban-born right fielder Jose Tartabull (best known for a throw he made that sealed a win in the Red Sox' 1967 "Impossible Dream" season), he grew up in the Miami area and had a 133 career OPS+ with 5 100-RBI seasons and 262 homers despite playing the bulk of his career at Royals Stadium in Kansas City (now Kauffman Stadium and always a pitchers' park) and Yankee Stadium (great for lefty hitters but terrible for righthanders like Danny).

He was a member of the 1994 Yankees that had the best record in the AL when the strike hit, but was traded a year later for Ruben Sierra, who was traded a year after that for Cecil Fielder.

Unlike his father, Danny never played in the postseason. However, he did appear on Seinfeld, as did fellow Yankees Derek Jeter, Bernie Williams, Paul O'Neill and manager Buck Showalter (and, in a scene that never made it to air, George Steinbrenner), and ex-Met Keith Hernandez.

C Mike Napoli of Pembroke Pines. Now the 1st baseman for the defending World Champion * Red Sox, he previously reached the World Series with the 2011 Texas Rangers, and before that the postseason with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. He's hit a least 20 homers in each of the last 6 seasons, and has a career OPS+ of 127.

Honorable Mention to Mike Stanley of Fort Lauderdale. After 6 years as a backup with the Texas Rangers, including catching Nolan Ryan's 7th no-hitter, he came to the Yankees, and was a big part of their revival that began in 1993. He batted .300 in 1993 and 1994, and was named an All-Star in 1995, as the Yanks finally made the Playoffs again.

Then, in a move that seemed to make no sense at the time, they let him go via free agency -- and he signed with the Red Sox, who had won the AL East that year! But the Yanks got Joe Girardi, and then Jorge Posada, and the rest is history.

The Stanley Steamer came back to the Yankees in 1997, and made the Playoffs again. Then he went back to the Red Sox, and helped them to the Playoffs in 1998 and '99, closing his career with the 2000 Oakland Athletics, another Playoff team. Despite playing big chunks of his career in ballparks unfriendly to righthanded hitters, he hit 187 home runs and had an OPS+ of 117.

Honorable Mention to Charles Johnson of Fort Pierce. He's here for his defense, winning 4 Gold Gloves. His best season with the bat was 2000, .304, 31 homers, 91 RBIs. He helped his hometown Marlins win the 1997 World Series, but was done at age 33. Injuries? Yes. Steroid-induced? Almost certainly not.

SP Steve Carlton of North Miami. In 1967, he helped the St. Louis Cardinals win the World Series. In 1968, he helped them win another Pennant. In 1971, he went 20-9. In 1972, Cards owner Gussie Busch offered him a contract for the season worth $50,000. Carlton wanted $60,000. Busch, a billionaire through his beer company, blew his stack over being asked to fork over an extra $10,000, and traded Carlton to the Philadelphia Phillies for Rick Wise.

Now, Wise was a good pitcher, but the Cards got rid of him too soon as well. That's why this was a bad trade: They didn't get what they could have out of the guy they got, and it was their fault, not his, and lost one of the greatest lefthanded pitchers ever, all over $10,000 -- even then, not an enormous amount.

In that 1972 season, Carlton went 27-10. The rest of the Phils' staff went just 32-87. Carlton also had a 1.97 ERA, and won the first of 4 Cy Young Awards (he was the first to win that many). When Carlton pitched, he told the Phils, "It's Win Day." He had 329 win days in his career, more than any lefthander ever except Warren Spahn, and an ERA+ of 115.

In 1983, he and Nolan Ryan vied to become the all-time strikeout leader. Ryan beat Carlton to Walter Johnson's longtime record of 3,508, but for a while, Carlton had the lead, until Ryan pulled away. Still, Carlton was the 2nd man to get to 4,000 strikeouts, finishing with 4,672. He reached the postseason 8 times, and helped the Phillies win the 1980 World Series (winning Game 2 and the clinching Game 6) and the 1983 Pennant.

He didn't talk to reporters -- in 1981, a joke went around that Steve Carlton and Fernando Valenzuela were the 2 best pitchers in baseball and neither of them spoke English -- but his pitching spoke volumes. He is in the Hall of Fame, and the Phillies have retired his Number 32, elected him to the Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame, and erected a statue of him outside Citizens Bank Park. When The Sporting News announced its 100 Greatest Baseball Players in 1999, he came in at Number 30.

SP Fred Norman of Andrew Jackson H.S. in Miami. His career record was just 104-103, but he went 24-11 over the Cincinnati Reds' 1975 and 1976 World Championship seasons.

SP Charlie Hough of Hialeah. Actually born in Honolulu, Hawaii, and if I were doing an All-Hawaii team, I might have trouble filling it out – only 38 people born there have reached the majors – but it would have a heck of a good pitching staff, with Hough joined by 1986 Mets Ron Darling and Sid Fernandez (who did both grow up there), and also former Detroit Tiger starter Milt Wilcox (who grew up in Oklahoma).

Hialeah High School, alma mater to Hough and Bucky Dent, also produced Alan Wiggins, the ill-fated 2nd baseman for the Pennant-winning 1984 Padres, Pro Football Hall-of-Famer Ted Hendricks, CNN anchor Rick Sanchez, and singers Jon Secada and Harry Wayne Casey (leader of KC & the Sunshine Band).

Hough's career record is dead-even at 216-216, but he still won 216 games more than most people ever will. He helped the Dodgers win Pennants in 1974, '77 and '78, although he never won a ring, and in '77 he gave up Reggie Jackson's monstrous 3rd homer in Game 6 of the World Series. He spent a few years with good-but-not-great teams with the Texas Rangers and Chicago White Sox, and then came home to South Florida in the 1993 expansion draft.

On April 5, 1993, at Joe Robbie Stadium (now Sun Life Stadium), he started for the Marlins and beat his former team, the Los Angeles Dodgers, in the 1st major league game ever played in Florida -- and since he was the starting pitcher, that officially made him the 1st man ever to play in a major league game in Florida.

Like a lot of knuckleballers, he wore Number 49 to honor Hoyt Wilhelm. Also like a lot of knuckleballers, he lasted a long time, throwing his final pitch at age 46. 

SP Rick Rhoden of Delray Beach. A teammate of Hough's on the Pennant-winning Dodgers of 1974, '77 and '78, he did play for a World Champion -- sort of, being hurt most of the 1979 season and pitching just 1 game, 5 innings, for the eventual World Champion Pittsburgh Pirates.

In 1987, he went 16-10 for the Yankees, and on June 11, 1988, Billy Martin, in his 5th term and last month as Yankee manager, desperate to plug injury-caused holes, batted Rhoden -- a .238 lifetime hitter with 9 career home runs -- 7th as the designated hitter, in a game I saw live. The gamble paid off, as he hit a sacrifice fly to drive in a run, the last of his 75 career RBIs, and the Yankees beat the Baltimore Orioles, 8-6.

He is the only pitcher ever to appear in a game as a DH but not as a pitcher. (His former Pirate teammate John Candelaria started and won that game. Jay Buhner hit a grand slam, but was soon traded for Ken Phelps. But enough about that.) That sac fly was pretty much the last highlight for Rhoden, and the next year was his last in the majors. Still, his 151-125 record was better than Norman's and Hough's.

SP Gio Gonzalez of Hialeah. He'd be the ace of the Washington Nationals without Stephen Strasburg, going 15-9, 16-12, 21-8 and 11-8 the last 4 seasons, including the Nats' 1st-ever NL East title in 2012. He's only 28, but he's already a 2-time All-Star.

Honorable Mention to Herb Score of Lake Worth. Born in Queens but grew up in Palm Beach County, in 1955 he set a rookie record for strikeouts that still stands for the AL. In 1956, he was even better. Prior to the start of the 1957 season, he was 36-19 with 508 strikeouts for the Cleveland Indians, and had just turned 24 years old.

The Boston Red Sox offered the Indians $1 million cash for him -- about $8.3 million in today's money. They turned it down -- not knowing just how much financial trouble the franchise would have over the next 30 years. His future, and the team's, seemed limitless.

On May 7, 1957, his future was limited, when he was hit in the face by a line drive from the Yankees' Gil McDougald. Several bones were broken, and his vision was permanently impaired. Although he insisted that it was a sore arm the following spring that doomed his playing career, we'll forever wonder. He was 19-27 the rest of the way. He won 55 games -- about 250 less than he should have. He could have been the AL's version of Sandy Koufax, a lefty strikeout machine who dominated the 1960s.

He went on to become an Indians broadcaster, staying until their Pennants of 1995 and 1997. He was Northern Ohio's version of Phil Rizzuto, Richie Ashburn, Ron Santo and Joe Nuxhall -- except he was probably better as a player than any of them, but had the least chance to prove it. He is in the Indians' team Hall of Fame.

RP Scot Shields of Fort Lauderdale. Basically a setup man for the Angels, but he helped them reach the postseason in 2002 (World Champions), 2004, 2005, 2007 and 2009. He has a career ERA+ of 140 and a WHIP of 1.246. In Game 3 of the 2005 ALDS, when Randy Johnson spit the very expensive bit for the Yankees, Shields was the winning pitcher in relief of Paul Byrd. He has been terrible this season, though (0-3 with a 5.62 ERA), and at 34 he could be nearing the end of the line.

MGR Dick Howser of West Palm Beach. An All-American shortstop at Florida State University, he became the prototypical good-field-no-hit infielder in the 1960s with the Kansas City Athletics and then the Yankees. An All-Star as a rookie in 1961, batting .280 and stealing 37 bases, that was pretty much his peak as a player.

He became a Yankee coach and got a pair of World Series rings that way. He managed the Yankees to the AL East title in 1980, but resigned when George Steinbrenner insisted he fire some coaches following an embarrassing ALCS loss to the Royals.

But when the Royals fired manager Jim Frey the next season, Howser went back to Kansas City, and got them into the postseason in 1981 (the 2nd-half AL West title in that split season), 1984 (AL West) and 1985 (the only major-league World Championship ever won by a Kansas City baseball team). He managed the AL to victory in the 1986 All-Star Game, but sadly that was his last game. He resigned due to cancer, and died less than a year later.

The Royals made his Number 10 the 1st they ever retired. Florida State named their baseball stadium for him, and both they and the Royals dedicated statues of him outside their ballparks. The baseball equivalent of the Heisman Trophy is the Dick Howser Trophy.

Honorable Mention to Skip Bertman of Miami Beach, who played at the University of Miami, and was an assistant coach there before becoming the head coach of 5 National Championship teams at Louisiana State University: 1991, 1993, 1996, 1997 and 2000.

Finally, an Honorable Mention to all those Cuban-born players who still can't go home, and have taken up residence in Miami, especially the following: Bert Campaneris, Jose Cardenal, Leo Cardenas, Paul Casanova, Tito Fuentes, Tony Gonzalez, the brothers Livan and Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez, Minnie Minoso, Tony Oliva, Camilo Pascual, Tony Perez, Pedro Ramos, Cookie Rojas, Diego Segui, Jose Tartabull, Tony Taylor and Luis Tiant. And to those who died before they could return: Sandy Amoros, Mike Cuellar and Zoilo Versalles.

2 comments:

  1. You forgot about Treasure Coast "treasures": Rusty Meacham, Rick Ankiel + Scott Proctor. Also, the Jupiter old timer Bob Shaw !!!

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  2. I forgot about Scott Proctor? Finally! It's a Spring Training miracle! Praise the Lord!

    Now, if I could just forget about Bob Shirley, Steve Trout, Greg Cadaret, Javier Vazquez (twice), Kevin Brown, Kyle Farnsworth and Boone Logan!

    ReplyDelete