The Nemesis
Semper Tyrannus
With the World Series wrapped up and now heading into the winter doldrums of GM meetings, free agency, the hope against hope that maybe the Jays aren't just a leverage trap for Juan Soto and the ever-increasing clickbait trash takes from US reporters that the Jays are going to dismantle the talented portion of their roster (like Vladdy), it felt like a good time to start a new thread.
And in honor of that I'm going to keep up with what I said I might do in the previous thread: posting youtube "videos" of vintage baseball radio broadcasts from 50-80 years ago.
If you weren't around for that, it's pretty simple. There are tons of freely available and apparently public domain radio broadcasts of old baseball games out there on the internet. I've gone through the collection I have and tried to find some games that feature historical feats, stars of the past, or just interesting matchups and history to post here. So if you've got some chores to do and need a soundtrack for it, or just a quiet night with no TV, maybe a fire, and maybe your favorite beverage then these are a way to possibly spend a couple of hours.
To christen this thread, I've chosen, from June 8, 1962, a regular season matchup between the San Francisco Giants and the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium in St. Louis.
What makes this game interesting? How about the combined resume of its lineups:
6 Hall-of-Famers (including both sides of the pitching matchup)
2 Cy Young awards (1968 and 70)
9 MVP awards (1943, 46, 48, 54, 64, 65, 67, 68, and 69),
3 World Series MVPs (1956, 64, and 67),
3 Rookies of the Year (1951, 58, and 59)
9 Batting titles (I didn't record the years for these)
1 Manager of the Year (1994)
and a combined 126 selections to All-Star teams (including both players who tied for the second most all-time with 24)
This complete broadcast is taken from the Cardinals' radio feed and features Harry Carey, Jack Buck, and Sparky Anderson on the call.
And the game itself
@Da Cool Rula, @MS, @HockeyThoughts , @the valiant effort, @td_ice, @PanniniClaus, @canucksfan, @Blitzkrug, @hockeywiz542, @kb, @torontoblood
Lastly, for anyone that is interested in this stuff, drop a like on this post. I will do my best to alert anyone who does whenever one of these vintage game posts goes up (previous likes are where the above list of posters comes from)
And in honor of that I'm going to keep up with what I said I might do in the previous thread: posting youtube "videos" of vintage baseball radio broadcasts from 50-80 years ago.
If you weren't around for that, it's pretty simple. There are tons of freely available and apparently public domain radio broadcasts of old baseball games out there on the internet. I've gone through the collection I have and tried to find some games that feature historical feats, stars of the past, or just interesting matchups and history to post here. So if you've got some chores to do and need a soundtrack for it, or just a quiet night with no TV, maybe a fire, and maybe your favorite beverage then these are a way to possibly spend a couple of hours.
To christen this thread, I've chosen, from June 8, 1962, a regular season matchup between the San Francisco Giants and the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium in St. Louis.
What makes this game interesting? How about the combined resume of its lineups:
6 Hall-of-Famers (including both sides of the pitching matchup)
2 Cy Young awards (1968 and 70)
9 MVP awards (1943, 46, 48, 54, 64, 65, 67, 68, and 69),
3 World Series MVPs (1956, 64, and 67),
3 Rookies of the Year (1951, 58, and 59)
9 Batting titles (I didn't record the years for these)
1 Manager of the Year (1994)
and a combined 126 selections to All-Star teams (including both players who tied for the second most all-time with 24)
This complete broadcast is taken from the Cardinals' radio feed and features Harry Carey, Jack Buck, and Sparky Anderson on the call.
Here's the box score for the game, if you don't mind being spoiled for the final score
And the lineups
Giants
Chuck Hiller (2B)
Willie Mays (CF)
Willie McCovey (RF)
Orlando Cepeda (1B)
Felipe Alou (LF)
Jim Davenport (3B)
Jose Pagan (SS)
Tom Haller (C)
Juan Marichal (SP)
Cardinals
Curt Flood (CF)
Julian Javier (2B)
Bill White (1B)
Stan Musial (LF)
Ken Boyer (3B)
Carl Sawatski (C)
Julio Gotay (SS)
Doug Clemens (RF)
Bob Gibson (SP)
How's that for a pair of lineups? The Cards' lacks some thump as this is near the tail end of Musial's career (his second to last season, all with the Cardinals) but it's still star-studded. Really though, no matter what the rest of the lineup looks like it's hard to say no to Marichal vs Gibson on the mound.
These Giants would go on to the 1962 World Series to face off against the New York Yankees in a series that went 7 games (I only have radio of the 7th game) while the Cardinals would finish in the middle of the pack in the NL.
Strangely for all the star power in this game, not one of the players involved won a major award that year.
The MVPs were Mickey Mantle (AL) and Maury Wills (NL). However the NL race was close, with Mays finishing second by the slimmest of margins (just 7 points)
The sole MLB Cy Young winner (we're 5 years away from 2 league-specific awards) was Don Drysdale of the Dodgers
The Rookies of the Year were Tom Tresh of the Yankees in the AL and Ken Hubbs of the Cubs in the NL. Tresh spent 9 years in the league as a Shortstop and outfielder with the Yankees and briefly with the Tigers and seems like he was mostly a pretty good but not great player.
Hubbs' career was tragically much shorter. In 1964 after just his second full season with the team he died in a plane crash in his home state of Utah. Apparently he had always been afraid of flying and had decided to learn to fly during the 1963-64 off-season. Less than a month after receiving his pilot's license he and a friend flew from Utah to California while attempting to beat an incoming snowstorm. Unfortunately it seems that they got caught in the storm and they were found less than 10 miles away from their departure point.
And the lineups
Giants
Chuck Hiller (2B)
Willie Mays (CF)
Willie McCovey (RF)
Orlando Cepeda (1B)
Felipe Alou (LF)
Jim Davenport (3B)
Jose Pagan (SS)
Tom Haller (C)
Juan Marichal (SP)
Cardinals
Curt Flood (CF)
Julian Javier (2B)
Bill White (1B)
Stan Musial (LF)
Ken Boyer (3B)
Carl Sawatski (C)
Julio Gotay (SS)
Doug Clemens (RF)
Bob Gibson (SP)
How's that for a pair of lineups? The Cards' lacks some thump as this is near the tail end of Musial's career (his second to last season, all with the Cardinals) but it's still star-studded. Really though, no matter what the rest of the lineup looks like it's hard to say no to Marichal vs Gibson on the mound.
These Giants would go on to the 1962 World Series to face off against the New York Yankees in a series that went 7 games (I only have radio of the 7th game) while the Cardinals would finish in the middle of the pack in the NL.
Strangely for all the star power in this game, not one of the players involved won a major award that year.
The MVPs were Mickey Mantle (AL) and Maury Wills (NL). However the NL race was close, with Mays finishing second by the slimmest of margins (just 7 points)
The sole MLB Cy Young winner (we're 5 years away from 2 league-specific awards) was Don Drysdale of the Dodgers
The Rookies of the Year were Tom Tresh of the Yankees in the AL and Ken Hubbs of the Cubs in the NL. Tresh spent 9 years in the league as a Shortstop and outfielder with the Yankees and briefly with the Tigers and seems like he was mostly a pretty good but not great player.
Hubbs' career was tragically much shorter. In 1964 after just his second full season with the team he died in a plane crash in his home state of Utah. Apparently he had always been afraid of flying and had decided to learn to fly during the 1963-64 off-season. Less than a month after receiving his pilot's license he and a friend flew from Utah to California while attempting to beat an incoming snowstorm. Unfortunately it seems that they got caught in the storm and they were found less than 10 miles away from their departure point.
And the game itself
@Da Cool Rula, @MS, @HockeyThoughts , @the valiant effort, @td_ice, @PanniniClaus, @canucksfan, @Blitzkrug, @hockeywiz542, @kb, @torontoblood
Lastly, for anyone that is interested in this stuff, drop a like on this post. I will do my best to alert anyone who does whenever one of these vintage game posts goes up (previous likes are where the above list of posters comes from)