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Autobiography of Ron Fairly, an American Major League Baseball player and broadcaster.
Combining playing and broadcasting appearances, Fairly was involved in over 7,000 major league games from 1958 through 2006.
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My 50 years in baseball, fromthe batter's box to the broadcast booth
BY RON FAIRLY
with Steve Springer
Foreword by Tommy Lasorda
Back Story Publishing, LLC
www.backstorypublishing.com
Fairly at Bat
My 50 years in baseball, from the batter’s box to the broadcast booth
by Ron Fairly
with Steve Springer
Copyright © 2018 by Back Story Publishing, LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned,
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ISBN: 978-0-9993967-3-5
Library of Congress Control Number: 2017964019
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or sales promotions, please inquire via electronic mail at
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Credits
Cover and back cover photographs by Gary Ambrose,
copyright © Back Story Publishing LLC
Designer: Stuart Funk
Back Story Publishing Editorial Director: Ellen Alperstein
www.BackStoryPublishing.comeBook by ePubMATIC.com
Foreword
Introduction
1 Catching History
2 A Solid Foundation
3 Baseball 101 With Professor Dedeaux
4 Riding the Backroads of Baseball
5 Carl Furillo Defends His Turf
6 Hanging With Duke, Pee Wee, and Gil in Zero Beach
7 The Pebble That Won a Championship
8 The Duke Comes Home, the Dodgers Come Apart
9 Blood on the Diamond: Big D and the Brushback Wars
10 The Golden Arm
11 The Dodgers Brain Trust: Two Walters and a Buzzie
12 New Uniforms, New Challenges
13 A Game Full of Unforgettables
14 Trading My Bat for a Microphone
15 What a Difference a Half-Century Makes
A Life in the Golden Era of Baseball
Fairly at the Plate
Dedication
To all the guys I played with and againstduring my career. We had our good and bad days,but we all have great memories.
By Tommy Lasorda
BASEBALL IS ONE of those games whose aging players remember the people they played with more than the games they played. I remember Ron Fairly well. Never managed him. Wish I had.
When we were younger, Ron and I were both at Vero Beach for spring training. I was a scout at the time, and Ron came to me and asked if I would pitch to him. He needed more work, he said. I said, “Sure.” I didn’t know he meant PITCH TO HIM EVERY DAY. He did, and I did.
He had this near-perfect batting system. You might get him out, but you wouldn’t embarrass him. Swing. Balance. Timing. All perfect. He never looked bad, even when you got him out.
So, we’re working at Vero. I’m pitching to him every day. After a couple of weeks, he says to me. “OK, I’m gonna take you out, to downtown Vero.” I asked him why. He said he wanted to pay me back for pitching. I said he didn’t need to, but he insisted. So, we go to downtown Vero Beach, we go into some stores, and he keeps asking, you want this, you want that? He’s holding up sport coats and matching pants, all sorts of nice stuff. I kept telling him that I appreciate the thought, but I’m not going to take anything like that. Then I see this sport shirt. Really fancy one. I said, “Hey, I like that.” He buys it.
One day, I found that shirt in my closet. Turned out to be 25 years since he had bought it for me. So, you know what I did?
I sent it back. I bet he still has it.
I remember managing against him in the mid-1970s, mostly when he was with the Cardinals. He got traded to St. Louis just about the time I took over from Walt Alston as the Dodgers manager. He was a tough out, a good right fielder, and first baseman. I remember he had a strong arm, and was accurate with it.
This is a guy who never got the credit he deserved in the majors. He stayed around for 20 years. How many guys can do that? He could hit anybody, and like I said, he never looked bad when he didn’t. Ron Fairly played the game right. I always thought he was kind of the model of how a player should be. He was a pro. He represented the game of baseball the right way.
I used to look forward to when he’d come to Dodger Stadium as a broadcaster. He was in Seattle, and also worked for the Angels. I’d invite him to the manager’s office, and we’d tell stories and remember stuff. He is a hell of a storyteller. I can’t wait to read his book.
Tommy Lasorda managed the Dodgers from 1977 to 1996. He won two World Series, two awards for Manager of the Year, managed the U.S. baseball team to an Olympic gold medal in 2000 in Sydney, and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1997. He turned 90 in September 2017.
IN ALL MY YEARS IN BASEBALL — a full 50, which seems unbelievable in retrospect — I never felt like I had a job. It was more like I was going to a playground every day. Except my playground had wide swaths of perfectly manicured, bright green grass, smooth patches of dirt with nary a pebble in sight, brightly colored walls that beckoned to batters, thousands upon thousands of seats, and breathtaking views of towering city skylines or gorgeous, landscaped hillsides.
I played major league baseball for 20 years, then went into the radio and television booth where I spent another three decades. It was a life filled with equal parts drama and humor.
Most kids who dream of becoming a major league ballplayer picture themselves wearing their hometown uniform if they grow up in a big league city. Reality for me was beyond my imagination. Growing up in Long Beach, California, I got to play for one of my hometown universities, USC, was the centerfielder for the Trojans on a team that won the 1958 College World Series, and then, that same year, signed with the new guys in town, the Los Angeles Dodgers, transplanted that season from Brooklyn.
Not only was I blessed to be playing for the team that had largely dominated the National League for more than a decade, but I arrived at a time unlike any other, a transition for the ages. One Dodger dynasty was fading while another was forming.
That first L.A. Dodger roster, back in 1958, contained the names of many holdovers from the Brooklyn glory years, players like Duke Snider, Pee Wee Reese, Gil Hodges, Carl Furillo, Carl Erskine, Don Newcombe, and Clem Labine.
Though their best days were behind them, they could still play the game. They also could and did pass on the knowledge of the game they had gained over the years, setting the tone for the future. They had a receptive audience because there were legions of talented young ballplayers in the Dodger organization waiting on deck, anxious to secure their own place in the lineup.
Don Drysdale had already established himself by the time the team came west, Sandy Koufax had not yet found himself, while others like me, Maury Wills, Tommy Davis, Willie Davis, Frank Howard, Wes Parker, and Jim Lefebvre, would join the club over the seasons ahead to help create or maintain the next Dodger era of excellence.
Baseball card collectors have no shortage of options for Ron Fairly, who played for 20 years.
GARY AMBROSE © BACK STORY PUBLISHING
We would also learn lessons in both baseball and life from those no longer wearing the Dodger blue, like Jackie Robinson and Roy Campanella, men whose stories and perspective about the franchise and the game kept me spellbound.
Along the way, I also interacted with Hall of Famers like Ted Williams, Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, and Bob Gibson, and their stories are also in this book.
In my half-century, I had hundreds of teammates and colleagues, roommates and travel companions, who made the journey so enjoyable. Every player, whether on winning or losing teams, can look back in retirement at memorable games in which they participated, but it was what we did before and after it was time to play ball that I miss the most. You can’t put 35 or 40 guys together for seven or eight months a year, travel around the country, spend more time with each other than with their families, and not generate lasting memories. During my playing days, my teammates and I probably spent more time away from our hotel rooms than players do today. We didn’t have computers and video equipment to entertain us.
We did have one simple rule: Do not criticize a player’s ability. Everything else was fair game as long as it was in jest. We could tease a teammate about his clothes, have fun with him for something dumb that he said, or something ridiculous that he did.
Here are a few examples of incidents that elicited no sympathy from teammates, and a few words of wisdom that did.
• Nolan Ryan, Hall of Fame pitcher for the Angels and three other teams, was bitten by a coyote.
• Brian Anderson, a pitcher for the Angels and three other clubs, burned himself ironing a shirt while wearing it.
• Steve Sparks, a pitcher for the Angels and four other teams, hurt his shoulder trying to rip a phone book in half.
• Dave Goltz, pitcher for the Angels (notice a pattern?), Dodgers, and Twins, cut the middle finger of his pitching hand getting tissue from a toilet-paper dispenser.
• Glenallen Hill, outfielder for the Angels and six other clubs, while having a nightmare about spiders, fell down a flight of stairs.
• Richie Sexson, first baseman/outfielder for five teams, hurt his neck putting on his baseball cap.
• Hall of Fame Manager Whitey Herzog disliked extra-inning games in spring training because he had other priorities. “I don’t need 12 or 13 innings to evaluate a player,” he said. “My pitching coach needs to make sure we have a cocktail pitcher in the bullpen — if the game goes into extra innings, I want a pitcher who can give up a run or two so we can all go and have a cocktail.”
Not all the characters in baseball have been players. They include announcers, clubhouse men, scouts, traveling secretaries, and, yes, even the grounds crew. In 1965, the Dodgers, after beating the Twins in the World Series, voted to give their grounds crew a full winners’ share of the players’ pool money generated by World Series ticket sales. The money was to be divided equally among the four-man crew. A check was given to the head groundskeeper, but, instead of distributing the money, he kept it all and skipped town.
My years in uniform generated enough stories to fill a book, and many people, having heard me tell some of those stories on the air as a broadcaster, said I should indeed put them in a book.
So here we are. I have included stories about the special players and unforgettable characters who have crossed my path, the fantastic games and wild times I’ve been fortunate enough to be a part of, the moments heralded in headlines, and those that will never be found in a box score.
You will read about the pitcher, the girl, and the violinist; the only pitcher ever to get the hook from his manager in the middle of batting practice; the horse that ran for the stables instead of the finish line with stacks of Dodgers money riding on him; and the Dodger who had to talk fans out of murdering an opponent.
Hope you enjoy my trip down memory lane, and maybe get a laugh or two.
— Ron Fairly
1
Catching History
WHEN I FIRST SAW the shiny white baseball soaring across the deep blue sky, headed in my direction, it seemed to be beyond my grasp. Going back all the way to the right-field fence in front of the visiting team’s bullpen at Dodger Stadium, I still figured the ball was more likely to land over the fence in a reliever’s glove rather than in my own. Or maybe it would carom into the hands of one of the fans in the right-field seats who would have been more than willing to exchange his beer cup for a priceless souvenir.
It was a pivotal moment for me, for the Dodgers, for baseball history. We were facing the New York Yankees in the 1963 World Series.
No surprise. There had been 16 World Series since 1947. The Yankees had been in 13 of them, winning 10, including five in a row from 1949 to 1953. It was an unbelievable stretch of dominance.
It had been six years since the Brooklyn Dodgers had departed their ancestral home, the New York Giants joining them in a move to the West Coast. There was shock, sadness, and outrage at the time, but the Yankees now had an opportunity to complete a double whammy against the teams that had deserted the Big Apple.
After beating the Cincinnati Reds in the 1961 World Series, the Yankees had exacted some revenge for their city by defeating the San Francisco Giants in the ’62 World Series. Beating us would be just as sweet. And nothing new. The Yankees had beaten the Dodgers in six of their previous seven World Series confrontations, losing only in 1955, when Brooklyn won its only world championship.
Playing in Yankee Stadium can be tough on any visiting team any time of the year. It’s the holy grail of baseball. It’s where Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, and other Yankee greats set records and established a level of team excellence that set them apart from all others. Considering the size of the stadium, the dimensions, the pinstripe uniforms, and the history, it can be an overwhelming experience. Just the idea that you’re standing in the batter’s box where Ruth and Gehrig stood makes the experience special.
The first thing I do when I step onto the Yankee Stadium field is to go to Monument Park beyond the outfield where there are statues, plaques, and retired numbers honoring the greatest to ever wear the pinstripes.
After I soaked all this in at the start of the 1963 World Series, I thought, How much are we going to get beat by?
We knew we had a good team, but then again, we were playing the Yankees.
They had a lot more power in their lineup than we did. The difference was glaring. New York hit 188 home runs in 1963, while we had knocked only 110 balls out of the park. They had been called the Bronx Bombers for many years and, with a power-laden roster led by Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris, they were very confident in their ability to win by maintaining their traditional philosophy of relying on the long ball as the No. 1 weapon in their arsenal.
How were we going to stop these guys from scoring a dozen runs a game? What we wanted to do was keep the ball in the park whenever possible, and stop the guys who hit in front of the power hitters from getting on base, so if they did hit a home run, it would be a solo shot rather than a two- or three-run homer. Stay away from the big inning.
We, in contrast, won with pitching, defense, and speed, scratching out a few more runs than the opposition. Our manager, Walter Alston, said many times, “Give me a team with a bunch of .270 to .280 hitters that don’t strike out much, and I’ll beat you more times than you beat me.”
As it turned out, thanks to our superlative pitching, we actually edged them in home runs in the series, 3-2. Frank Howard, Bill Skowron, and Johnny Roseboro homered for us, Mantle, and Tom Tresh for them.
In Game 1, Sandy Koufax was dominating, leading us to a 5-2 victory. He allowed two runs and six hits in a complete-game performance, striking out a then-World Series record 15, including the first five hitters he faced.
At times, his fastball was just unhittable. Yankee second baseman Bobby Richardson was a good high-fastball hitter. Koufax struck him out three times, all on high fastballs. I don’t think Richardson had seen a guy quite like that. And, it was the same thing with a lot of their other hitters. They saw a fastball they were not familiar with.
The last batter of the game was Harry Bright, who came in as a pinch hitter. He had no chance. There were shadows around home plate when he walked up there cold off the bench in the latter part of the afternoon. So not only did Bright have to try to catch up to a fastball that had blown away so many of his teammates, but he had to do so at a time when it was tough to pick the ball up as it came out of Koufax’s hand. It was a mismatch, Bright becoming strikeout No. 15.
In Game 2, our starter was left-hander Johnny Podres. If a game was not crucial, there was no telling what Johnny was going to do or where he had been the night before. You never knew what you were going to get.
In the closing days of the 1963 regular season, we had clinched the pennant, so we had time to organize our pitching staff heading into the World Series. Alston decided to make our next-to-last game of the regular season a tuneup outing for Podres. He wanted his left-hander to throw at least five innings to get ready for Game 2 of the World Series.
Facing the Philadelphia Phillies, Podres got clobbered. In 1⅔ innings, he gave up eight runs on 12 hits.
Out to the mound went Alston.
“How do you feel?” he asked his pitcher.
“For God’s sakes, get me out of here before I get somebody killed,” said Johnny. “This is enough of the tuneup shit.”
He handed Alston the ball. The skipper hadn’t asked for it, but Johnny gave it to him nonetheless.
We had two great pitchers in Koufax and Don Drysdale. But if a season was on the line, I just might start Podres over either of those two guys because, in that situation, you could feel confident Johnny would be fantastic. He could give our team seven or eight strong innings and keep us in a ballgame. If we could score a couple of runs for him, that would be enough.
Podres’ greatest game was in Yankee Stadium in the 1955 World Series. He pitched a complete-game shutout in Game 7, giving the Dodgers a 2-0 victory and the only World Series triumph they would attain in their days in Brooklyn.
In Game 2 of the ’63 World Series, Podres went 8⅓ innings, allowing six hits and a run. Reliever Ron Perranoski came in to finish up a 4-1 victory.
For Game 3, the scene shifted to Dodger Stadium. The Dodgers scored in the first inning when Jim Gilliam walked, advanced to second on a wild pitch, and scored on a Tommy Davis single.
When the inning was over, I jokingly told Drysdale, our starting pitcher, “There’s your lead. Hold on to it.”
As the game wore on, it became obvious that was just what Don was going to have to do, and he was up to the challenge. He faced only 33 batters, allowed just three hits, struck out nine, and walked one (an intentional walk to Clete Boyer to get to the pitcher, Jim Bouton, with the bases loaded in the second inning). Drysdale struck Bouton out and went on to retire 18 of the last 21 batters he faced.
In the sixth inning, Mantle struck out. I was trotting in from right field and Mickey was going out to center. As we passed, he said, “Ron, tell Drysdale to lighten up on me. He’s making me look bad.”
Still, as we went into the ninth inning, I was scared as hell because the Yankees were sending up Tresh, Mantle, and Joe Pepitone, their No. 3, 4, and 5 hitters. Tresh struck out and Mantle grounded to first.
One more to go.
Pepitone had hit 27 home runs in the regular season. If he could get one more here, it might be a very different series. He was a good lowfastball hitter, and Don had a good sinking fastball (actually, truth be told, it was a very good spitter), so it was strength against strength.
On his second pitch, Drysdale threw Pepitone a change-up that he connected on, hitting that towering fly ball to right.
Although I initially thought from the trajectory that it was headed over the fence, I raced back, feeling the dirt of the warning track on my cleats. As I picked up the flight of the ball, I could feel a slight breeze blowing from the right I kept muttering to myself, “Get him wind, get him!”
I sneaked a glance at the fence and the Yankee pitchers behind it, rooting the ball on. I still had a little more room, so I backed up a few more feet.
Finally, much to my relief, I could tell the ball was going to come down just short of the fence. It was playable. If I could catch it, we would win and go up three games to none with Koufax, one of the best pitchers in baseball history at the peak of his career, ready to take the mound in Game 4.
But I realized I had one last problem. The ball had drifted directly into the sun, always a hazard on cloudless afternoons at Dodger Stadium. I flipped my sunglasses down, but they were too dark. I couldn’t see the ball very well. So, I flipped the glasses back up and used my glove to shade my eyes.
Down came the ball, finally settling into my glove. Elation swept over me. We had won, 1-0.
In the clubhouse afterward, a beaming Drysdale told me, “I thought you were kidding when you said, ‘There’s your lead. Hold on to it.’ ”
I thought I was kidding. But it turned out to be one of the best performances of Drysdale’s Hall of Fame career.
In Game 4, the Yankees found themselves right back in the line of fire, Koufax being as tough to hit as he had been in Game 1.
Howard hit a solo home run in the fifth inning, but Mantle matched that with a solo homer of his own in the seventh. Then, in the bottom of that inning, Gilliam hit a high bouncer to third. Boyer fielded it and threw to first, but Pepitone lost the ball in the largely white-shirted crowd. It bounced off his arm, ricocheted off the railing, and rolled down the right-field line. By the time the Yankees recovered, Gilliam was sliding safely into third. Willie Davis hit a sacrifice fly to drive him in.
That gave us a 2-1 lead, and, with Koufax on the mound again pitching a masterful complete game, that’s the way it ended.
It was an historic victory for us, the only World Series sweep in Dodger history, and only the second time the Yankees had been swept in the World Series, a feat first accomplished by the Giants in 1922.
What was amazing to me was that we had done this using a total of only 13 players in the four games. There were four pitchers, Koufax, Drysdale, and Podres as the starters, with Perranoski pitching in relief in Game 2. The starting lineup never changed with the exception of Game 3, when I replaced Skowron. Alston also brought me in to replace Howard in right field for defensive purposes in the latter stages of the other three games. But that was it. Nobody else came off the bench.
Skowron, a right-handed hitter, hit left-handers well, and he was very comfortable in Yankee Stadium, where he had played for the previous nine years. That’s why he started the three games in which we faced left-handers. During the season, he had hit only .203 for us with four home runs and 19 RBIs. Alston played a hunch by starting him in the World Series and Skowron responded by doing a hell of a job. He hit .385 with a home run and three RBIs. That was a smart move by Alston.
Doused with Champagne, Ron Fairly celebrates the Dodgers' World Series championship in 1963.
© (1963) ASSOCIATED PRESS
In the middle of the wild clubhouse celebration, the booze spraying everywhere, I think each of us paused at some point to soak in the magnitude of what had just happened. We had beaten our old tormentors, the most successful franchise in baseball history, in the World Series in four straight.
It was the greatest moment in Dodger history.
2
A Solid Foundation
I GUESS I WAS DESTINED to wind up playing for the Dodgers with the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum becoming my first major-league home field. Baseball was in my DNA. And seeing the Coliseum was one of my earliest memories.
My dad, Carl Chester Fairly, was a professional baseball player, an infielder who spent 11 years in the minors.
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
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