Monday, January 21, 2019

That's the old ballgame Shreveport -- Chapter 1 (Ken Guettler)

His 62 home runs in 1956 for the Shreveport Sports a Texas League record that stands is the greatest legend in the city's baseball history.
Ken Guettler was the ultimate Shreveport slugger.
It was his only Shreveport season, he turned 29 that May, and he never did much in his three remaining pro seasons, never made the major leagues. But, even for a seventh-place team, he was easily the TL’s “Most Valuable Player” in 1956.
He batted .293, scored 115 runs, drove in a TL-best 143, and broke Clarence Big Boy Kraft's 32-year-old league home-run record with his 55th on August 13.
A quiet, compact 5-foot-11, 190-pound right-handed slugger nicknamed “Muscles,” uniquely, his right arm was two inches shorter than his left because of a childhood hockey accident in Bay City, Mich.
He had poor eyesight — bottle-thick glasses — and he was considered a mediocre outfielder, with limited throwing ability because of that short right arm.
But he was the league home-run champion in eight of his years in the minors.
   Starting in 1945, he played 11 years before Shreveport, six in the Class B Piedmont League with Portsmouth, Va., where he hit 41 home runs in 1955 as the team’s player-manager. When the league and the team folded, he needed a place to play. Hence, Shreveport.
As he did with so many players, Sports general managing partner Bonneau Peters knew of Guettler, did his research, and in the winter of 1955-56 signed him to a contract.
   On Opening Day at home, he homered against Houston, then hit three the next night (although the Sports lost in extra innings). By the end of May, he had 18 home runs, including another three-homer game on May 28, and soon he had a new nickname: Kenneth the Menneth.
    In Shreveport's Texas League Park, his trademark was high fly balls that -- mostly -- cleared the fence in left. He had only six homers in June, but cranked up with 24 in July and had 48 total going into August.
    He hit very few cheap home runs, Mel McGaha, the player-manager that season, told a Shreveport Journal columnist in the 1970s. He hit the kind of fly balls that looked like the outfielders would catch. But pretty soon the outfielder would have his back against the fence and the ball would keep going.
    McGaha recalled Guettler as “a quiet guy, unassuming. Almost an introvert, really. He took everything in stride … I never saw him get too mad.”
    “He didn’t have much personality,” said Jack Fiser, sports editor/columnist of The Shreveport Times in the 1950s who regularly covered the ballclub. “He was very reluctant to talk … he almost never talked about himself much.”
    Guettler’s sister, Selma Pett and her husband Ollie, came to Shreveport in the spring of 1988 to visit the old ballpark where Ken had starred in 1956.
"He was a good-natured person," Mrs. Pett said then. "Out in public, he was shy. In a crowd, he would stand back and hold back. But he was very close to his family. He was a fun-loving fellow. He enjoyed doing things like playing cards and just being with the family."
  In 1957, Guettler had a brief shot in Triple-A ball (with Wichita), but was overmatched and hit only one home run there. Back in Double-A with Atlanta, he had only two more home runs the rest of that soon.
And he kept moving, playing with seven teams in three final seasons, and hitting only 12 home runs in those years. That included a stay back in the Texas League with Dallas in 1958.
    Why his hitting skills left him after the ’56 season “is something we have always wondered,” said his sister. “There was no honest answer for it.”
  He played 21 games in the Mexican League, then played his final pro games at Charleston, S.C., in 1959.
    “I don’t think he was bitter that he didn’t make the big leagues,” Mrs. Pett said in 1988, “but if they’d had the designated hitter when he played, he would have made it. He always said he had been born 10 years too soon.”
    After baseball, Guettler worked for the U.S. Postal Service in Jacksonville, Florida, and he died there of a heart attack on Christmas Day 1977 at age 50.
    “He talked often of Shreveport and the year he had here,” his sister said as she stood on the diamond where Ken Guettler made Texas League history with 62 home runs in ’56. “He was very proud of having done what he did here.”     

     

      

12 comments:

  1. From Susan Z. Jackson: Loved reading about Shreveport sports history. I remember as a young girl my dad, Irving Zeidman (IZ), as a sports announcer yelling in the mike as each home run was hit, “And THERE she goes!”
    Keep writing.

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  2. From Larry Powell: Holy smoke, does that make a fellow miss the Shreveport Texas League franchise or what!
    The summer I got to cover some of the Shreveport Braves games, Ralph Garr was there and it was a revelation seeing the difference between Texas League talent and big league talent in that era. Lord knows what it looks like now.
    Do you think Texas League baseball gets the endearing coverage it used to get? I suspect those days may be gone ... but maybe I've just been living in an allegedly big league area for too long.

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  3. From Ralph Kraft: Enjoyed. Thanks. Our family often went to see the Sports play, generally on Tuesday nights, which I recall to have been Ladies Night. Mom and my two sisters got in free. We enjoyed watching Guettler do his thing, though did not recall that Guettler was with the Sports only one year. Although we all hoped he would, I do not believe Guettler hit the white globe ($500) atop the left-field wall. If he or another did, perhaps you can advise.
    And when the Sports traveled, [we listened to] Irv Zeidman (IZ) and Tony Barrett, from their studio downtown. Must admit, to pull that off, night after night, took a talent.
    Two additional observations: More than interesting, the other Texas League cities -- Houston, San Antonio, Oklahoma City, Little Rock, et al, AND … Shreveport (or vis Southern Association), left in the dust… Secondly, Guettler not wearing even the minimalist Norm Cash style helmet.
    Awaiting your next installment.

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  4. From Dick Hicks: Fabulous article. I remember seeing some of his towering shots.

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  5. From Sid Turner: Reminds me of Irv Zeidman ..."IZ for 5D" ..."And there she goes!" I was 11 that year, and my parents and I were regulars at the Sports games. When we weren't at the game, we were sitting on our front porch listening to IZ. What a great summer that was ...

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  6. From Bettye Schwab Mitchell: I remember going to those games!

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  7. From David Lee: I remember him and that year. It was only one year, but what a year.

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  8. From Stan Tiner: As a loyal “Knothole Gang” member, I was in the left-field bleachers for most of the games that summer of my 14th year. When the Sports were on the road I sat close to the console radio in our little living room and listened to the wonderful voice of Irv Zeidman bringing the play-by-play. Lord, I loved that team and Ken Guettler was really such a big part of those memories.

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  9. From Glynn Wilder: My dad would take me to the games in the old ballpark. I guess maybe 7. I thought it was so cool!

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  10. From Robert B. Levy: I had an aunt who loved The Sports and took me to many games. Great memories. Great snow cones.

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  11. From Jimmy Russell: I was about 12 or 13 when Guettler hit his 62 home runs and I thought I was seeing the next Babe Ruth. I think Dick Stuart his his 66 the same summer.

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    Replies
    1. Stuart hit 66 for Lincoln (Class A Western League). Unlike Guettler, he did make the major leagues and was with the 1960 World Series champion Pirates, and later with the Red Sox. Dr. Strangeglove.

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