Willie Stargell

Willie Stargell

*Bar Chat will return Monday.

Baseball Quiz: 1) Name the 3 players in baseball history who had

20 stolen bases and 50 home runs in a single season.

2) Name the 3 players in baseball history to have 40 stolen bases

and 40 home runs in a single season. [Hint: These are six

different players. Only one is in the Hall of Fame.] Answers

below.

“Pops”

Pittsburgh Pirates great Wilver Dornel (Willie) Stargell died the

other day at age 61. The baseball Hall of Famer had 475 home

runs (tied for 19th all time) and 1,540 RBI (30th). But he was far

more than a slugger, he was also one of the great leaders in the

game.

Growing up, my family would take an annual summer vacation

back “home,” which was the Pittsburgh area for me. As a kid

there was nothing better than spending my days at my cousin Joe

and AJ”s gas station. They”d ring up 100 games on the pinball

machine, give me all the ice cream and Mountain Dew I wanted,

and then I”d just soak up the atmosphere as my cousins” friends

would come in to talk Pirate baseball. And, of course, everyone

loved Willie Stargell.

Unless you were a pitcher…then you faced him with terror. For

baseball fans in the 1960s and 70s, there were two hitters you

feared more than any other (especially if you were a Mets fan

like yours truly); Stargell and Willie McCovey. I have to be

honest (especially since I”ve already mentioned this in a previous

spot), but I feared McCovey the most…if I could only pick one.

But certainly Stargell hit them as far as any player in the history

of the game.

At 6”4″ and 225 lbs. (McCovey was 6”4″, 215), Willie Stargell

cut a fearsome presence, pinwheeling his 40-ounce bat before the

pitcher delivered the ball. He once had the record for the longest

homer in half the parks in the National League. And consider

this, at Forbes Field, where Willie spent the first 8 years of his

career, he is responsible for 7 of the 18 shots that sailed clear out

of the stadium. [You”ll recall from just two days ago in this

space that Babe Ruth was the first to hit it out of Forbes.] In

fact, Forbes Field was the most spacious park of this era and if

Willie hadn”t played there, he would probably have been a

member of the 600-homer club. Among his other prodigious

shots, Stargell was the first one to hit a ball out of Dodger

Stadium. L.A.”s Don Sutton once commented, “He didn”t just

hit pitchers, he took away their dignity.”

Considering that players like Stargell and McCovey played in a

dead ball era, compared to today, it would have been fun to see

where they”d hit some these days. Johnny Mac told me that you

would definitely have to watch where you parked the car.

Mark R. called to tell me about the time that legendary Pirates

radio announcer Bob Prince implored Stargell to hit a home run

up on “the Hill” district. It seems that Stargell had just

purchased a fried chicken joint in that neighborhood. Well,

Willie complied with a blast and forever after, with each Stargell

homer it was “Chicken on the Hill with Will.”

But Willie Stargell was more than just a slugger, he was one of

the great leaders of any sport. As he aged, the label “Pops” was

handed to him for his clubhouse presence. And his shining

moment was 1979.

At age 39, Stargell hit 32 homers in the ”79 regular season,

fueling the Pirates to the division championship. Then in the

National League Championship Series he hit 2 homers in a 3-

game sweep of the Reds (for which he was named MVP). The

fairytale continued as Willie was the MVP, again, for Pittsburgh

in their dramatic, come-from-behind World Series triumph over

Baltimore (after trailing 3 games to 1) as he clubbed another 3

dingers. Pops was then named Co-MVP for the regular season

(sharing it with Keith Hernandez). In other words, he swept the

awards and he remains the oldest player ever to gain the regular

season MVP honor.

The 1979 Pirates were the group best known for the Sister Sledge

song, “We Are Family,” which the Bucs adopted as their anthem.

And there was nothing phony about it; Pittsburgh was a happy

team, led by Pops Stargell. Commenting on the season, Willie

said:

“We won, we lived and we enjoyed as one. We molded together

different individuals into one working force. We were products

of different races, were raised in different income brackets, but in

the clubhouse and on the field we were one.”

That season, Captain Willie would pass out stars for performance

after every win and his teammates would bust their butts for one.

He was an original. And he was also just a great person.

Roberto Clemente Jr. recalled the moment that his father died in

that New Year”s Eve tragedy, back in 1972. Stargell was the

first player to arrive at the Clementes” home in Puerto Rico. He

asked 7-year-old Roberto Jr. if he understood what had

happened.

“”Of course I know what happened,”” said Roberto, recalling the

moment with the New York Post”s Tom Keegan. “Then he told

me I had to be there to help my mother take care of my brothers.

He said he would always be there for all of us, any time we

needed him. He was true to his word. He was always there for

us.”

It seemed only fitting that Stargell”s death came as the Pirates

were inaugurating their new stadium on Monday. Earlier, a 12-

foot bronze statue of “Pops” had been unveiled outside. From

here on, every Opening Day in Pittsburgh will be Willie Stargell

Day. [Additional source: Richard Goldstein / New York Times]

Shawn Kemp

From the class of Willie Stargell to one of the great dirtballs of

any era, the NBA”s Shawn Kemp, who recently checked himself

into rehab. Kemp, known for fathering something like 9 kids

with 6 different women, is a truly awful person. The New York

Post”s Peter Vecsey wrote:

“As a time-honored, at large humanitarian, it”s probably

politically correct I be sympathetic to Shawn Kemp”s plight as a

cocaine, marijuana, alcohol, womanizing, baby-making, over-

eating addict.”

But he”s not. According to Vecsey, Kemp (a member of the

Portland Trailblazers) was so out of control he was getting high

in the Blazers bathroom and leaving the evidence behind. And

he would be in such bad shape his teammates were afraid he”d

drop dead on the court. So here at StocksandNews we really

couldn”t give two hoots about a fellow who could retire the

“Dirtball of the Year Award.” [But first we”ll see how the China

situation wraps up.]

Ed “Big Daddy” Roth

I missed the classic era of Big Daddy by just a few years but I

certainly observed my older brother in action. You see, Roth,

who died last week at age 69, was the man who defined

California”s hotrod culture of the 50s and 60s with his whacky

car designs and creation of “Rat Fink,” the counterculture”s

answer to Mickey Mouse.

Roth would tour the country, attending car shows and selling his

wild monster T-shirts (I do have one of these creations, featuring

the other “Big Daddy,” dragster Don Garlits). But aside from his

creation of Rat Fink, he made a mini-fortune doing model car

kits for Revell Company (my brother had every one made).

Revell produced millions of them.

Unfortunately for Roth, he lost all of his money in a motorcycle

magazine, “Choppers,” and he was kind of blackballed (for lack

of a better term) for his association with the Hell”s Angels. So

toss back a brewski for Big Daddy. And find out if your mother

threw away your Rat Fink items. [Undoubtedly she did.]

Killer Bees!!!

A Guyanese farmer was killed by a swarm of killer bees on

Sunday. This is important because with the budget talks likely to

heat up in Washington, the issue of subsidies for honeybee

farmers in the U.S. will have to be explored carefully. I”m not

too sure how ticked off we want to make bees of any kind right

about now. Give them the money.

Excess

The New York Post (as you can tell a major source for this

edition of Bar Chat) had a story about a dinner at a Manhattan

eatery on Monday night (Nello”s / Upper East Side) wherein a

British trader left a $16,000 tip with the maitre d”.

“I feel very fortunate,” said 31-year-old Lenny Lorando. “We

try to do the best and make everybody happy, and we get excited

about that when they are pleased. But tonight, I must say, I was

struck.”

The customer was a 37-year-old regular. He had just one

companion, ordered a modest meal, but racked up an incredible

bar tab of $8,900 as he bought drinks for the other tables. [Jamie

Lee Curtis was a diner…I always liked her.] Lorando said he”d

keep $10,000 and give the rest to the other 10 staffers.

But something tells me there is more to this story. Wasn”t it in

Chicago (?) last year where another British chap gave a waitress

something like $10,000 and then later canceled the credit card?

It”s also awful weird that the New York Post was called the night

this happened. Now I realize the restaurant owner likes the

publicity, but, still, it sounds fishy. We”ll update as warranted.

Top 3 songs for the week of 4/12/69: #1 “Aquarius / Let The

Sunshine In” (The 5th Dimension…StocksandNews is a charter

member of the Marilyn McCoo Fan Club) #2 “You”ve Made Me

So Very Happy” (Blood, Sweat & Tears) #3 “Dizzy” (Tommy

Roe).

*Augusta National is lengthening four holes for next year. Tiger

will win by 9…unless Arnie wins.

Baseball Quiz Answers: 1) 20SB / 50HR: Ken Griffey Jr., 1998

(20SB – 56HR); Brady Anderson, 1996 (21SB – 50HR.a

travesty); Willie Mays, 1955 (24SB – 51HR). 2) 40SB / 40HR:

Jose Canseco, 1988 (40SB – 42HR); Alex Rodriguez, 1998

(46SB – 42HR); Barry Bonds, 1996 (40SB – 42HR).

Next Bar Chat, Monday…we are taking Good Friday off. And

we”ll do MacArthur next week. Stargell took precedence today.

*Yes, sports junkies. Your editor is thrilled that there will be a

coaching change at my alma mater, Wake Forest. YESSSSS!!!