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#1
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My one year of playing some sort of "organized" baseball. We could barely get enough players and there was only 6 official school uniforms. This was a international school in Japan and as a high school team we were usually beaten by Japanese junior high schools and forget about playing the Japanese high schools....
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Was collecting Next day newspaper article and earliest rookie ephemera/card of all 20th century no hit hurlers. |
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#2
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Grew up in Oakland in the 1970s with its great history of baseball. I was a terror in the local Japanese baseball league but also a bit of an outcast since I was only 1/2 Japanese. For some reason my parents didn't get me into the local Babe Ruth league where everyone else in the city played.
Had to try out for the high school, and made the team as a pitcher. Coach years later confided that he figured with my control I could throw batting practice, which is what I did pretty much my sophomore season. We had a very good high school team. In my soph season I only got in 7 innings, usually when we were way ahead and coach didn't want to waste any of our "real" pitchers. I had great control and a Barry Zito curve but probably wouldn't have hit 90 on the radar on a good day with a fast gun and the wind behind me. Luckily our catcher was an extremely smart dude and knew most everyone's tendencies. He basically told me what to throw and where to throw it so I did. He knew how to work the strike zone too. I can't tell you how many guys we struck out with pitches a foot off the plate because of his ability to "frame" the pitch. I remember one game against Oakland Tech I struck out the side in the last inning and it was their three best hitters, one of whom was a guy named Rickey Henderson, yeah that one. That summer, my coach convinced the guy who ran the best summer league team for high school age players to take me on. While he did, he never intended to let me play and I never got to play all summer until our elimination game in the State Championships when we ran out of pitching. I think he was hoping I'd quit but I loved baseball too much and was learning a lot just being around all that talent. Of the 20 players on the team, two signed and left during the season (Henderson and his best friend Fred Atkins - if you saw Rickey's HOF induction speech he credit's Fred for keeping him real), and 7 others eventually signed pro contracts with two ultimately having MLB careers - Henderson and Lloyd Moseby (Blue Jays and Japan). In my Junior high school season I was slated to the be the 2nd pitcher and probably start against the two weak teams in our league. However our star pitcher ran into "academic difficulties" not to mention being out of shape. Coach asked our catcher if he thought we could get by with me and he said yes. Eventually the star pitcher ran out of chances and got kicked off the team. We easily won the league that season and I made the all-city team. I won 11 of the 15 league games (2 losses) and had a one-hitter to boot. Senior year didn't go so well as my catcher had graduated and we couldn't find anyone to replace him. I mean, it was bad, guys who couldn't even catch the ball let alone throw anyone out. The only two decent games I had were when Moseby volunteered to catch. I did manage to hit a HR, my only one in high school, in our last game. Something happened to my shoulder when pitching to kids during my summer job and it was never the same, so that was that. Started coaching and won two city championships with mostly kids from my neighborhood and their friends. Moved up to summer league high school and formed a traveling team. Had some success and one player made it up for a cup of coffee with the Giants and is in the 1993 Topps set. Could never get a sponsor for the team though, and by the mid-1980s I was broke, unemployed and dealing with depression so I stopped. It was all great fun though. PS. The Rickey story always brings a "yeah, right" from most people. I used to have the scorebook from that game as proof - I asked my coach (I later became assistant baseball coach at the high school) if he still had the book from that year when Rickey got called up by the A's - but in one of my many moves it got lost. Last edited by MooseDog; 07-29-2013 at 08:42 AM. |
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#3
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3 memories. I played for a Christian high school in Peoria, Illinois.
When I was on the JV baseball team in 1978 we played Spalding Academy (A Catholic HS). The star player for Spalding was Joe Girardi, who had quite a rep in HS, and it was well known he was going to Northwestern. Their varsity thumped our varsity pretty good as I recall. In probably 1980 we played Yates City HS, which now no longer exists. Their home field was the town park. There was a tree in left center about 250 feet from home. Hit the tree = ground rule double. I bet there were 10 ground rule doubles. Here is link to now closed high schools in Illinois - Yates City RIP http://www.illinoishsglorydays.com/id68.html Then at the NAIA level I played 1 year of baseball and got to make a diving catch in left field to end an inning. That was my college high light - haha. |
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#4
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I was basically a no arm ballplayer and it got so that there was no position for me to play in the field. They would put me out in right and try to pitch to keep the batters from going that way. Though I could hit, I struck out a lot especially with the bases loaded. Mr. No-clutch.
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#5
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Quote:
Did you ever play The Pekin Chinks. I'm from Pekin and yes, that really was the name. Kmac
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Favorite MLB quote. " I knew we could find a place to hide you". Lee Smith talking about my catching abilities at Cubs Fantasy camp. |
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#6
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Quote:
They were the Chinks when I was in HS, but I think in the mid 80's became the dragons or something. |
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#7
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Yeah they did. I graduated in 78 and believe they changed it in the early 80's. Odd community to grow up in.
__________________
Favorite MLB quote. " I knew we could find a place to hide you". Lee Smith talking about my catching abilities at Cubs Fantasy camp. |
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#8
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I played DIII college ball at a small school in Indiana, and while I wasn't terribly successful, I had a great time. It was great being able to get away from schoolwork for a couple of hours a day and focus on the game. Plus, I made some great friends that I am still close with today. One of those friends happened to be the assistant coach, who was also a fellow Red Sox fan. Long story short, we attended game four of the 2004 World Series together, something that I will cherish for years to come.
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