Chapter 8

Top players from the era
The Sports (1925-42)
1925 -- After the 1924 season, O.L. "Ollie" Biedenharn Sr. bought the team. He was operator of the Coca-Cola Bottling Co. that his family had founded and had bottling rights in Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi.
He also bought the ballpark and made two significant changes: (1) the team nickname went from Gassers to Sports; (2) the park -- first known as League Park, then Gasser Park -- became Biedenharn Park.
R.S. Tarleton was the team business manager from 1925 to 1928.
1926 -- Sports' total attendance was 143,794, fourth-best in the league -- and the team finished in fourth place.
1929 -- The Sports came close in the Texas League's first-half season, with a 46-33 record and second-place finish a half game behind Dallas (47-33). Their second-half record almost matched the first (45-33), but again they were second behind Wichita Falls. So the overall record was 91-66, but Dallas and Wichita Falls made the championship series.
1930 -- Night baseball came to the Texas League, five years before the first major-league night game. Waco was the first TL team to be host for a game under the lights, on June 20, and the night debut in Shreveport's Biedenharn Park was on Thursday, July 10 -- postponed a day because the system was not quite ready.
The Sports lost that first night to Houston, 9-5, and a little less than 4,000 spectators attended -- the largest weekday crowd in Shreveport in years.
Six steel towers were erected around the ballpark with a total of 48 bronze weatherproof lamps, each 1,000 watts. The cost of the system was estimated at $22,000 and The Shreveport Times reported that the Sports would pay $25 a night for electricity for a routine game (then about two hours).
On July 24, Shreveport also played in the first night game in San Antonio. Houston also installed lights that season, and Fort Worth did in 1931.
The Shreveport ballpark that fall was used for high school and Centenary College football night games.
The season attendance was 76,331, down a little more than 30,000 from 1929.
After the season, Art Phelan resigned as manager after six seasons and Biedenharn sold the team to T.S. Hickman, the secretary-business manager in 1929-30. Biedenharn maintained ownership of the ballpark.
1931 -- Jake Atz, who had managed the Fort Worth Panthers for 16 years and seven consecutive TL championships (1919 -- first half of a split season when Shreveport won the playoffs,and then 1920-25), came in as field manager and the team's part owner (with T.S Hickman). But the team's awful play led to Atz resigning after a 66-94 season and sixth-place finish. Attendance suffered again, falling to 57,572.
1932 -- The team was bought by the Caddo Baseball Association group, headed by B.A. Hardey, with Walter Morris -- once the Texas League president -- operating as business manager. Future Hall of Famer George Sisler, then 39, came in as a player (first baseman) and manager.
Disaster struck on the night of May 4 when the ballpark burned down after a game with the Galveston Cubs.
A night watchman, sweeping trash, heard a small explosion, fire quickly spread through the grandstand and all but the umpires' dressing room, the Negro bleachers and the club office was destroyed, including all of the Sports' equipment.
It was first reported in The Shreveport Times that team officials felt play could be resumed at home in three weeks. But the next day, the estimate became eight weeks.
Biedenharn was to receive a $35,000 insurance payment for the losses, but -- this was Depression time -- announced on May 10 that he would not rebuild the ballpark, saying he had lost $25,000 on baseball in Shreveport and would lose no more.
The team's home game with San Antonio on May 6 was moved to Longview, Texas, and drew more than 2,000 spectators. (Longview soon would be take over the floundering Wichita Falls franchise.)
Tyler -- like Longview and other East Texas towns booming because of the newly found and developing oil fields -- also wanted a team, and the Sports' games with San Antonio on May 7 and 8 were played there, before a reported total of 4,000 fans.
Then with the Sports' record at 9-21, a disenchanted Sisler quit as manager.
With the franchise homeless, the Texas League decided to take the offer from a group of Tyler businessmen and moved the team there. Thus ended 18 consecutive seasons of TL ball in Shreveport.
Pop Kitchens took over as field manager and completed a dismal 57-93 season.
(From the East Texas Historical Journal, Volume 36, Issue I, Article 10, by Larry G. Bowman, professor of history at University of North Texas, "Cannibals and Sports: The Texas League comes to Longview and Tyler, Texas, 1932")
1933 -- Shreveport, in a working agreement with the Detroit Tigers, joined the Dixie League and qualified for the championship series by finishing second in the regular season to the Baton Rouge Solons. The Sports won the first two games of the finals series, but Baton Rouge took four of the next five games (one was a tie halted by darkness), winning 2-1 to clinch the title. Shreveport workhorse pitcher Steve Larkin won one game, then lost 1-0 and 2-1 in his final two starts.
1934 -- With Major B.A. Hardey and R.T. Andress as co-owners, the Sports moved to the six-team East Dixie League (three teams in Mississippi). But it drew little interest in Shreveport and, after a third-place finish (33-31 record) in the season's first half, the league persuaded Hardey to allow the team -- to move to Greenwood, Miss. (the official transfer date was July 17). The team's record was 12-9 then, but the renamed Chiefs faded badly (12-30 to season's end).
1935 -- With Fred Nicholson as owner-president, Shreveport was part of the West Dixie League, replacing Lufkin. Most of the league was based in East Texas and again little attention was paid to the Sports. On June 4, they were a dismal 8-30 when the franchise was shifted to Gladewater, Texas.
The team owner there was oilman Dick Burnett, who in 1948 bought the Dallas franchise in the Texas League. He was one of the top promoters in baseball until his death (at age 57) of a heart attack while with his team in Shreveport on June 1, 1955.
1938 -- A local stock company, headed by oilman Bonneau Peters, bought the Galveston franchise and players for $23,000. The Shreveport-TL Baseball Corporation, financed by prominent local citizens and businessmen, thus gained re-entry into the Texas League and also made plans for construction of a new stadium -- named Texas League Park -- near the same grounds where the previous park had stood until it burned.
From 1938 to 1942 and again in 1946, the Sports had a partial working agreement with the Chicago White Sox.
But, for the most part, from 1938 to 1957, "Mr. Pete" was an independent baseball operator, signing his own players and often keeping the team's finances afloat by selling his better players' contracts to major-league teams for then-hefty sums.
BUD BATES -- An outfielder, his first full pro season at age 21 was 1933 with Shreveport (Dixie League) and he hit .331 with 163 hits in 123 games, including 14 home runs. He started the next season with the Sports and after 18 games (.246 average) went to Beaumont (Texas League). He played 18 minor-league seasons -- including six Southern Association seasons (1938-39 with Memphis, 1940-41-42-46 with Atlanta) and his only major-league time was 15 games with the Phillies in 1939 (15 games, .259 average). He then managed in the minors for 11 seasons, including Atlanta (SA, 1957-59). Died April 29, 1987, in Long Beach, Calif., age 75.IRV STEIN -- A right-hander who pitched one game in the majors, in his second season (1932) -- three innings for the Philadelphia Athletics. In 1934, he was with Shreveport (East Dixie League) -- 9-10 record, 2.79 ERA, 21 games, 145 innings. He was in the Texas League for five years, Tulsa (1936-39) and Oklahoma City (1940) with a 62-66 record in that period. He pitched some in the International and Pacific Coast Leagues and mostly in the Southern Association and wound up with a 10-10 record for Baton Rouge (Evangeline League) in 1946. Died Jan. 7, 1981, in Covington, La., age 69.
EDDIE LOPAT -- He became a major-league star in his native city, "Steady Eddie" as one of the New York Yankees' dependable starting pitchers for seven seasons and five consecutive World Series titles (1949-53). His best season was a 21-9 record in 1951. The slow-throwing left-hander -- born Edmund Walter Lopatynski -- also was known as "The Junkman." But he was only 20 and 21 years old when he was a struggling pitcher -- converted from first base -- briefly for the Shreveport Sports in 1938 (1-2 record in three games) and 1940 (0-3 in 15 games). It was a long road to the majors, but he got there as a starter for the Chicago White Sox in 1944. Traded to the Yankees in 1948, he was 109-51 for them in his first seven years -- and 4-1 in the World Series. In 340 regular-season MLB games -- with 318 starts -- he had a 166-112 record. He pitched through 1956 and later managed in the majors, in 1963 and for 52 games in '64 with the Kansas City Athletics. Died June 15, 1992, in Darien, Conn., age 73.
VALLIE EAVES -- A right-handed pitcher from Oklahoma, he was with Shreveport early in a career that spanned more than 20 seasons. With the Sports, he was 6-8 in 1938 and their ace in 1939 -- 21-10 record, 2.77 ERA, 42 games (36 starts) and a Texas League-best 165 strikeouts. His long journey began in the majors, with the 1935 Philadelphia Athletics when he was 1-2 in three starts (and 14 innings). He returned to the big leagues for bits of four more seasons, all in Chicago -- two with the White Sox, two with the Cubs -- and in 24 games (14 starts) had a 4-8 record. In 18 minor-league seasons, his record was 227-172; he was 25-5 for Texarkana (Big State League) in 1947, 26-10 for Lufkin-Leesville (Gulf Coast) in 1950 and, at 41, 19-11 for Brownsville (Gulf Coast) in 1953. He died April 19, 1960, in Norman, Okla., age 48.PETE FLEMING -- In 1938, the outfielder had the best of his nine minor-league seasons, leading the Shreveport Sports in batting average (.299), hits (182), doubles (39), triples (11) and home runs (24). It was his second year in a row in the Texas League; he batted .326 for Galveston in '37. He played in the American Association in his last two seasons, then retired as a player.
BOB KENNEDY -- He became a prominent baseball name and the prelude to 15 major-league seasons as a player was 1939 when he was the Shreveport Sports' third baseman. That year he batted .284 (26 doubles, seven triples, eight home runs) in 130 games and was with the Chicago White Sox for three games. He stayed in the majors from 1940 through 1957 -- except for military service in 1943-45 -- mostly as a strong-armed reserve outfielder (switched from third base after World War II), a .254 hitter in 1,484 games. He was 1-for-2 in the 1948 World Series for the champion Cleveland Indians, and caught the fly ball that ended the Series. He became a scout, farm-system director, "head coach" for the Chicago Cubs' "cradle of coaches" in 1963-64-part of '65 and the first Oakland Athletics' manager (1968). He then was a general manager and front-office executive, and his son Terry was an All-Star MLB catcher. Bob died April 7, 2005, in Mesa, Arizona, age 84.
DAVE PHILLEY -- His brief stint for the 1941 Shreveport Sports (six games, 1-for-10) was no indication of a long and productive baseball career for the East Texas resident. A switch-hitting outfielder, later also a third baseman and first baseman at times, he spent 16 full seasons (1947-62) in the majors with eight teams (a couple twice). After spending most of the 1941 season with Monroe, La., he made his MLB debut with the White Sox that year and, after military service for three years, was back with them for a short time in 1946. He was regarded as a clutch hitter, and later in his career, one of the majors' best pinch-hitters, a .270 hitter overall with 7,000 plate appearances, 1,700 hits (84 homers, 729 RBI). He was an outfield regular for the 1954 American League champion Cleveland Indians, and went 1-for-8 in the World Series. He was a Class A manager for four years (1963-66), then a longtime baseball scout. Died March 15, 2012, in Paris, Texas -- he made his longtime home near there -- at age 91. 
VERNON "GEORGE" WASHINGTON -- The outfielder from Linden, Texas -- near Texarkana -- was a regular, and a star, for the Shreveport Sports from 1939 to the pennant-winning year of 1942. A lefty batter, he was ages 32-35 in those years, and in 544 regular-season games, he was a .307 hitter (boosted by .349 in 1941; his 181 hits led the Texas League), with 149 doubles, 28 triples and 25 home runs. He first played for Shreveport in his second pro season, 1932 (89 games, 14 homers, .350 average), and was a major leaguer for all of 1935 with the Chicago White Sox (108 games, .268, nine homers, 52 RBI) and 20 games in 1936. After World War II, he finished his 20-year minor-league career with five seasons for teams in east and central Texas (back in the Texas League for 36 games in Dallas in 1950), highlighted by a .404 average, 37 home runs and 143 RBI for Texarkana (Big State League) as player-manager in 1947 and an East Texas League batting title (.387) at age 42 for Gladewater in 1949. Died Feb. 17, 1985, in Linden, age 77.
MERV CONNORS -- After reaching the big leagues in his fourth pro season and playing in 52 games for the Chicago White Sox in 1937-38 (.279 average, eight home runs, 25 RBI), the lifelong Californian was the Shreveport Sports' first baseman for most of the 1938 and '39 seasons. He batted .292 in 214 games, with 41 doubles, five triples and 38 home runs. His career ran from 1934 to 1953 -- he was back with the Sports for 14 games (.219 average) in 1948 -- and he hit 373 minor-league home runs in 2,019 games over 18 seasons. Died Jan. 8, 2006, in Berkeley, Calif., age 91.
BOBBY COOMBS -- A small (5-9, 160) right-hander from Maine, he was a durable frontline starter and consistent winner in three seasons (1938-40) for the Shreveport Sports -- records of 12-11, 16-15 and 19-14, consistent ERAs (3.37, 3.22, 3.13). He worked 246 and 273 innings in '39-'40. His pro career began in the majors with the Philadelphia A's in 1933 (21 games in relief, 0-1 record) and he would not return to the majors until 10 years later (1943, New York Giants, nine games, 0-1 record). Most of his years were in the International League (Syracuse, 1934-35, and Jersey City, 1941-43). Died Oct. 21, 1991, in Ogunquit, Maine, age 83.JACKIE REED -- The right-hander from Boyd, Texas, was age 44 in 1939 and in the first of three seasons with the Shreveport Sports, he had the best winning percentage (.750, 9-3 record) by a Texas League pitcher. He was 16-16 and 8-11 in the next two years, winding up with Fort Worth in 1941 to complete a 21-year minor-league career in which his record was 294-227. Died Jan. 5, 1971, in his lifelong home area, Wise County, age 75.

JOE VITTER -- A New Orleans native and later longtime resident of Carthage, Texas, he was one of the Shreveport Sports' most popular players from 1938 to 1942. Mostly a utility infielder who also played some outfield, a smallish switch-hitter, he was on Texas League all-star teams in 1938, 1940 and in 1941. In 680 regular-season games for Shreveport, he batted .251 (his best season was .282 his first year). After leaving the Sports, he played for St. Paul for five seasons, then managed Class D teams in 1948-49. Died Feb. 19, 1995, in Denver, age 84.
JOE GREENBERG -- The younger brother of Detroit Tigers superstar Hank Greenberg played third base in 1940 for the Shreveport Sports, hitting .308 in 91 games with seven home runs. He split the 1941 season between Shreveport and Fort Worth in the Texas League, the last of his five minor-league seasons.
Note: Walter Stephenson, C, 1938, 1941, listed in chapter 25, "They played and stayed."
JOE GREENBERG -- The younger brother of Detroit Tigers superstar Hank Greenberg played third base in 1940 for the Shreveport Sports, hitting .308 in 91 games with seven home runs. He split the 1941 season between Shreveport and Fort Worth in the Texas League, the last of his five minor-league seasons.
Note: Walter Stephenson, C, 1938, 1941, listed in chapter 25, "They played and stayed."
From Allan Lazarus: Vernon Washington was the big name I remember from those days, also [Joe] Vitter and [Bobby] Coombs. I am waiting to see your comments on Salty Parker, who was our filling station man in the late 1940s as well as [the Sports'] team manager.
ReplyDeleteGreat research you are doing.
From Vince Langford: It was fun to read through the Shreveport Texas League history 1925-42. The Tulsa hot stove baseball dinner gave a Rip Radcliffe Memorial Award. Roy Cullenbine is a baseball name I always remember, and I'm not sure why.
ReplyDeleteFrom Skip Peel: Nicely done, thanks. I have the stock certificates for the Shreveport Texas League Baseball Corporation. I did a composite with a picture of the '39 Sports team, an aerial shot of the "new" stadium and a stock certificate with a short caption for each that I sold to prominent Shreveport heirs of those "who's who" of 1930s Shreveport team investors. I am about to take the remaining stock certificates to LSU-S to add them to the Homer Peel Baseball Collection.
ReplyDeleteFrom Bob Tompkins: Interesting stuff.
ReplyDeleteI wonder why Oscar Tuero is buried in Bunkie? Also was wondering if he’s related to former [Louisiana] tennis great Linda Tuero.
From Art Carmody Jr.: Great work! Keep it up.
ReplyDeleteI remember Vernon "George" Washington well. He was a powerful left-handed hitter who had a penchant for throwing his bat down the first-base line and often into the stands so that finally Mr. Bonneau Peters installed a movable chainlink fence about 2 feet high along the first-base line which the box seat holders near the field could and did lift up when GW was at bat to protect themselves from flying missiles.