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Best of health to Elroy Face.
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I received an e-mail from Sirraffles this morning and it indicated Elroy Face, who is 96, was recently moved into a nursing home. Attached is a photo included in the e-mail. The best to you Mr. Face.
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Elroy and my Uncle Charley were best friends and neighbors in North Arlington, PA for many, many years. I spent a week with him back in 2010 or 2011. Interesting guy. Had some real disdain for Roberto Clemente. I think, not 100% sure, my uncle was the guy that hooked him up with the Expos in 1969.
(Charley Feeney covered the Pirates for the Pittsburgh Post Gazette from 66-86) |
Here is Clemente calling my uncle an “asshole” to famed asshole and scumbag, Dick Young.
https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%...e=true&aty=geo |
Face
didnt know he played for Expos
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The best to you Mr. Face.[/QUOTE]
+ 1 18-1 in 1959, which is also the year of my favorite card of him |
Nice post
Man that’s A lot of autographes |
I wish Mr. Face a peaceful transition to his new living arrangements, and good health. Brian, thanks for posting and for the jersey pic
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Regarding the Face-Clemente mutual non-admiration relationship, Face was not an outlier. Clemente is correctly honored for the noble circumstances of his death, but during his lifetime, he could be rather difficult, and he was not popular with many of his teammates, particularly his African-American teammates. Donn Clendenon was traded, and wound up with the 1969 Mets, specifically because he and Clemente loathed one another, and I believe even came to blows on more than one occasion.:eek:
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Isn’t it funny how we as fans only get the perception that we get of ball players from the media or elsewhere? We never get the inside scoop. I had a conversation online with a young lady who was the former girlfriend of a major leaguer and she told me that Ken Griffey Jr. and Tony Gwynn were not the nicest and most honorable of men. We’ll just leave it at that. She actually also said that Randy Johnson was the nicest guy in the world.
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I kinda always go back to the fact that it is nearly impossible to find a picture of Roberto Clemente with anything other than an intense, never smiling or joyous, look on his face. I guess he was just born with that type of personality?
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I worked in MLB for 7 years in the 80's and lets just say many of the players I looked up to as a kid shattered my illusions of them real fast. They are humans and could probably never live up to my 10 year old expectations but some of those guys really surprised me.
On the other hand, some of the guys I thought were turds were incredibly nice to me. |
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https://x.com/BSmile/status/1511712355373228036 |
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Clemente is one of my heroes for what he did outside of baseball. I believe the animosity between Face and Clemente began early and supposedly fought each other, according to the most recent biography about Roberto. Roy Face was interviewed for the book "We Played the Game." Face spoke highly of his teammates; however, while not saying anything negative about Clemente, in his only comment he coldly observed that "Clemente got his 200 hits." In the same book, Dick Schoefield was interviewed and he observed that a number of his teammates were putoff by Clemente's personality; he described Clemente as "paranoid." Clemente was a proud and sensitive person who felt that he wasn't treated fairly by the press. Many of the Latin players of that era were quoted syllbatically, making them sound idiotic. Dock Ellis in his autobiography shared that by the late 60s Clemente interacted more with his teammates. Ellis would tease him, but Clemente seemed to take it in stride. Clemente did participate in the clubhouse humor in those later years. Most of his baseball cards present him with a serious visage, but there are also many photos where he is smiling. There is a "halo effect" over Clemente due to the circumstances of his death. When I was much younger, Clemente could do no wrong. I was inspired by Clemente's life to go into a field where I could help and serve others- teaching (1987-2023). As I have aged my perception of his life is more nuanced; Clemente was a talented athlete who had a Hall of Fame career, who had tremendous pride but also had flaws. He reacted to the perceived slights, sometimes alienating others, but at the end he lived a good life and made a difference. As for Roy Face, he was a keen observer based on his interview and I hope that his remaining time is comfortable. Phil aka Tere1071 |
When he was referred to as “Bob”, was that something Clemente was agreeable with?
Or was it condescension on the part of media and the establishment? |
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Elroy
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1959…
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I can't cite the specific source for my impression, but I believe the reason Clemente had issues with his African-American teammates was that he was perceived as a "Company Man." Harry Walker, who managed the Pirates in the mid-Sixties, was largely (and probably correctly) perceived as somewhat racist. Issues quickly arose between Walker and many black players, and Clemente repeatedly defended Walker. The resulting ill feelings were unfortunate but probably inevitable. Another problem was that while Clemente was very active in charitable causes in Puerto Rico, the perception was that he did little or nothing of that sort in Pittsburgh itself. I haven't researched this, but if that's the case, it would be another wedge driven between Clemente and players and fans. I'm not trying to bash Clemente, just to make the point that heroic though his death may have been, he was not a saint, and it's no surprise some of his contemporaries may not have been fond of him. I guess the best way to view it is that I have no doubt that Clemente was subjected to racism and to cultural misunderstanding - but that he didn't handle it well. |
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It’s true that Clendenon was close to the end of his career, but he had enough left to mentor the 1969 Mets, who gave him a lot of credit for their miraculous run that year.
By the way, the reason Clendenon refused to report to Houston that year? They were being managed by - Harry Walker. |
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In 1970 the Pirates 1B Bob Robertson slashed . 287/.367/.564 OPS+ 149. The last time Clendenon gave the Pirates that kind of production was never. With Robertson and Oliver the Pirates won the NL East 5 of 6 years from 1970-1975. |
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Sent by my Father in 1986 to me while stationed in Torrejon AB Spain while I served in the USAF..
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Back on topic...
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...1d2f3d4f_z.jpg
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...961936f5_z.jpg Roy Face signed the top card for me in November 2014, and the bottom card in the summer of 2016. He has been a very gracious signer. |
I remember the Pirate reliever going 18 wins and one loss one year. When he came in the game you were pretty sure your favorite team was going to lose to the Buckos.
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.....and Don Wert
With Don Wert passing this week...another '68 Tiger in Face might be next. Sad indeed!
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