Friday, December 31, 2021

1961 Profile: Tony Kubek

1961 AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL-STAR

"Kubek is a fancy-fielding shortstop who can move to third, second or the outfield and do a marvelous defensive job. He has a quick pair of hands and keen eyes when at the plate. He can punch or pull and is capable of chipping in with the long ball.
Born in Milwaukee, Kubek had three sensational minor league years, hitting .344 as a 17-year-old prodigy at Owensboro. He was American League Rookie of the Year in 1957, his best season of four for batting (.297). Kubek hit .333 in the '60 Series after a .273 season average, but will always be remembered for his hard-luck role in the Series when a ground ball struck him in the throat and enabled the Pirates to take the verdict."

Don Schiffer, The Major League Baseball Handbook 1961

WILL TONY KUBEK MAKE THIS HIS BIG YEAR?
Yankee Shortstop Ripe To Realize Rookie Promise
"The season ahead is an important one for the proud New York Yankees, the beginning of Ralph Houk's regime after an era of brilliant prosperity under Casey Stengel.
It could- in fact, should- also be the year Tony Kubek makes it ... BIG.
This may very well be the season 1958 was to have been, and then 1959 and 1960, for the tall blond youngster from Milwaukee. There seems to be no reason why he should not finally attain the stature of an established major league star and there are plenty of indications that he will.
Although he was one of Stengel's most valuable players, and certainly his most versatile performer, for the past four years, authentic stardom has somehow eluded Kubek. He has never quite managed to catch up with and fill out the shadow of greatness he cast before him when he was chosen the American League's outstanding rookie in 1957. It is no simple matter to specify in precisely what respects he has failed to reach his accredited potential. Admittedly, he has never quite become the .300 hitter everybody thinks he should and eventually will be. His batting average has never approached within 15 points of the .297 figure that represented his credential as a bright young star as he began his sophomore season.
It is even more difficult to explain why the husky youngster with the extravagant equipment and the lifetime ambition to be a big league star has not succeeded more spectacularly. There has been the suspicion, perhaps most importantly in his own determined young mind, that he has been handicapped by the shifting he has done in Stengel's kaleidoscopic defense. He has played more or less regularly at both shortstop and in left field but he has also seen service in center field and at all three bases. He has played all six positions with consummate skill but somehow without establishing himself as a star of the first magnitude at any of them and without realizing his full potential at the plate.
'I know where he can play- I'm just trying to find out if there's any place he can't,' Stengel once explained unsatisfactorily. Casey then spoke for quite a few baseball men, Yankees and others, when he added:
'You might truly say that this young man's long range prospects of continued employment around here appear to me to be highly favorable. He is a solid ball player with no weaknesses and no bad habits, who can make the hard play as well as handle the routine chance. He is like money in my bank in California, which is a hard thing to beat.'
Maybe so, but somehow the Yankees haven't quite realized the dividends that might be expected from a talent so diversified and consistent as Kubek's.
There were two opinions about Tony when he came up from Denver, a youngster just turned 20, in the spring of 1957. He brought with him a .331 batting average that took on added luster when it was discovered that he had played most of the season with a hairline fracture across his instep.
There was one school of thought that held that this 190-pound lad, who towered six feet two inches above the ground with a crew haircut, was too big to be a shortstop. There was another that held that he should be taught to pull the ball to capitalize on his power and perhaps become a home run slugger.
Both notions soon were either discouraged by the rookie himself or abandoned by his superiors. He proved that he had the glove, the range and the arm to play shortstop and he impressed his coaches, just as he had his own father years before, as too good a natural hitter to fool around with.
Kubek played 50 games in the outfield, 41 at shortstop, 38 at third base and one at second in his first year with the Yankees. And he hit a whopping .297. Since there is practically no more valuable commodity in baseball than a hard-hitting shortstop, Kubek was used at that position in 134 games in 1958. He proved adequate, at the very least, in the field, but his batting average shrank to .265, with only two home runs.
The following season he appeared in the outfield in 53 games and in the infield in 85, including 67 at shortstop. He restored his batting average to a respectable .279 with consistent, timely and occasionally long range hitting, but not quite enough of any variety to earn his way without his glove. He simply got the job done, establishing himself as an even better outfielder than shortstop if only because there was less demand on his talents, and proving himself a hard and daring base runner who could outfoot any of the Yankees except Mickey Mantle.
Then, last summer, he settled for .273 in 136 games at short and only 29 in left field. Batting left-handed, he still was rarely pulling the ball but hitting it with authority to right and center and with enough power to manufacture 14 home runs, three more than he had hit in his three previous seasons. Most important to himself, he drove in a personal big league high of 62 runs. Kubek happens to think a hitter's worth is best reckoned by the part he plays in getting runs for his team, whether it consists of getting on base, advancing runners or driving in runs.
Kubek, now 24, finds himself not at any crossroads of an established major league career, but on the threshold of stardom. This is the year he can burgeon into a .300 hitter and become the Yankees' regular shortstop until further notice. The quiet but determined young man is among those who think so on the former score and fervently hopes so on the latter.
'I haven't talked with Ralph Houk but from what I've read in the papers, he's planning to use me at shortstop,' Kubek said between hunting trips from his winter home in Milwaukee. He spent the winter trying his hand at promotion work for an insurance company with enough time off for hunting to bag a four-point buck in the woods of northeastern Wisconsin. His weight never has been a problem and he passes up any winter activity that might prove physically hazardous, just as he plays a minimum of golf during the summer because of his dedication to baseball.
'I've always liked shortstop best, ever since I gave up pitching in high school so I could play every game,' Kubek said. 'But I'd rather play the outfield regularly than shift around. I think changing positions affects my batting. I seem to be sharper, more in the ball game, when I'm playing short. Perhaps playing the outfield gives you too much chance to relax and makes it more difficult to concentrate when you get to bat.
'I don't care where I hit in the batting order- I never have. Helping in the run production is the most important thing. I try to do the things a hitter has to do in the different situations- get on base, move the runners along or bring them in, or try for the long ball.
'But hitting isn't something you can turn off and on, like a water faucet.  Not with me, anyhow. I know I do better when I'm in there every day, and at the same position. You get into the swing and the feel of things more. Maybe it's just a matter of confidence. That can be important, too.'
With Gil McDougald retired and Bobby Richardson likely to be a fixture at second base as a result of his World Series heroics, Kubek has perhaps his best chance to start the season as the Yankees' shortstop.
'There's DeMaestri and Brickell, in addition to Richardson and Cletis Boyer,' Kubek pointed out, 'but, then, there's always somebody. You can't expect to have it any other way.'
Lest Kubek's dissatisfaction with alternating between the infield and outfield be misconstrued and he be branded some kind of malcontent, it should be made plain that Tony never wanted to be anything but a Yankee and that hasn't ever changed since donning a New York uniform for the first time. He not only quit pitching as a kid as a precaution against hurting his arm, as his father had done while playing Triple-A ball with the Milwaukee Brewers [American Association] before Tony, Jr., was born; he also gave up football and basketball in high school for fear of aggravating a knee injury and he refused to compete in the state high school track meet after setting a hurdles record in practice because he had once broken his arm jumping. He could have been an outstanding end or back in football, possibly big-time college material, but that would have interfered with baseball.
Baseball has been Tony's life almost since birth. His father had retired from the game shortly before he was born because a sore arm cost him a chance as an outfielder with the St. Louis Browns. Instead, Anthony Christopher Kubek, Sr., married a young woman from Milwaukee's South Side and went to work for the post office.
Young Tony was born in the two-story house that is still the family home and found himself with no brothers but with a ready-made family of playmates. His young mother had taken over her three orphaned younger brothers. They helped his father make sure that little Tony would learn to play baseball. They themselves were husky youngsters and good athletes. Johnny Oleniczik got as far as Buffalo as a catcher and Roman had a trial with the Chicago White Sox as an infielder. Eddie played varsity basketball at Marquette University and baseball on the Milwaukee sand lots.
'I encouraged Tony to bat left-handed but I never changed his style much otherwise,' the senior Kubek says. 'He still could be a switch hitter, if he wanted to, but he's better off hitting left-handed. He learned to keep his eye on the ball and guard the plate playing cork ball in the streets. He tagged along after me when I  played industrial league ball until he got tired of chasing fouls and earned the chance to play himself.'
By the time Tony finished high school in Bay View, the Braves had moved to town from Milwaukee, but by then his father had taken him to see the Yankees play in Chicago and his mind was made up. It wasn't easy to change, either then or now. He wanted to be a Yankee. The help and encouragement he got from young gentlemen like Jerry Coleman and Phil Rizzuto when he worked out with the world champions at Comiskey Park cost the other big league clubs their last chance of signing him. When the Yankees offered him a contract and said they would meet the offers of the Braves and half a dozen other clubs, he asked only $3,000 because a larger bonus would have meant sitting on the bench. Tony was impatient to get started on his baseball career.
He needed only one season at Owensboro, one at Quincy and two at Denver to reach the maturity, gain the experience and acquire the special skills that made him a big leaguer.
He has these skills now, without weaknesses to detract from them or bad personal habits to dull them. There seems no doubt that he will continue to improve and no limit to how far he can go. The only question is what has held him back, if this actually has been a case of arrested development.
He has a new measure of determination, too, and increased confidence.
Typically, he doesn't say much. But he has an idea this is going to be his year.
His BIG year."

-Cleon Walfoort (Baseball Digest, April 1961)

1960
April 24: Hits two home runs in win over Orioles.
May 23: Hits two doubles for two RBIs in win over A's.
June 7: Hits two-run double in 5-2 win over Chisox.
June 24: Five RBIs on two home runs and single in win over Indians.
June 29: Hits two doubles and single in rout of A's.
July 7: Decides win over Orioles with sacrifice fly.
July 19: Gets four hits in 13-11 win over Indians.
July 28: Beats Indians, 4-2, with two-run homer.
August 10: Three RBIs on single and sacrifice fly in win over Chisox.
August 24: Beats Chisox, 3-2, with home run in 7th.
September 5: Gets four hits in 3-2 win over Bosox.
September 18: Hits home run and decisive sacrifice fly in sweep of key doubleheader with Orioles.
September 30: His home run against Red Sox gives Yankees American League mark.
Comment: "A topflight player, Kubek had his best year for power and improved at short. His versatility is a big asset."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1961

"Though he's only 24 years old, Tony Kubek is in his fourth season as the regular Yankee shortstop. The big blond from Milwaukee has played every infield and outfield position for the Yankees, but Manager Ralph Houk is determined to leave him at shortstop this season.
In 1957, Tony was the American League Rookie of the Year. While his average has never equaled his freshman year's .297, he has been developing home run and RBI power.
Manager Houk, who had Tony at Denver in 1956, believes Kubek has great value as an all-around player. 'He's still improving in all departments and has not yet reached his potential,' said Houk early this spring.
Tony, whose father played in the American Association, has set his goals for 1961 and they include a .300 batting average, 75 RBIs and about 20 homers ... and, of course, the American League pennant for the Yankees."

-The New York Yankees Official 1961 Yearbook

Anthony Christopher Kubek (SS)     #10
Born October 12, 1936, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where he resides. Height: 6-3, weight: 190. Bats left, throws right.

-The New York Yankees Official 1961 Yearbook

"One of the most versatile players in the majors, Tony Kubek has played second, short, third and the three outfield positions in his four-year career with the American League champs. The 24-year-old Milwaukee bachelor, whose dad was once a minor leaguer, found a home as Yankee shortstop, after moving around from spot to spot during his first three years in the Bronx.
Tony broke into Organized Ball with Owensboro in 1954. He batted .344 for the Kitty Leaguers and advanced to  Quincy of the Three Eye League in '55. A .334 average (including 53 extra-base hits) pushed him to the Triple A Denver Bears in '56. The 6' 3" left-handed swinger's .331 mark in the American Association earned him a shot with the Bombers.
Kubek was selected Rookie of the Year by the Sporting News [and by the Baseball Writers' Association of America] following a .297 season. He topped off his freshman campaign with eight hits, including a pair of homers (in one game) against the Milwaukee Braves in the 1957 World Series.
Never the slugger, Tony hit 14 circuit blows last summer for a personal high in big-league competition. He also drove out 25 doubles and three triples and led the club with 12 successful sacrifices. The strong-armed youth drove in 62 runs, his big league high.
The injury he suffered in last fall's post season classic (hit in the throat by a bad-hop grounder) gave the hot-stove leaguers plenty of fuel this past winter. Would the Yankees have won the Series had Tony not had this accident?
An Army veteran (via the six-month plan during the winter of 1958-59), Tony is also an All-Star Game veteran, playing in 1959 and 1960.
Ralph Houk's shortstop problem is solved for many years to come, and he has the best 'second string' outfielder in the loop."

-New York Yankees 1961 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

"Tony Kubek's one of the most under-publicized infielders in the game."

-Joe DiMaggio (Baseball Digest, June 1961)

"Though he is only 24 years old, Tony Kubek is in his fifth season as a Yankee regular. The big 6-3, 190-pound blond from Milwaukee has played every infield and outfield position for the Yankees, but Manager Ralph Houk is determined to leave him at shortstop. Tony was the American League's All-Star shortstop this summer and the club's regular No. 2 hitter.
In 1957 Tony was American League Rookie of the Year. Though his average has never equaled his freshman year's .297, he has been developing home run and RBI power. Manager Houk, who had Tony at Denver in 1956, believes Kubek has great value as an all-around player. 'He's still improving in all departments and has not yet reached his potential,' says Houk.
Kubek has been in three World Series with the Yankees and in the 1959 All-Star Game. His father played in the American Association."

-1961 World Series Official Souvenir Program

Friday, December 24, 2021

1961 Profile: Bill Skowron

1961 AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL-STAR

"Skowron is a man of muscle who has hit better than .300 lifetime after six seasons. He reached .309 in 1960, the fourth-best mark in the circuit, hit 26 homers, smashed 34 doubles, second best in the American League, and drove home 91 runs. Skowron is a good fielder at first base who was unduly criticized for attempting a routine force play that backfired in the fourth game of the Series
Born in Chicago, Skowron was a top schoolboy athlete and had a football scholarship at Purdue. He spent three years in the minors before coming to the Stadium to stay in 1954. He has been injury-prone and must wear a special back brace when playing."

-Don Schiffer, The Major League Baseball Handbook 1961

1960
April 19: Gets four hits in 8-4 win over Bosox.
April 21: Beats Bosox, 4-0, with three-run homer.
May 7: Beats A's, 4-1, with RBI single, forced run.
May 13: Beats Nats with two-run homer double in 8th.
June 7: Hits two-run double in 5-2 win over Chisox.
June 13: Four RBIs on home run and sacrifice fly in 8-4 win over Nats.
June 18: Four RBIs on home run, double and single in win over Chisox.
June 30: Hits two home runs in 10-3 rout of A's.
July 2: Named to American League All-Star team.
July 10: Hits two home runs and single in loss to Red Sox.
July 19: Five RBIs on two home runs and double in win over Indians.
July 22: Hits two-run homer, triple and single in loss to Chisox.
July 23: Hits home run and two singles in 5-3 win over Chisox.
August 7: Beats A's, 3-2, with two-run homer.
August 10: His home run settles 6-0 win over Chisox.
September 20: Beats Nats with two-run homer in 11th.
September 23: Gets four hits in win over Red Sox.
Comment: "Skowron stayed sound and had his best all-around year. He's a brutal hitter when in a groove."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1961

"Almost overnight Big Bill Skowron has become the 'dean' of the Yankee infield. At 30, Moose is the power man of the inner defense cordon with which the new Yankees hope to build another American League pennant winner.
In 1960, Moose played a full season for the first time with the Yankees. Injuries had hampered his career almost from the outset, but last year he was a regular and thus he boosted his personal batting highs in home runs, RBIs and total hits. In the losing World Series, Moose was one of several Yankee standouts. He pummeled Pirate pitching for a .375 average. In All-Star competition since 1957, Skowron has totaled six hits in 10 at-bats for a .600 mark. Another healthy year for the popular Skowron may well insure Manager Ralph Houk's first pennant.
In the off-season, Moose has been developing his post-baseball career in several business ventures and is a fine after-dinner speaker."

-The New York Yankees Official 1961 Yearbook

William Joseph Skowron (1B)     #14
Born December 18, 1930, in Chicago, Illinois, resides in Hillsdale, N.J. Height: 6-0, weight: 200. Bats right, throws right. 
Married and father of two boys, Gregory (7) and  Stephen (4).

-The New York Yankees Official 1961 Yearbook

"29-year-old Moose Skowron rebounded from his 1959 injuries to have one of his finest seasons with the Yankees and played a big role in nailing down the 1960 American League championship.
The six-foot, 200-pound slugger was signed by New York off the Purdue University campus in 1951. He played football and baseball for the Boilermakers and still holds the Big Ten batting record, having hit an astronomical .500 in 1950.
A native of Chicago, Bill was a shortstop in college and played third base and the outfield as a minor leaguer. He started his Organized Ball career with Binghamton of the Eastern League. He was sent down to Norfolk of the Piedmont loop after a few weeks and won the batting title with a .334 mark.
The Yankees moved him up to Kansas City of the American Association and Bill turned in two fine seasons in Triple A company. He was the AA's home run and RBI champ in 1952.
Platooned with Joe Collins, Skowron hit .340 in 87 American League contests in 1954. The rookie first sacker had 12 doubles, nine triples and seven homers as a part-time operator.
Bill 'slumped' to .319 in 1955, when he again shared the job in Casey Stengel's shuffle system. And, he was a .333 hitter in his first World Series.
As New York's regular first baseman, Skowron hit .308 and .304 in 1956 and 1957 respectively. He slammed out 23 four-baggers and drove in 90 runs in the former season and had 17 circuit clouts and 88 RBIs in '57. Injuries kept him from seeing more than token duty in the '57 Series.
Moose's average fell below .300 for the first time in 1958, but his big bat helped the Yankees to another pennant and World's Championship. His seven hits in the '58 Series included two home runs and he drove in seven runs.
A broken wrist and torn thigh muscle limited him to 74 games in 1959 and the loss of the Hillside, New Jersey, resident was a key factor in the Bombers' failure to win the AL crown.
Big Bill appeared in 146 contests last summer, hit .309 and reached his major league high in homers (26) and RBIs (91). His 34 doubles, also a personal high, were the second highest total in the Junior Circuit last season.
A repeat of his 1960 marks will make Ralph Houk's rookie season a pleasant one and the Moose is confident that he can do the job."

-New York Yankees 1961 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

"Almost overnight Big Bill Skowron has become the 'dean' of the Yankee infield. At 30, he is the power man of the inner defense cordon with which the new Yankees hope to continue their great dynasty. In 1961 the muscular first basemen topped his personal high in home runs and was a key man in driving home important runs in the Yankees' stretch drive to the pennant.
In 1960, the six-foot, 200-pound right-handed hitter played a full season for the Yankees for the first time. Injuries had hampered his career almost from the outset, but in 1960 he was a regular and thus boosted his personal batting highs in home runs, runs-batted-in and total hits. In the losing World Series, Bill was one of several Yankee standouts. He blasted Pirate pitching for a .375 mark.
He has been in five World Series with the Yanks and in four All-Star Games. Since 1957, in All-Star competition, Skowron has totaled six hits in ten at-bats for a .600 mark. In 24 previous World Series games, he has six homers (including a grand slam) and 20 RBIs.
Skowron lives with his wife and two sons in Hillsdale, New Jersey."

-1961 World Series Official Souvenir Program

Thursday, December 9, 2021

1961 Profile: Johnny Blanchard

"Injuries to Berra and Howard late in the season gave him a chance to prove his ability. Blanchard showed he was a capable catcher and a dangerous left-handed hitter and delivered many vital pinch safeties toward the close of the year.
Born in Minneapolis, Blanchard played one game for the Yanks in 1955 and then went to the minors until 1959. He was desired by many clubs during the winter trading season, but the Yanks consider him too valuable to deal away."

-Don Schiffer, The Major League Baseball Handbook 1961

1960
August 16: Beats Orioles, 1-0, with single in 4th.
September 7: Two RBIs on pinch hit in win over Chisox.
Comment: "Blanchard's late-season and Series showing suggests he may be the No. 1 Yankee receiver."

-Joe Sheehan, Dell Sports Magazine Baseball, April 1961

"John Blanchard has been on the verge of stardom for several seasons now. A long ball hitter, handsome John had an impressive minor league record, twice leading leagues in home run production.
When both Yogi Berra and Elston Howard were forced out of action late last summer, Blanchard got his big opportunity and he did not muff it. He did a good job behind the plate, was a timely hitter and helped spark the club in its late-season pennant drive. Blanch hit .455 in World Series competition and established himself as a full-fledged Yankee this year.
Like Howard and Berra, Blanchard can play first or the outfield if need be, giving the Yankees essential bench strength. Just 28, John Blanchard figures in the Yankee future."

-The New York Yankees Official 1961 Yearbook

John Edwin Blanchard (C-OF)     #38
Born February 26, 1933, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, resides in Golden Valley, Minnesota. Height: 6-1, weight: 197. Bats left, throws right. 
Married and father of one boy, Tim (1).

-The New York Yankees Official 1961 Yearbook

"Johnny Blanchard's minor league record made him one of the most sought after players on the Yankee roster during the past few seasons. He had two home run crowns and was a polished receiver.
But with Yogi Berra and Elston Howard on hand, the 6'1" Minneapolis born-and-raised slugger had to wait for his break. This came last season, his second with the Bronx Bombers, and John made the most of it.
Blanchard's 24 hits were good for 41 bases and he sent 14 tallies across the plate. Now that he has shown his ability to hit big-league pitching, he has moved into the number two catching job with Berra slated for 'considerable' outfield duty.
The Yankees signed Blanchard in 1951. After trying his hand in the outfield and at third, Bill Dickey took him in hand and converted him into a backstop.
John split the '51 season with Kansas City of the American Association and Binghamton of the Eastern League. In '52 he was the home run king (hitting 30) for Joplin of the Western Association while driving in 112 runs.
After two years in the Army, the 198-pound left-handed hitter returned to the diamond. He was the EL's home run leader with 34 in 1955 and moved up to Birmingham of the Southern Association the following season. After two good summers with Denver of the American Association, he reached the Bronx, appearing in 48 games for the Yankees in 1959.
Now 28 years old, Blanchard has finally arrived. In addition to being a fine receiver, John can patrol the outfield if necessary."

-New York Yankees 1961 Yearbook (Jay Publishing Co.)

"John Blanchard, 28-year-old catcher, has been on the verge of stardom for several seasons. A long-ball hitter, the handsome 6-1, 197-pounder had an impressive minor league record, twice leading leagues in home run production. He topped the league with Joplin in 1952 with 30 round-trippers and in 1955 had 34 for Binghamton.
When both Yogi Berra and Elston Howard were forced out of action late in 1960, Blanchard got his big opportunity and didn't muff it. He responded with a fine job behind the plate, was a timely hitter and helped spark the club in its late-season pennant drive. He hit .455 in the 1960 World Series and established himself as a full-fledged Yankee in 1961.
Like Howard and Berra, Blanchard can play first or the outfield if needed, giving the Yankees essential bench strength. He bats left-handed and throws right.
John and his wife live in Golden Valley, Minnesota, with their son."

-1961 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...