Showing posts with label Shreveport Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shreveport Sports. Show all posts

Monday, August 1, 2022

That's the old ballgame, Shreveport -- a book for sale!

           Happy to announce That's the old ballgame, Shreveport has been published, and is now for sale.

      I have the first three copies -- they arrived today -- and can tell you that the type is large enough for easy reading.
       It is 231 pages of Shreveport and North Louisiana pro baseball history. Many photos and capsules on the players and officials significant to the teams that represented Shreveport, the city's ballparks, and the area players who played pro ball -- in the majors and minor leagues.
---
       When people suggest that writing this book has been "a labor of love," they are correct.
       Loved doing it, the writing and even moreso the research. Proofreading was a task. To the final read, there were corrections to make.
       And, yes, it was a labor. Putting together the book -- formatting it -- took the first seven months of 2022. No technical wizardry here; let's say that the Publisher and Word programs often were more in charge than the formatter.
       But with lots of help, it is done. Thankfully.
       Going back even further, the project began four years as a series of chapters on my blog, Once A Knight. But much material was updated and corrected, and there are many more photos than in the blog series.
        While finishing up in the past couple of months, three of the 1959-61 Shreveport Sports passed away -- Dave Wickersham, Frank Cipriani and the popular Leo Posada. Sad, but all were in their 80s. We updated their player capsules.  
       So many great names in this book, many great memories ... and the issues that led to the demise of pro ball in the city. 
---      
       Two ways to buy the book:
       (1) You can buy the book on Amazon ($35 per copy, plus shipping costs);
       (2) Preferably, you can buy the book from me. Let me know, and I will order it and then send it to you (send $35 and your mailing address).
       (To be honest, we benefit more if you order through me. Amazon Publishing, which printed the book, gets a greater share with a direct order.)
       But who's counting?
       Here is the link to the Amazon order page, if that's the way you want to go:       https://www.amazon.com/dp/1791838391
       Hope you will be interested in the book. 

Monday, August 12, 2019

That's the old ballgame Shreveport, chapter 30 -- A personal journey

    Chapter 30
      A personal journey
The writer, as Shreveport Journal executive sports editor, covering a Shreveport Captains game at the old, roofless
 SPAR Stadium in 1982. (Photo by Louis DeLuca, Dallas Times-Herald
     Baseball was my first American sports love, and it still is.
     From the time we first saw them, we loved the Shreveport Sports. Then we loved the Shreveport Captains.
     Over about a 40-year period -- boyhood to middle age -- those were our teams. 
     The Gassers and all those previous team nicknames? Too soon.
     The Swamp Dragons and the independent teams that followed? Too late. By the time they came along, we had left town. Soon, so had professional baseball.
     Too bad, and kind of sad.
     The players who represented professional baseball in our hometown,  who wore those white home uniforms with "Sports" or "Captains" across the front or the (usually) gray road uniforms with "Shreveport," those were our boys of summer (young men actually, although some were close to 40).
     And the ballparks, those were our home parks. Countless hours spent at each of those places.
     First, Texas League Park-turned-Braves Field-turned SPAR Stadium -- never "beautiful," but functional through the 1950s and '60s and a decaying facility in the 1970s that was a near-wreck into the mid-1980s. 
     Then, the new concrete Fair Grounds Field, so nice at its opening in 1986, so visible from Interstate 20. And for 17 years, home of Shreveport's Texas League team. For another nine, home of independent-league teams.
     And then gone ... a pro baseball void in Shreveport-Bossier that soon enough will be a decade long.
A ballpark still standing by I-20, but -- honestly -- an eyesore, even from a distance. Can it be put back into playing shape? Doubtful. Too expensive, too much negativity.
Maybe someday ... a fix, or a new ballpark. Difficult to see it in the near future.
     But once upon a time, following those Shreveport teams was a magical journey for us, and a totally unexpected one. Because before 1956, baseball indeed was a foreign subject for me.
 ---
     We came across the Atlantic Ocean on a boat as 1955 became 1956, and the hottest topics that first year in the U.S. were Elvis Presley, Mickey Mantle, Ike and, for us, the Mickey Mouse Club. 
     To think, the Brooklyn Dodgers -- for the only time in their history -- were the defending World Series champions. Did not realize then how much misery the New York Yankees had dealt them over the years.
     But Dodgers, World Series, Mantle, Yankees? All new to me. Baseball? Did not know the second thing about it.
     The first thing: It was a game that in the old country, The Netherlands, was called honkbal. A minor sport there. We had read (in Dutch) about it, but never seen a game.
     The kids on the elementary school grounds here, though, played baseball at recess and speedball -- same game, rubber ball (a bit bigger than a hardball). So, after rudimentary introductions to speaking, reading and writing English, came some of the basics of the game.
     Found out a couple of things pretty quickly: 
     (1) Hitting a ball with a wooden bat was not all that easy, especially when -- as Bill McIntyre would write in The Shreveport Times a few times in future years -- pitches were fired in anger; 
     (2) If you lined up in the catcher's position, without benefit of a mask, and got too close, the wooden bat could hit you in the face. A few weeks into the experience that meant a severe black eye, but luckily no further damage.          
     Slowly that first spring and early summer, we would begin hearing about the Shreveport Sports. A professional baseball team in our city, and Dad's company had tickets for games at the stadium. His bosses, hearing of the son's sports interests, suggested we take the tickets and go to a game.
     We lived close enough to the ballpark in the old Allendale neighborhood that -- without benefit of a car -- we could walk, and be there in about 20 minutes. Down Jordan Street to a right on Southern Avenue, then across the railroad tracks toward downtown, and soon enough, a few blocks away, you could see the stadium light poles behind the fence in right field.
     Can close my eyes and see that scene, and remember the thrill. It was almost -- not quite, but almost -- like going to Olympic Stadium in Amsterdam (also within walking distance of our little house there).
     Hello, Texas League Park, 1956.
     Recall going in the front gate and then seeing the ballfield and the stands, the Sports in their home white uniforms, the Dallas Eagles in the visiting grays. The date -- researched this in The Times files -- was July 8, the only Sunday game the Eagles played in Shreveport to that point in the '56 season.
     And I know, I remember, it was the Eagles as the visiting team.
     Do not think, however, that I was aware of how special a season 1956 would be in Shreveport, or how special one player -- home-run hitting phenom Ken Guettler -- was that season.
     By that Sunday, Guettler had hit 33 home runs -- past the halfway mark of the Texas League record (55). 
     He did not hit one that Sunday, but he would make history, earn his forever place in Shreveport baseball lore -- and make the cover of this book.
     We sat in the upper grandstand, Dad and I, two of the 1,319 paid for the game. We were about 10 rows up just to the right of home plate, but enough so we could see into the home-team dugout on the third-base side. In Shreveport, the home team side was always on the third-base side.
     No one was more enchanted by baseball than I was that day. It was instant love.
     Maybe it was the first inning -- Dallas scored three runs, then Shreveport scored five. (The Eagles ended up winning 8-6, but that did not matter much to us then.)
      Could not always figure out exactly what was happening in the game (although it was easier to learn than American football), but I loved the pitcher-batter battles, I loved the speed of the baserunners, loved the mixture of white-and-gray uniforms -- and loved the red and blue trim of the Sports' colors (especially the two-tone hat) with the "S" logo.
     Along with the Sports, I found another favorite team because they were on television a lot -- once we got a TV -- and in the news. The pinstriped home uniforms were unique, eye-catching. Lots of interest, I discovered, in the Yankees and especially the center fielder, No. 7. It would be Mickey Mantle's greatest season, so it was natural to become a fan of the player and the team.
     Think we went to one more Sports game that summer, but by the next year, Dad's company had box-seat tickets, so we went often -- although attendance had fallen off dramatically -- and I remember Dad proudly leaning over the railing on the third-base side to scoop up a couple of foul-ball grounders. Never an autograph seeker, I took those baseballs and used them on the playground.)
     By the next year, I had a Shreveport Sports cap and a yellow-and-blue Sports T-shirt.
     It was disconcerting to learn that there would be no Sports in 1958; the ballclub left town. Did not really understand the reasoning then -- a ban on integrated games was a huge issue -- but was delighted when the Sports' franchise came back to life in 1959 ... in the Southern Association.
     So, it was the 1959-61 Sports -- a Kansas City Athletics' farm team -- with which we most identified. Found a player who, other than Mantle, became a personal favorite -- a 19-year-old second baseman, Lou Klimchock, "Baby Lou" to the Shreveport media. 
     He was terrific that season and he wore uniform No. 4 for the Sports. And for the four years in which I played at baseball -- not well, at all -- my uniform was No. 4. (Also liked the Yankees' No. 4, Lou Gehrig, subject of the first book I read in America.)
     Those Sports players -- Peden, Posada, Grunwald, Slider, Ward, Hankins, Hunt, McManus, Howser, Wickersham, Spicer, Pfister, Blemker, Black, Davis and Davis, Parks ... I could go on and on -- were magic for me. Followed their career paths in their years after Shreveport.
     Tough to see the ballclub leave again after 1961. But the ballpark became a close friend -- as a scorekeeper for high school, American Legion and recreational ballgames, and sometimes P.A. announcer, too.
     When pro ball returned in 1968, I was a college junior and one of our Louisiana Tech friends, basketball-baseball star George Stone, started the '68 season pitching for the Shreveport Braves (in the Atlanta Braves' organization). As he commuted to home games, we came with him several times in the early season.
     He was on his way to the major leagues; that year, in fact. I was on the way to a sportswriting career.
     That summer, 1968, among the assignments as a Times intern a half-dozen times was coverage of Shreveport Braves' games (with that came the official scorer role). The next summer it was a fulltime position -- and frequent Braves/Captains stories and columns for almost the next two decades.
     From that standpoint, it was less being a fan and more being a reporter. But still, it was -- as it had always been -- a point of pride in seeing Shreveport in the standings (yes, it was in bold in the newspapers). It looked especially good at the top of those standings.
     However, I always felt like a jinx for Shreveport teams. In the years I lived there (1956-1988), there were this many league championship teams: zero.   
     In the four years before we arrived, the Sports won two Texas League playoff championships (1952, 1955) and one regular-season championship (1954). Two years after I left for good, the Captains won the first of back-to-back championships (1990-91), and then they won again in '95.
     Oh, well.
     Another point of pride was identifying former Shreveport players and/or managers as they moved on, many to the major leagues, some as big stars. For a short time in their lives, they were our guys.
It was tough, but understandable, to see the demise of pro baseball in Shreveport starting in the year 2000 when the ballclub -- mostly locally owned for some 25 years -- was sold to corporate interests. Personally, the independent-league teams that followed were not of much interest for someone living out of state.
But the game endures, without a team in Shreveport. So do memories.
And so does the love for a baseball past in a place that meant so much to us.

Monday, April 15, 2019

That's the old ballgame Shreveport, chapter 13 (the managers, Part II)

Chapter 13
The managers, part II (1941-78)

     FRANCIS "SALTY" PARKER (1941-42, 1946-51) -- separate, chapter 11

    MICKEY LIVINGSTON -- A catcher, he was the Shreveport Sports' player-manager for two seasons (1952-53), his first managing job, and the first season brought a Texas League championship. His second season was not as successful, but he was re-signed for 1954, only to be fired when -- without the team's permission -- he opened a bar (with his name) in a downtown Shreveport hotel. He sued for breach of contract, but lost the suit. He had been mostly a reserve in 10 seasons in the major leagues, although he was a starter and star in the World Series for the 1945 Chicago Cubs (eight hits, three doubles, four RBI, a .364 average). His last MLB stop was two games for the Brooklyn Dodgers in September 1951, after he spent the bulk of the season in the Texas League, batting .307 for Fort Worth. His '52 Sports were third in the regular season (84-77 record), then won the league playoff championship and lost in the Dixie Series. Livingston hit .274 with 18 doubles and five homers in 111 games that season. The 1953 season didn't go as well; he hit only .159, the Sports went 79-75, and did not make the playoffs. He was back in the TL in 1954-55, managing and playing for Beaumont. His managing career (five seasons) soon ended and he was out of baseball by age 41. As a player, his career went from 1937 to '56; his major-league debut came with Washington in 1938. In 561 games (six organizations), he batted .238, with 19 home runs and 153 RBI. He died April 3, 1983, in Houston, at age 68.

MEL MCGAHA (1954-57) -- Separate, chapter 12.
 
     LES PEDEN -- Slow afoot, but a professional hitter, the bulky catcher was the Shreveport Sports' player-manager for three seasons (1959-61) and hit .300, .327 and .283, while playing in a little more than half the games. He first came to Shreveport for 30 games in 1955 and in a full season in 1956, he hit. 282 in 137 games, with 23 home runs and 88 RBI. The A&M player  and World War II veteran, nicknamed "Gooch," played the first of his 18 minor-league seasons in 1947 and was in the big leagues for nine games, eight starts, for the Washington Senators at the start of the 1953 season (he hit .250, 7-for-28, with one solo home run). He was a minor-league manager for 12 seasons (10 as a player, too) in the Cubs and Athletics' organizations. He managed Little Rock in 1958, and it was one of his best hitting seasons -- .334, 26 home runs, 88 RBI -- and when the Southern Association franchise moved to Shreveport, he came with it. His 1960 Sports, after a furious last-season surge, missed the regular-season pennant by a half-game. He played through 1964 and managed in the Triple-A Pacific Coast League) for three seasons, then stayed in the game as a scout. In the minors, he was a .299 hitter over 1,787 regular-season games, with 249 home runs and 644 RBI. Died Feb. 11, 2002, in Jacksonville, Fla., at age 78.

Charlie Lau coaching third base
 (The Shreveport Times photos)
   CHARLIE LAU -- After a decade as a major-league catcher, mostly a reserve and not a batting star (.255 average), he was the Shreveport Braves' manager at age 35 in 1968, the year after he retired as a player with the Atlanta Braves. Shreveport's team, loaded with past and future major-league talent, went 78-62, but was second in its division. Lau the next year was a coach in the majors and soon became known as one of the top batting instructors -- a "guru" -- in the game. He helped develop some of the Kansas City Royals' stars of their powerful late 1970s/early 1980s teams. He died of colon cancer March 18, 1984, in Key Colony Beach, Fla., at age 50.

LOU FITZGERALD -- His 20-year minor-league managing career ended with the Shreveport Braves in 1969 and 1970. He had five regular-season or playoff championship teams in a 12-year period -- including with San Antonio in the Texas League in the mid-1960s -- but the 1969 S-Braves were 61-75 and after a 3-9 start in '70, he was replaced by Clint Courtney, who had been one of his catchers for Durham in 1962. Fitzgerald, from Cleveland, Tenn., had a 55-year pro baseball career -- as an infielder (never a major leaguer), manager and scout. Paul Richards, the baseball sage from Waxahachie, Texas, was his boss with three organizations: Orioles, Colt 5s/Astros and Braves. He died Jan. 27, 2013, in Chattanooga, Tenn., at age 93.


    CLINT COURTNEY -- He provided a nearly local presence as the Shreveport manager when he replaced Lou Fitzgerald after the first 12 games of the 1970 S-Braves' season. The hard-battling, tough little guy -- "Scrap Iron" -- was from Hall Summit, La., 40 miles southeast of Shreveport and he had been the Braves' minor-league catching instructor. Shreveport's record under him was 55-67 and he would go on to manage Richmond in Triple-A. He had played in the Texas League for Beaumont in 1950, then was in one game for the 1951 Yankees before a decade in the majors (1952-61) for four other American League franchises. He twice was a .300 hitter and hit .268 overall. He was known as (1) the first bespectacled catcher in MLB; (2) a fierce style and frequent fighter; and (3) with ex-catcher and noted manager/general manager Paul Richards' input, the first catcher to use an oversized mitt to catch knuckleballs (thrown by Hoyt Wilhelm with Baltimore in 1960). He was manager of the Richmond Braves when he died of a heart attack -- while playing ping-pong with one of his players -- on a team road trip in Rochester, N.Y., on June 16, 1975, at age 48.


LES MOSS -- The season (1971) he managed Shreveport was unique: (1) it was the first year of the Captains' team nickname and (2) the Texas League and the remnants of the Southern Association and South Atlantic (Sally) League were combined into a 14-team Dixie Association -- a one-year experiment. It was only three years after Moss, a journeyman big-league catcher for more than a decade,  had been interim manager (36 games) for the Chicago White Sox. The '71 Captains went 69-73; after six more seasons managing in the minors, Moss again was an interim MLB manager, 53 games with the 1979 Detroit Tigers -- he succeeded Ralph Houk and was followed by Sparky Anderson. He died Aug. 29, 2012, in Longwood, Fla., at age 87.

Captains 1972 manager Norm Sherry with
baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who was
visiting Shreveport and SPAR Stadium.
(The Shreveport Times photo)
      NORM SHERRY -- He wasn't as famous as pitching brother Larry and only a bit player for the 1959-62 Los Angeles Dodgers. After stints as a Dodgers' minor-league manager and coach for the 1970-71 California Angels, he managed the 1972 Captains (62-78 record) With a roster shortage, he even played in four games at the end of the season (at age 40), going 3-for-9 (.333) with three RBI. In 1976-77, he was the Angels' manager -- succeeding Dick Williams -- for 147 games.

GENE FREESE -- A major-league third baseman for a dozen years, a star with the 1961 National League champion Cincinnati Reds, "Augie" had been out of baseball for five years, living in his adopted hometown, New Orleans, when he was named manager of the 1973 Captains (Milwaukee Brewers' chain). A team that included end-of-the-line, ex-MLB pitching star Denny McLain (right, with Freese) went 70-68. At age 39, Freese played in four games near the end of the season, going 3-for-9,  with a double and two RBI. He returned to manage in '74, but the team faltered (59-79 final record) and he was replaced in midseason by minor-league pitching instructor Ken McBride. He died June 18, 2013, in Metairie, La. -- a New Orleans suburb where he lived for decades -- at age 79.   

TIM MURTAUGH -- The son of the Pittsburgh Pirates' two-time World Series champion manager Danny Murtaugh, he spent 13 years in the Pirates' chain -- six as a catcher, seven as a minor-league manager. His teams had won two championships before he managed the 1975 Captains. They were the Texas League's best team for much of that season, but faded late and, despite a 76-52 record -- the best for a Shreveport team over a 56-year period -- and 98 more runs than their opponents, finished two games behind Midland in the West Division. He then managed in Triple-A for 1½ seasons before returning to Shreveport for the second half of the '77 season, and then retired from baseball.

    JOHN LIPON -- A journeyman major-league shortstop for nine seasons and a World War II (Navy) veteran, he was 53 when he managed the 1976 Captains to a division title. It was the 18th of his 30 seasons managing minor-league teams, plus a 59-game stint as the Cleveland Indians' interim manager in 1971. He came back to Shreveport to start the 1977 season, then was promoted to manage the Pirates' Triple-A team, swapping spots with Tim Murtaugh. After his managing career, he was a baseball scout and in 1992 was chosen as the "King of Baseball" for his lifetime contributions. He died Aug. 17, 1998, in Houston, his longtime home, at age 75.

    STEVE DEMETER -- He was a veteran minor-league player -- a good one -- who had short stays in the majors and was a Pittsburgh Pirates' coach for a year before a nine-year minor-league managing career. He maintained a positive approach through a long, difficult season in Shreveport in 1978. Died Feb. 3, 2013, in Parma, Ohio, at age 78.