Wednesday, March 31, 2021

1960 Profile: Yogi Berra

1960 AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL-STAR
"Yogi Berra has been the league's best catcher - and best conversationalist - the past nine years. He has also hit more home runs (303) than any receiver in history and has a .287 lifetime batting average.
Born in St. Louis, Yogi played at Norfolk and Newark before starting his 14-year career in 1946. Yogi, who likes to talk to umpires and opposing players on every and all subjects, has been the league's Most Valuable Player on three occasions (1951, '54, '55). His World Series records: first to pinch-hit a homer; most games played; most hits made and most runs batted in in one Series (10 in 1956). Yogi, who has also played the outfield, will be 35 in May. After a slow '59 start, he finished with .284 and 19 home runs."

-Don Schiffer, 1960 Mutual Baseball Annual

1959
May 10: Breaks major league catching record with 148th straight errorless game, hits home run in 3-2 win over Senators. Streak ends at 149 games.
May 20: Playing right, hits two home runs in loss to Tigers.
May 24: Hits three-run homer and two singles in 9-0 rout of Orioles.
June 3: Hits two-run homer and single in 11-5 win over Tigers.
June 19: Gets 1,200th RBI on single.
June 30: Beats Orioles, 4-1, with two-run single.
July 8: Three RBIs on home run and single in 11-5 win over Red Sox.
July 16: Paces sweep over Indians with homer, double, two singles.
July 25: Beats Tigers, 9-8, with two-run homer in 9th.
July 29: Ties White Sox, 4-4, with two-run homer in rain.
August 7: Hits home run in 3-0 win over A's.
August 9: Ties A's with 300th home run (pinch-hit); Yanks win.
August 18: Leads 5-3 win over Tigers with two-run homer and single.
September 2: Beats Senators, 4-3, with two-run homer in 8th.
September 6: Hits home run, has three RBIs in 5-4 win over Orioles.
Comment: "Berra raised his average to normal after two sub-par years and added to his reputation as a clutch hitter. He's reaching the point where he should cut down his work load."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1960

"There's not much about this man that every fan doesn't know. Lawrence Peter 'Yogi' Berra has become a baseball legend. 
One of the most popular and colorful players ever to don the Yankee pin stripe, Yogi owns a host of records. Just a few of these include: most homers by a catcher, lifetime, 291 (he has a total of 303); first player to hit a pinch homer in a World Series (1947); has played the most games and has the most hits of any World Series performer in history; one of six players to hit a Series grand slam; set Series record of 10 RBIs (1956); caught a record 148 consecutive errorless games (959 chances); member of 11 American League All-Star teams and named MVP of the second All-Star Game in 1959; American League's Most Valuable Player in 1951, 1954 and 1955.
Yes, indeed, one of the all-time Yankees."

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

Lawrence Peter Berra (C)     #8
Born May 12, 1925 in St. Louis, Missouri, resides in Montclair, N.J. Height: 5-8, weight: 191. Bats left, throws right. Married and father of three boys, Lawrence Jr. (10), Timmy (8) and Dale (3).

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

"Even he's approaching the end of a brilliant career, Yogi Berra is still one of the most feared hitters in the American League. Since joining the Yankees from Newark at the tail end of the 1946 season, Berra has blasted 303 home runs and driven in 1,244 tallies in league play.
A three-time winner of the Most Valuable Player award (1951-54-55), Yogi has the distinction of being the first player to ever hit a pinch-hit home run in World Series competition. He did it against the Dodgers on October 2, 1947.
In addition to his catching chores, Berra has also played the outfield, first and third for New York, and he worked out at third base in St. Petersburg this spring just in case the Yanks need him there.
Born in St. Louis, Berra and his lovely wife, Carmen, and their three sons now reside in Montclair, N.J.
As a catcher, Berra has belted 291 of his homers, the most by any backstop in big league history. And, he shares the American League record for most homers by a catcher in a single season with big Gus Triandos of the Orioles.
When Yogi first joined the club his work behind the plate left much to be desired. However, under the watchful eye of Bill Dickey, he was turned into one of the best handlers of pitchers-  and would-be base runners- the game has known.
Berra has played in more World Series games than any player in history, 61, and has the most Series hits, 61. And, his 10 RBIs in the 1956 classic are also a record.
Last season his batting average was .284 in 131 contests and he connected for the circuit 19 times while driving in 69 runs. His extra-base hit output included 25 doubles and a triple.
His highest batting mark was achieved in 1950 when he hit a solid .322. And he hit his paramount in RBIs in '54 with 125, one more than he had in 1950. Yogi has hit seven grand slam homers since joining the Yanks.
Berra's minor league experience was limited to a year with Norfolk, 1943, and a year with Newark, 1946. In between, he was in military service.
The little man built more like a fireplug than a slugger still has a few years of top caliber ball still left in him. He'll be 35 in May, but as long as Yogi Berra can swing a bat he'll drawing the respect and acclaim due an 11-time All-Star selection.
Yogi and former shortstop Phil Rizzuto (who now shares the announcing chores with Mel Allen and Red Barber) are partners in a bowling alley in Clifton, N.J. And, the popular slugger is also bossman of a soft drink firm in the Garden State."

-New York Yankees 1960 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

The Yankees' Yogi Berra, on his ideas of third base play: "It's not a bad job- if no balls are hit to you!"

-Baseball Digest, July 1960

"Veteran of 11 World Series, Lawrence Peter 'Yogi' Berra has played in more games and has made more hits in World Series competition than any player in baseball history. Among the 23 Series records he owns or shares is batting in the most runs in a seven-game Series (10). He is one of six men to hit a Series grand slam homer.
Yogi has belted more than 300 home runs as a catcher, a major league record. Three times the American League's Most Valuable Player, Berra has been on 13 consecutive All-Star teams."

-1960 World Series Official Souvenir Program

Monday, March 29, 2021

1960 Profile: Clete Boyer

"Signed originally by the Yankees as an 18-year-old bonus shortstop, Cletis Boyer spent his first two baseball seasons on the Kansas City roster. Obtained by the Yankees, he was sent to Binghamton and Richmond for needed playing experience.
Now at 23, Clete is a versatile, clever fielding shortstop. In the minors, he's shown power at the plate but has not yet developed into a consistent hitter. Once he masters big league pitching he should rival his distinguished brother, Ken, All-Star third baseman for the Cardinals."

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

Cletis Leroy Boyer (IF)     #34
Born February 8, 1937 in  Cassville, Missouri, resides in Webb City, Missouri. Height: 6-0, Weight: 183. Bats right, throws right. Married and father of two girls, Valerie (3) and Stephanie (6 months).

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

"The third member of his family to make the big leagues, young Clete Boyer may be one of the surprises on the Yankees this season.
Following in the footsteps of his older brothers Ken (the St. Louis Cardinals' third baseman) and Cloyd (a former big league hurler), Clete signed with the Kansas City Athletics for a sizable bonus in 1955.
He was chained to the bench for most of that season and 1956 by the rule which prevented bonus boys from being farmed out and this undoubtedly set him back a few years. The Yankees obtained him as a 'throw in' in one of their many package deals with the Athletics.
Boyer hit .243 at Binghamton in 1957 but showed enough to earn a promotion to the Triple A Richmond Virginians in 1958. With the International League club, he upped his mark to .284 and slugged 22 home runs.
Last season he was on the shuttle between the Bronx and Richmond. He hit 12 circuit clouts in the I.L but had only two doubles among his 20 American League hits.
Cletis can play second, short or third, though he looks best at second. His versatility, age (23) and potential power are all in his favor and he will probably be spending 1960- and many more seasons- with the Yankees."

-New York Yankees 1960 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

"One of the surprises of the 1960 season, 23-year-old Clete Boyer has added defensive strength to the left side of the infield, regardless of whether he plays third or short. While his hitting still leaves something to be desired, he has shown marked improvement. He has hit several game-winning home runs, and his defensive play has been on the brilliant side. Clete is the younger of St. Louis Cardinal All-Star Ken Boyer."

-1960 New York Yankees Official Program and Scorecard

Saturday, March 27, 2021

1960 Profile: Joe DeMaestri

 LOOKED LIKE BAD NOOSE TO HIM
"Enos Slaughter, the Kansas City A's veteran outfielder, told of this amusing experience the other day. The Macks had wound up an unhappy road trip by losing to the Red Sox, 14-1. When they arrived home at the Kansas City airport, there were 5,000 fans on hand.
Shortstop Joe DeMaestri took one look, then hollered at the pilot, 'Get this thing right up and outta here. They're gonna lynch us all!' "

-Halsey Hall, Minneapolis Tribune (Baseball Digest, March 1956)

SHORTSTOP WITH TEN DOUBLE PLAY MATES
Kansas City's DeMaestri Rated Third In A.L. Despite Handicap Of Ever-Changing Partners
"When the Athletics were transferred to Kansas City in the winter of 1954, a young man named Joe DeMaestri came along with the franchise. He was considered a questionable asset and in fact, the new officials of the club were advised by some experienced baseball men to start looking for a shortstop to replace him.
When the Athletics opened spring training this year, their roster included only four holdovers from the 1954 Philadelphia club, pitchers Alex Kellner and Arnold Portocarrero, First Baseman Vic Power and, of course, DeMaestri.
Not only was DeMaestri still on hand, but his manager, Harry Craft, maintains that he is the third best shortstop in the American League. He rates only Gil McDougald of the Yankees and Luis Aparicio of the White Sox ahead of him.
Several clubs, including Detroit and Cleveland, have made bids for DeMaestri's services but Craft has steadfastly refused all such offers. DeMaestri and Woodie Held, the center fielder, are probably the only two players about whom Craft feels so strongly.
DeMaestri's rapid development is all the more amazing in view of the fact that he does not have outstanding physical equipment. He is not a fast runner or a quick starter. He has a good arm and throws accurately but his throwing isn't so powerful as to bring gasps from the stands. He hits an occasional home run but can't be considered a power hitter. Nevertheless, he is considered an outstanding ball player.
DeMaestri believes that he got the biggest break of his career when he was traded to the Athletics. Not many players care to be traded to a tailender but it was a stroke of good fortune for DeMaestri because he was given an opportunity to play regularly and because he later crossed paths with Lou Boudreau, one of the all-time great shortstops.
DeMaestri says without hesitation that Boudreau did more to help him than anyone else with whom he has come in contact during his baseball career.
'Boudreau worked hard with me and taught me a lot of things,' DeMaestri said. 'He showed how to move as the count changed and how to be in motion when the pitch was thrown.
'I'm not a quick starter but by learning these things I've been able to cover a lot more ground. Before Lou came along no one had bothered to do anything extra for me. They showed me a few things, naturally, and answered any questions I had but I really didn't learn too much. Lou put in a lot of time with me and gave me some good ideas.
'I owe a lot to him and I'll never forget what he did for me.'
Boudreau, who took over as manager of the Athletics following the transfer of the franchise, started working with DeMaestri in the spring of 1955, and by the time the Athletics broke camp he told DeMaestri that he had the shortstop job. From that point on DeMaestri improved steadily and by the end of the season, he had arrived as a top-flight defensive shortstop.
Boudreau was among those who were skeptical of DeMaestri's ability in the spring of 1955 and was as surprised as anyone at the speed with which his pupil developed.
Craft, who replaced Boudreau as manager last season, is especially high on DeMaestri because of his steadiness. He has quick hands and usually comes up with any ball he can reach. Craft believes he has the most accurate arm of any shortstop in the league.
He has good evidence in support of his claims since DeMaestri had the best fielding percentage among American League shortstops last year. He nosed out McDougald for the honor by the margin of a few percentage points, .980 to .976.
DeMaestri is a quiet, unassuming individual and one of the most popular players on the Kansas City club. He is starting his second season as player representative, a job he took with some misgivings.
In 1955 Joe Astroth was named player representative and the following season he was shipped back to the minors. He was succeeded by Jim Finigan, who was traded to Detroit in the winter of 1956.
DeMaestri was elected player representative in the spring of 1957 and kept his fingers crossed before becoming convinced that the job wasn't a complete jinx.
Although DeMaestri is a quiet individual, he is a good competitor. If he wasn't a battler he wouldn't be where he is today because success in baseball has not come easily to him.
DeMaestri started playing baseball at an early age. He was encouraged by his father who had had aspirations of becoming a ball player. The elder DeMaestri once had a tryout with Seattle, but about the same time Joe was born and his father decided that he needed a steadier type of job.
Joe played in high school and in the American Legion program. When he finished high school he signed with the Boston Red for a princely bonus of $600.
Young Joe tucked his money in a bank account and headed for El Paso, Tex., where the Red Sox had a farm club. He played in 76 games that season and batted .264. The next year he was with San Jose and then he moved to Oneonta, N.Y. In 1950 he finally made it to Birmingham, where he batted .283 with the Southern Association club.
The Red Sox were not exactly overwhelmed by his talents and left him in the draft. Frank Lane was in the midst of his rebuilding program with the  Chicago White Sox and he selected DeMaestri off the Louisville roster for $10,000.
DeMaestri saw little service for the White Sox and in 1952 was traded to the St. Louis Browns. For the first time in the majors he was given the opportunity to play steadily but his .203 batting average failed to impress the Browns' management and he was traded back to the White Sox who immediately passed him on to the Athletics. In the latter deal, DeMaestri went to the A's along with Eddie Robinson and Ed McGee for Ferris Fain and Bob Wilson.
Unbeknown to DeMaestri at the time he had found a home with the lowly Athletics.
Eddie Joost, the veteran Philadelphia shortstop, was nearing the end of his career about the time DeMaestri arrived and as a result Joe played in 111 games in 1953 and 146 in 1954.
Despite the fact that he was getting a lot of experience, DeMaestri's batting average was skimpy and he was still far from being a polished shortstop. Then came the move to Kansas City and the arrival of Boudreau on the scene.
Oddly, once DeMaestri began to improve his defensive play, his hitting picked up. In both 1956 and 1957 he held his average around the .300 mark for about the first two and a half months of the season. He slumped the last half of those seasons and wound up batting .233 and .245, respectively, but it was exhaustion rather than a lack of ability that brought on the slumps.
DeMaestri is a slender individual and he always loses weight during the heat of the summer. As the weight falls off he loses some of his strength and his batting average declines.
This year DeMaestri reported for spring training weighing 185 pounds, which is ten pounds more than his normal weight. By getting his poundage up now he hopes that he will be able to remain stronger during the summer.
DeMaestri also believes that he will be able to keep his weight up now that he is getting older (he was 29 last December).
'It used to be that I could put on five pounds,' Joe said, 'and then lose it in one afternoon of digging flowers in the back yard. I could usually get the weight on all right, but I could never keep it there. Last winter, however, I was able to keep my weight up better than I ever had before so I'm hoping that maybe I won't drop it so fast this summer.'
Although his final season average doesn't show it, DeMaestri is convinced that he is a much better hitter now than he was two or three years ago.
'The big difference now is confidence,' he explained. 'I'm relaxed at the plate. I'm not pressing like I was in the days when I didn't know whether I had a job.'
Craft is of the opinion that DeMaestri is a better hitter than his average indicates because he can do many things at the plate. He is perhaps the best bunter on the club, he is a good hit-and-run man and he hits to all fields.
Although DeMaestri is quite happy with the Athletics he has one complaint. It concerns the staggering number of second basemen he has had to play with in the last three years.
Since the transfer of the club to Kansas City the Athletics have had no less than ten second basemen. The first one was Pete Suder. He was followed by Spook Jacobs, Jim Finigan, Hector Lopez, Cletis Boyer, Vic Power, Milt Graff, Mike Baxes, Billy Hunter and Billy Martin.
In short, just about anyone with a trace of aptitude has been tried at second by the Athletics and the search is still going on. This year Baxes, Graff and Hunter are the best candidates.
DeMaestri's complaints about the frequent changes in second basemen stem from the fact that every man plays the position a little differently and that it takes time for the shortstop to become accustomed to his style of play.
'Of those ten players not one of them makes the throw alike on the double play,' DeMaestri said with a wry smile. 'I have to play at least 12 games with a man before I feel that I can work smoothly with him. Maybe some shortstops can do it faster but I haven't been able to. It seems that just about the time I'm really getting used to a player then they move him or get rid of him.'
DeMaestri rates Phil Rizzuto the greatest shortstop he has ever seen.
'When I came up  Boudreau was just about at the end of his career so I really couldn't compare him with Rizzuto but Phil is No. 1 in my book. He could do everything. Even when his arm was gone he got the ball away so quick that he was still tops. You'd think you were going to beat him on a play, but he always got the ball there just ahead of you.'
DeMaestri plays his position more in the manner of Boudreau than Rizzuto and is a credit to his teacher. He is  highly popular with the Kansas City fans and Craft is of the opinion that DeMaestri should be on his way to his finest season yet in the majors."

-Joe McGuff (Baseball Digest, May 1958)

1959
April 15: Beaned by Barry Latman of White Sox.
April 30: Gets three hits in 4-3 win over Orioles.
May 23: Gets double and two singles as A's rout White Sox.
June 1: Beats White Sox on home run, triple and two RBIs.
June 11: Gets three hits as A's down Yankees, 9-5.
June 27: Two RBIs on double and sacrifice fly in 5-4 win over Senators.
July 2: Hits home run and single in 6-4 win over Indians.
Comment: "A solid player, in a quiet way."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1960

"This is Joe DeMaestri's tenth year in the American League. He came up with the White Sox and was traded to the old Browns, then on to the Athletics. He was an 'A' for enough years that he remembers Philadelphia.
Acquired in the big mid-winter deal with Kansas City that also brought Roger Maris and Kent Hadley to the Yankees to the Yankees, Joe will give the club a stronger infield 'bench.' For the last seven years, he was the A's regular shortstop, but his lifetime .237 batting average probably means he'll see utility service here."

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

Joseph Paul DeMaestri (SS)     #20
Born December 9, 1928 in San Francisco, California, resides in San Anselmo, California. Height: 6-0, weight: 180. Bats right, throws right. Married and father of two girls, Christine (8) and Donna (1), and one boy, Joseph Paul Jr. (6).

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

"The Yankees have a Joe D. in their lineup again. No, it's not the old Yankee Clipper, but veteran infielder Joe DeMaestri, who was acquired in the Roger Maris trade during the winter. Like the other Joe D., DeMaestri hails from San Francisco.
He broke into Organized Ball in 1947, playing for both San Jose and El Paso that year. Following one-year stays with San Jose, Oneonta and Birmingham, Joe made the big leagues with the 1951 Chicago White Sox. As a utility infielder he saw action in 56 games and batted only .203.
The old St. Louis Browns used him in 81 contests the following year and dealt him off to the Philadelphia Athletics in 1953. DeMaestri remained with the Athletics (both in Philly and Kansas City) until this season. He won the regular shortstopping job there and batted between .219 and .255 during those years. A fine glove man, Joe has fair power, having averaged over seven homers a year with the A's.
In 1,042 American League contests, DeMaestri's batting average is .237. His .980 fielding average led A.L. shortstops in both 1957 and 1958."

-New York Yankees 1960 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)


Thursday, March 25, 2021

1960 Profile: Bobby Richardson

"The best club performance in 1959 was turned in by Bobby Richardson, clever infielder who played third base, shortstop and second base. A late-season surge gave him a .301 figure, the only Yankee to reach .300.
Bobby, who was with the team briefly in 1955 and '56, became a fixture in '57. He started as a pro with Norfolk in 1953, moving to Olean, Binghamton, Denver and Richmond.
Another spray hitter, Bobby is also one of the classiest fielders in the game. Born in Sumter, South Carolina, Bobby is 24."

-Don Schiffer, 1960 Mutual Baseball Annual

1959
April 15: Beats Orioles, 2-1, with two-run double in 9th.
July 14: Beats Indians, 1-0, with RBI single in 2nd.
July 19: Gets three hits in 6-4 win over White Sox.
July 25: Hits home run and two singles in 9-8 win over Tigers.
August 1: Added to American League All-Stars for second game.
August 21: Gets double and two singles in 9-7 victory over A's.
September 3: Gets three hits and three RBIs in rout of Senators.
September 11: Four RBIs on home run and three singles in 9-3 win over Tigers.
September 16: Hits single to start rally that beats White Sox.
September 19: Beats Red Sox, 3-1, on three-run double in fifth.
September 23: Gets three hits, beats Senators in ninth, 5-4.
Comment: "Once settled down at second base, Richardson turned in a top-flight job. A great fielder, he at last seems to have it made."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1960

"Bobby Richardson really came into his own in 1959. Early in the season he was tried at shortstop but got another chance at second base when Gil McDougald was injured. He hasn't relinquished it since.
A fine glove man, quick on the double play, the little man became a strong man with the bat last year. He was the Yanks' only .300 hitter, reaching .301 on the last day of the season.
A native of Sumter, S.C., Bob did regular radio sportscasting last winter. Youth and religious work are among his other important activities, but Bob intends to make a success of his Yankee baseball career. He appears headed in that direction."

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

Robert Clinton Richardson Jr. (2B)     #1
Born August 19, 1935 in Sumter, South Carolina where he resides. Height: 5-9, weight: 170. Bats right, throws right. Married and father of two boys, Robert Clinton III (2) and Ronald Owens (1).

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

"Little (5'9") Bobby Richardson holds the distinction of being the only Yankee regular to reach the .300 mark last season. His .301 batting mark, the best of his career- three full seasons- as a big leaguer, has proved to those that doubted it that Bobby can hit major league pitching.
Richardson broke into Organized Ball in 1953, dividing the season between Norfolk and Olean. His .412 batting average in 32 games with the Pennsylvania-Ontario-New York League club earned him a berth with Binghamton of the Class A Eastern League the following spring.
Richardson hit a convincing .310 for the Triplets and was elevated to the Triple A Denver Bears in 1955. He had a .296 mark in the American Association when he got the call to report to the Stadium.
Bobby, who is one of the finest glove men in the business, batted only .154 in 11 games with the Yankees and was sent to Richmond for the balance of the campaign.
In 1956, playing for the Bears again, Richardson batted a solid .328 with 30 doubles, 12 triples, 10 homers, plus 73 runs batted in. That's pretty fair slugging for a 166-pounder.
Bobby made the Yankees 'for keeps' in 1957. In 97 games he batted .256. The following year, in 73 contests, his average dropped nine points.
However, last season, installed as a regular (134 games), he found his batting eye and in addition to hitting .301, collected the first two home runs of his big league career. He also had 18 doubles and six triples while being used primarily as the lead-off man.
Bobby, who'll be 25 in August, lives in his native town of Sumter, South Carolina, with his wife and two sons."

-New York Yankees 1960 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

"Bobby Richardson was the only Yankee to hit .300 a year ago. This year his average fell off 50 points, but Bob continued to do a cracker-jack job around second base and got his share of important hits.
He has been in two previous World Series, but only as a utility man. At 25, Richardson hopes to contribute to the Yankee cause in this, the New Yorkers' silver anniversary World Series."

-1960 World Series Official Souvenir Program

Monday, March 22, 2021

1960 Profile: Tony Kubek

"Perhaps the most versatile of all is Tony Kubek, who is at home in the infield or the outfield. He hits to all fields, spraying most of his blows on a line.
Rookie of the Year in 1957 when he hit .297 and drove two homers in one Series game, Tony collected a season high of six homers in '59. After a slow start last year, he closed with .279, which happens to be his lifetime average.
Born in Milwaukee, he served at Owensboro, Quincy and Denver. Fast and aggressive, Tony, at 23, has a fine career in front of him. "

-Don Schiffer, 1960 Mutual Baseball Annual

1959
April 21: Gets three hits in 11-4 win over Senators.
April 29: Collapses in dizzy spell; rests awhile.
May 6: Hits home run and single in 7-4 win over A's.
May 30: Five RBIs on four hits in 11-0 rout of Senators.
June 5: Gets four hits in 11-2 rout of Indians.
June 13: Hits two-run homer in 6-4 win over Tigers.
July 3: Two RBIs on three hits in 4-3 win over Senators.
July 4: Gets eight hits in split with Senators.
July 11: Hits home run, triple and double in 8-4 loss to Red Sox.
July 30: Back after lay-up with shoulder injury.
August 1: Added to American League All-Stars for second game.
August 18: Hits triple and two singles in 5-3 win over Tigers.
August 21: Hits triple and two singles in 9-7 victory over A's.
September 1: Gets three hits in 5-0 win over Orioles.
Comment: "One of the best young players. Kubek would benefit from settling down at one position but his versatility adds to his value."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1960

"Although a veteran of three full major league seasons, young Tony Kubek (he's only 23) appears established as the Yankee shortstop. This, despite the fact that Tony has performed at every position on the club except pitcher and catcher. He does a more than acceptable job in the outfield as well as in the infield. Last season he hit .279, which also is his lifetime big league mark. Gradually, Tony is showing increasing power and gives promise of developing into a really strong hitter.
He was named the American League Rookie of the Year in 1957 and hit two World Series homers in a game that fall in Milwaukee. Kubek's goal this year is to help the Yankees get back into the World Series. A good season from him will go a long way toward assuring that goal."

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

Anthony Christopher Kubek (SS)     #10
Born October 12, 1936 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where he resides. Height: 6-3, weight: 191. Bats left, throws right.

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

"Tony Kubek is one of the most versatile players in the majors, being able to play second, short, third or the outfield.
The 6'3" Milwaukee youngster captured the American League Rookie of the Year award in 1957 when he hit .297 for the Yankees.
During his three seasons in the minors, Kubek never hit below .331 and his three seasons in the majors show him with a .279 mark, the average he hit for last summer. Just 23 years old, he is not a slugger, but he has had at least 21 doubles every season and had a total of 38 extra-base hits in 1959.
Tony had two homers against Milwaukee in the World Series game of October 5, 1957. Tony's dad was a minor league ball player in the American Association.
An Army veteran (having done a six-month stretch during the winter of 1958-59), Tony is willing to play wherever Casey Stengel can utilize him. With youth, determination and ability, Kubek looks like he'll be a Yankee for a long time."

-New York Yankees 1960 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

TWO GLOVES HAS HE
"The Yankees' Tony Kubek, who has played every position except pitcher and catcher during three and one-half seasons with the Yankees, uses a one-finger mitt for the outfield and a different one when he works the infield.
The glove he uses at shortstop is of firm, more open-faced construction than the one in the outfield.
'In the infield, the ball comes at you faster,' Kubek explained. 'You've got to get out of the pocket faster. You don't have much time to fish around for it.
'When you're chasing flies in the outfield, it's a different story. Out there, you run a lot more and it's easier to run when you can clench your first inside the glove. So I have a floppier glove for the outfield, where most of the catchers are made up in the webbing.' "

-Lou Hatter, Baltimore Sun (Baseball Digest, August 1960)

"Shortstop Tony Kubek more than doubled his previous high homer output, posted his top RBI season and generally had a fine year as the Yankee shortstop. He played shortstop throughout 1960, only going to the outfield on a few occasions. He played seven positions for the Yankees in past years.
The 24-year-old infielder from Milwaukee was the American League Rookie of the Year in 1957 and this is his third World Series."

-1960 World Series Official Souvenir Program

Saturday, March 20, 2021

1960 Profile: Gil McDougald

Gil McDougald of the Yankees: "I don't mind all those stories about the Yankees wanting to trade me. And I don't think my 1959 record had anything to do with those trade rumors. I've heard them practically every year since I became a Yankee, it seems. In a way, it's flattering that so many other clubs are interested in getting me. And even more flattering is the fact that the Yanks put so high a price on me that the other clubs backed off."

-Baseball Digest, March 1960

1959
April 18: Hit on knuckles against Red Sox, out awhile.
May 6: Hits two doubles in 7-4 victory over A's.
May 24: Gets three hits in 9-0 rout of Orioles.
June 4: Gets two home runs and single in 14-3 rout of Tigers.
June 5: Hits home run and double as Yanks down Indians, 11-2.
June 23: Hits two-run homer in 10-2 victory over A's.
June 26: Hits home run, double and single in 8-4 win over White Sox.
July 1: Hits home run in 4-0 victory over Orioles.
July 22: Comes down with virus, out a spell.
August 9: Beats A's, 4-3, with single in 14th.
September 11: Gets triple and two singles in 9-3 rout of Tigers.
Comment: "McDougald's second straight subpar year is a cause for worry. A solid three-position fielder and usually a big run-producer, he has been a Yankee mainstay."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1960

"Last season was an 'off' year for popular Gil McDougald. Like Bill Skowron, Gil was physically below par in 1959. This spring he reported in good condition and determined to win back a regular infield job. His early work was convincing.
When right Gil is quite a ball player. He's played in seven World Series, is one of only six players ever to hit a grand slam homer in Series competition and the only rookie ever to accomplish the feat. He has played second, third and short for the Yankees in Series play; was also selected to all three positions on American League All-Star teams.
This is his tenth season as a Yankee and Gil hopes it will be one of his best."

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

Gilbert James McDougald (IF)     #12
Born May 19, 1928 in San Francisco, California, resides in Tenafly, NJ. Height: 6-1, weight: 178. Bats right, throws right. Married and the father of two girls, Christine (11) and Denise (7), and two boys, Gil Jr. (10) and Ted (9).

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

"San Francisco has sent many stars to the Stadium- Ping Bodie, Tony Lazzeri, Frank Crosetti, Joe DiMaggio- but it's doubtful if any have been more valuable to the club than Gil McDougald.
The 32-year-old infielder, now in his tenth season with the Bombers, is the only player in major league history to have been named to the All-Star team at three different positions. Gil was selected as a second baseman in 1952 and 1958, as a shortstop in 1956 and 1957, and as a third baseman in 1959.
Gil had three seasons of minor league experience before coming up to the Yankees in 1951. He batted .336 or better in each of these seasons and hit the long ball with regularity.
The great Rogers Hornsby, who managed Gil at Beaumont of the Texas League in 1950, was one of his biggest supporters and felt that McDougland was a big leaguer. He was one of the few who felt that Gil's odd batting stance would hold up against big-time hurling.
McDougald batted .306 in his rookie year and drove in six runs in one inning on May 3 of that year to tie a major league mark.
In his nine years with New York, Gil has a lifetime average of .276 and has slugged out 104 homers, 171 doubles and 47 triples. His nine three-baggers in '57 were the American League high.
McDougald has played in seven World Series and collected 40 hits, including seven home runs, in the post season classic. He has also taken part in four All-Star Games. Gil's grand slammer in the '51 series is the only one ever hit by a rookie.
The McDougalds, Gil, his wife and four youngsters, are year-round residents of Tenafly, N.J."

-New York Yankees 1960 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

"In his tenth year as a Yankee, Gil McDougald again played in more than 100 games, though he had fewer at-bats than in any of his previous seasons. Gil was the real 'Handy Andy' of the infield, playing second, short and third, as well as pinch-hitting. This is his eighth season with the Yanks and he has played all three positions in World Series competition and also has been selected as an All-Star at short, second and third."

-1960 World Series Official Souvenir Program

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

1960 Profile: Bill Skowron

1960 AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL-STAR
"Bill (Moose) Skowron is one of the few active players who has a better than .300-lifetime figure. Bill is a blaster who hits with power to all fields and has been a Yankee regular for six years. He prepped at Binghamton, Norfolk and Kansas City (then in the American Association) before coming to Yankee Stadium in 1954.
Last season was one the husky first baseman would rather forget. Back injuries and a broken wrist permitted him to appear in only 74 games. But he came up with 15 homers and a .298 average.
Bill, who is 29 and was born in Chicago, is one of six players to hit a grand slam homer in a World Series."

-Don Schiffer, 1960 Mutual Baseball Annual

1959
April 14: Recovered from back injury, hits grand slam, double and single for five RBIs in 13-3 rout of Orioles.
April 18: Four RBIs on home run, triple and single in rout of Red Sox.
April 22: Beats Senators, 1-0, with home run in 14th.
May 5: Beats A's, 3-2, with sacrifice fly in 10th.
May 7: Injures right thigh in exhibition at Los Angeles.
May 17: His pinch single helps beat A's, 3-2.
May 23: Three RBIs on home run and single in rout of Orioles.
May 27: Beats Red Sox, 3-2, with two-run homer in 8th.
May 29: Beats Orioles, 5-2, with two-run single in 5th.
May 31: Beats Senators, 3-0, with three-run homer in 9th.
June 14: Hits home run in each game of sweep by Tigers.
June 20: Five RBIs on two home runs and triple in rout of Indians.
June 21: Hits home run in each game of sweep by Indians.
June 22: Hits home run in fourth straight game in win over A's.
June 27: Named to start at first for American League All-Stars.
July 9: Gets triple and single in win over Red Sox.
July 11: Re-injures back against Red Sox.
July 25: Returns to lineup against Tigers. Breaks left wrist in collision with Coot Veal. Out for season.
Comment: "Skowron is capable of tearing the league apart if he ever manages to stay sound. He's an outstanding hitter with devastating power, but is injury prone."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1960

"'It's about Moose got a good break!' That's what most everyone was saying in spring training this year. 
Injuries have plagued Bill Skowron's career. The affable slugging first baseman has had rough going during most of his limited big league tenure. Pulled muscles, then a back injury just before the 1957 World Series, the same injuries last year, culminated by a broken wrist when hit by a base runner in Detroit have kept Moose on the bench much of the time.
When he went out of the lineup for good last July, Bill was leading the club in RBIs, was near the tops in batting and homers. Carefully supervised in his convalescence at Mayo Clinic last winter, Skowron was a determined athlete this spring. A full season from Skowron will have Manager Casey Stengel smiling in October ... not to mention the Moose himself."

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

William Joseph Skowron (1B)     #14
Born December 18, 1930 in Chicago, Illinois, resides in Hillsdale, N.J. Height: 6-0, weight: 191. Bats right, throws right. Married and father of two boys, Gregory (6) and  Stephen (3).

-The New York Yankees Official 1960 Yearbook

"Signed off the campus of Purdue University, where he played football and baseball, Bill Skowron has been with the Yankee organization throughout his career.
Originally an outfielder and third sacker, Moose opened the 1951 season at Binghamton, and after 21 games was sent to Norfolk where he won the Piedmont League batting title with a .334 mark.
Bill advanced to Kansas City of the American Association in 1952 and hit .341 while leading the loop in home runs (31) and runs batted (134).
A second good year with A.A. Blues bought the Chicago-born slugger to the Bronx. Platooned at first base, with Joe Collins, Skowron hit a rousing .340 in 87 games in his freshman campaign.
In 1955, playing in 108 contests, he posted a .319 mark. As a regular in '56, Skowron had 23 homers, 90 RBIs and a .308 mark, pretty good for the ex-Boilermaker shortstop.
In 1957 and 1958 he had marks of .304 and .273. Last season, when he was out for half the year, Bill hit .298 but his 84 hits in 74 tilts included 15 homers, 13 doubles and five triples.
Injuries have prevented the six-foot, 190-pound righty from reaching his full potential. A bad back, torn thigh muscle and broken wrist have been among his ails since joining the Yankees.
Bill now makes his home in Hillsdale, N.J., with Mrs. Skowron and their two children. He has a business in New Jersey and lives there year round.
An accident-free Skowron could enhance the Yankee pennant chances in 1960."

-New York Yankees 1960 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

"Before the season started, experts were saying that any comeback by the Yankees in 1960 would depend on the return to duty of big Bill 'Moose' Skowron. Well, Moose beat the injury jinx that has haunted his Yankee career and recorded one of his best big league seasons. He hit better than his lifetime average of .303, topped his previous home run high and about equaled his personal high RBI total."

-1960 World Series Official Souvenir Program

1962 Yankees Yearbook Roster, Taxi Squad and Prospects

ROSTER Manager: Ralph Houk 35 First Base and Batting Coach: Wally Moses 36 Third Base and Infield Coach: Frankie Crosetti 2 Pitching and Ben...