Baseball The Way It Never Was

Tag: Ron Cey

TWIWBL 3.0: Series II – Brooklyn Royal Giants @ New York Gothams

This time up, we’re heading for a Subway Series between the Brooklyn Royal Giants (4-1) and the New York Gothams (3-2).

Brooklyn may be better built for the future than this year. A lot of their success will depend on how a pair of youngsters, 21 year old Dutch Leonard and 20 year old Don Drysedale, do in the starting rotation. Roy White and Duke Snider look solid offensively, but any team with 2 Spring Training insertions in the regular lineup (2B Davey Lopes and RF Raul Mondesi) is taking a lot of risk.

The Gothams, on the other hand, could be contenders this year. Christy Mathewson anchors what should be a deep pitching staff, and especially if Buster Posey continues to produce at an all-league level, a lineup with the 2 Willie‘s–Mays and McCovey–should score some runs.

The first game matched up the aces, as Leonard faced off against Mathewson. Leonard was fantastic in his first start; in this one, not so much as New York rocked him for 9 runs in 5.2 IP. Mays paced a 17 hit attack for the Gothams, going 4 for 5. Most of the damage was in the 3rd, when the Gothams scored 5 runs with Art Fletcher driving in 2 runs with a 1-out double. Newly acquired 2B Cookie Rojas chipped in with 3 hits, 2 runs, and 2 RBI’s, allowing New York to overcome a mediocre start by Mathewson that saw him surrender 4 runs in 6 IP. Still, it was enough: New York got the win 12-5 and both pitchers leveled their records at 1-1.

New York was on the verge of taking a 2-0 lead in the series, taking a 5-3 lead in the bottom of the 8th on 4 consecutive singles from Rojas, Eugenio Suarez, Mark Loretta, and Posey. Ron Cey singled to lead off the 9th for Brooklyn, bringing in Gotham’s closer, Brian Wilson. After a walk to Jim Delahanty, Wilson gave up a 2 run double to White, sending us into extra innings. It remained scoreless until the 15th inning, when Cey and Dickie Thon managed to drive in runs. Brooklyn closer Watty Clark pitched the final 4 innings, giving up only 1 hit and earning the victory, 7-5. The loss went to New York’s Mike Norris, who was tagged for those final 2 runs in 3.2 IP of relief.

With the series tied 1-1, game 3 saw Brooklyn’s Don Sutton taking the mound against New York’s Sad Sam Jones. A solo HR in the top of the 5th by Brooklyn’s Beals Becker increased the Royal Giants’ lead to 3-1, but the Gothams would tie the game in the bottom of the 6th and put it away in the bottom of the 8th behind a 3-run HR from Wally Berger. Robb Nen got the 7-3 win with Marcel Lachemann picking up the save and Smokey Joe Williams was tagged with the loss.

Brooklyn rode a great start from Drysedale to even the series at 2-2. He gave up 8 hits and only 1 run in 8 IP, which was plenty as the Brooklyn offense tallied 9 runs against losing pitcher Juan Marichal and reliever Gaylord Perry. Drysdale moved to 2-0 on the year with the 9-1 victory, and White led the way for Brooklyn, with 4 hits in 5 at-bats, totaling 3 2Bs, 2 runs, and 2 RBIs. Dan Brouthers added his 2nd HR of the year, and Becker continued his hot streak with 3 hits.

So, a split series, which has to be more encouraging for Brooklyn than the Gothams. White was the key for the Royal Giants, amassing 12 hits–8 of which were doubles–in the series and raising his BA to .425 on the young season.

Season Preview: Brooklyn Royal Giants

It could be a really long year in Brooklyn. There is talent here, but most of it is aimed at the future. It is possible the starting rotation is better than anticipated, and closer Watty Clark was dominant during the Spring. But the offense … there just isn’t a lot here unless a couple players join Duke Snider in creating runs at a high level.

Final Roster

SP: Dutch Leonard, Orel Hershiser, Don Sutton, Don Drysedale, Brickyard Kennedy.
RP: Dick Redding & Smokey Joe Williams; Dave Van Ohlen & Terry Forster; Trevor Hildenberger & Eric Gagne; Watty Clark.

C: Mike Piazza; Steve Yeager
1BDan Brouthers & Jackie Robinson
2B: Davey Lopes
3BRon Cey; Jim Delahanty
SSTommy Corcoran & Pee Wee Reese
LFRoy White
CFDuke Snider
RFRaul Mondesi
DH: Beals Becker

Notes

Sandy Koufax was a long shot to make the roster after missing most of the Spring through injury, but he didn’t last an inning in a final start, making the choice pretty easy … Frank Knauss joins Koufax at AAA, meaning Dick Redding earns the final bullpen slot … opening day starter Dutch Leonard was the worst of the Royal Giants’ Spring starters, which could be a good witch or a bad witch … none of the rest of the cuts were particularly dramatic, which is a problem for Brooklyn: when 5 players finish the Spring with OPS under .700 and none of them have their roster spots threatened, there are warning flags flying … 2 of those are Tommy Corcoran and Pee Wee Reese, making Brooklyn another team in search of a better SS, and 2 others are Ron Cey and Jim Delahanty, making them also desperate for a 3B upgrade … 2 bright spots from the Spring: neither Raul Mondesi nor Davey Lopes were scheduled to make the roster, both hit well enough to force themselves into the starting lineup.

SS Pee Wee Reese is the veteran leader at 35, followed by 34 year old SP Brickyard Kennedy. Dick Redding is the only teen on the roster at 19.

There is talent at AAA, with 24 year old SS Dickie Thon the most likely to get a chance, given the poor performance of the current crop at SS. On the mound, the final 2 cuts–Frank Knauss and Sandy Koufax–are likely to get a chance. AA is a bit bare, although the 3 teenagers–3B Tim Foli, SS Sonny Jackson, and P Hilly Flitcroft all have time to develop.

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