By Yours Truly
http://throneberryfields.com/2016/04/20/milt-pappas-rip-infamy-tragedy-and-beyond/When Tigers pitcher Armando Gallaraga* lost his perfect game to Jim Joyce’s blown call at first base in 2010,
he had a sympathiser from baseball’s not too distant past. Milt Pappas’s cell phone blew up, Pappas having
lost a perfect game in the ninth on a ball call.
“I would tell him, ‘I feel for you’,” Pappas—who died Tuesday morning at home at 76—said he’d have told the
then-Tigers pitcher. “There have been only 20 perfect games in the history of baseball. The umpire situation
was the same one I had — they blew it.
“‘At least I had the satisfaction of getting the no-hitter’,” continued Pappas in telling what he’d have said to
Gallaraga. “‘You don’t. I feel for you. You pitched a tremendous game. At least you have the satisfaction of
the umpire saying he was sorry. But that doesn’t help your situation as far as a perfect game’.”
The problem was that Pappas’s loss—pitching for the Cubs, 2 September 1972, against the Padres—wasn’t
a blown call. He spent decades to follow arguing otherwise, but the 3-2 pitch to pinch hitter Larry Stahl with
two out in the top of the ninth was clearly outside enough that plate umpire Bruce Froemming made the right
call. Pappas’s saving grace was that he got the next batter out on a popup behind second base to save at
least a no-hitter.
Pappas to the end thought Froemming should have given him the strike considering what history was at
stake. “Bruce was a young umpire,” said Pappas’s Cub teammate, Hall of Famer Billy Williams. “If we had
had a veteran umpire that day, sometimes they get a little lenient with a guy pitching a perfect game.”
There were other days of infamy in the pitching career of Miltiades Stergios Papastergios. One was the day
he was traded from the Orioles for Frank Robinson, and the other was a clubhouse explosion in Wrigley Field
in which he had role enough after manager Leo Durocher—fuming over a freak check-swing double off Pappas
for a tough loss—demanded a team meeting and turned it into a war.
Two days before the Robinson trade, in late 1965, Pappas was assured by the Orioles that he wouldn’t be
traded. So, on a rainy day, he decided to take his wife to the movies. The film?
The Cincinnati Kid. That’d
teach him. The couple returned home to learn Pappas was traded with outfielder Dick Simpson and
veteran relief pitcher Jack Baldschun. The
“not a young thirty” Robinson was so not young he won the
1966 American League Triple Crown and help the Orioles to their first World Series rings, as a franchise
and in Baltimore.
Pappas was one of the heralded-enough Baby Birds rotation of 1960-61–with Steve Barber, Chuck Estrada,
and Jack Fisher**. He’d been a two-time All-Star in Baltimore. As he related decades later, he also told then-
commissioner Ford Frick he fed Roger Maris nothing but hittable fastballs for Maris to hit his 59th homer in
1961, because he didn’t like Frick’s declaring the single-season home run record could only be broken in
154 games. The arbitrary deadline day was the day Maris teed off for 59.
Why would the Orioles want to give up the only Baby Bird who hadn’t been bedeviled by elbow issues
(possibly
connected to the tricky slip pitch once masted by Yankee legend Eddie Lopat but taught them by
manager/ex-catcher Paul Richards) that sank the others into journeyman status?
For one thing, the Orioles coveted Robinson and the Reds at the time needed more solid pitching to
bolster their then-top two starters, Jim Maloney and Sammy Ellis. Pappas—whose stock in trade was
control and deceptiveness, and who’d pitch serviceably enough for the Reds—seemed like an ideal fit.
But Durocher claimed (in
Nice Guys Finish Last) that the Orioles really let Pappas go because of his
reputation as a clubhouse lawyer. ”It was, from everything I heard,” he wrote, “why Cincinnati let him go;
and it was probably why he no longer felt he had a glowing future in Atlanta.”
The Lip wasn’t quite the most reliable witness, of course. But he wasn’t the only Cub who had that view,
apparently. “Milt was always known as a clubhouse lawyer with any team he was with,” said Glenn Beckert,
the second baseman on Durocher’s Cubs, to Peter Golenbock (for
Wrigleyville). “He was a hell of a
pitcher . . . but he was always getting into the politics of the business.”
Pappas’s Baltimore teammate Boog Powell told another story. “Actually, I kind of had mixed emotions
about [the trade] it because Milt was a good friend and a heck of a pitcher,” he once told the
Baltimore
Sun. “We had seen Frank from the other side. We knew he was an MVP and had some really good years.
We certainly respected him as a hitter. Also at the same time, why mess with something that was working
pretty good?”
When the Orioles acquired Hall of Famer Luis Aparicio from the White Sox two years earlier, he, too, had
a rep as a clubhouse lawyer. Apparently, the Orioles weren’t always allergic to the type. And Little Looie
put up some good seasons for the Orioles including their ’66 Series winner.
Pappas did cook himself with the Reds over the politics of politics, sort of. When presidential aspirant
Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated, several teams elected not to play on the day of his funeral as a show
of respect. (Six games were postponed.) The Reds’ players voted to play. Pappas, the team’s player
representative (as he’d also been in Baltimore and would be again with the Braves and the Cubs), was
outraged by the vote, especially when he suspected the team’s upper management pressured the
vote.
Three days after he made his objection to playing on Kennedy’s funeral day and the vote in favour
known, he was dealt to the Braves. (He’d pitch adequately for the most part but surrendered three runs
in two and a third innings of Game Two work in the middle of the Miracle Mets’ 1969 National League
Championship Series sweep.)
When he got to the Cubs, he pitched well but seethed with many teammates under Durocher’s
whiplash managing style. Overusing regulars, underusing his bench, mismanaging his badly built as
it was bullpen (riding favourites into the ground; just ask Phil [The Vulture] Regan, who declined
swiftly after he’d been a big part of their 1969 run for the roses), and thus overworking especially
his younger starters, didn’t sit well with many of those Cubs.
Never mind that Durocher didn’t like what he considered Pappas’s too-evident eagerness not to
pitch into the seventh inning if he could help it. When Durocher called a team meeting in August
1971 that went down in Cub history as one of the worst and most public, Pappas proved one of
the unwitting causes, after an away pitch to Houston’s Doug Rader turned into a freak check swing
double and a tough Cub loss.
The Lip bawled his players up one side and down the other, then urged them to speak their minds
freely, as if he was another player. That’d teach them. Pappas couldn’t resist, according to David
Claerbaut’s
Durocher’s Cubs, accusing Durocher of being unable to handle the team, of
going too far with the team meetings, and of failing to use his bench more judiciously.
Oops. Durocher ripped Pappas and his defender Joe Pepitone,
the haunted former Yankee, a few
new ones. Then, he shockingly (and falsely) accused Ron Santo of lobbying for a Ron Santo Day,
causing the eventual Hall of Fame third baseman—formerly one of Durocher’s stauncher defenders—
to go nuclear. Durocher’s hold on the Cub clubhouse was never that stable, but he probably lost
it for keeps right there.
If there were times when Pappas was on the side of the angels, there were other times when he
was thought a devil’s handmaiden. Aside from fuming for years over the perfect game loss, Pappas
also fumed in later years over the decline in pitching conditioning and endurance.
That sounded strange coming from a pitcher who averaged six innings a start over a seventeen
season career. Leo Durocher may have been guilty as charged about mismanaging the Cubs when
they were clear contenders in 1969-72, but under Durocher’s management Pappas led the National
League in shutouts in 1971.
No baseball loss, however, equaled that of Pappas’s first wife. Described as a recovering alcoholic,
Carole Pappas, his childhood sweetheart, went out one day in 1981 and never returned. She was
found dead five years later, when pond workers discovered her in her car and in the pond, the victim
of an accidental drowning.
The jacket of his eventual memoir,
Out at Home, showed Milt and Carole Pappas and their two
young children at an Orioles field ceremony. One can only imagine the depth of his heartbreak. “That’s
a question that may never be answered,” he told the
Chicago Tribune. “Why she went that way; why
nobody saw a car fly through the air into the pond.”
In time, Pappas remarried happily and became the father of a third child; his widow, Judi, has been
a special needs teacher. Once the owner of a Baltimore steakhouse which burned to the ground a
year after he opened it, Pappas after baseball settled in Illinois and worked for a liquor distributor
and also as a building supplies salesman.
He looked more cheerful than his periodic curmudgeonly remarks portray him to have been. He never
stopped keeping an eye on his former Orioles and Cubs; he attended Cub Opening Days regularly;
he’d enjoyed interacting with fans no matter what his clubhouse relationships were or weren’t.
When Carlos Zambrano pitched his no-hitter for the Cubs, Pappas was publicly congratulatory. He
had reason to be. Zambrano’s was the first Cub no-hitter since Pappas’s broken perfecto. Against
the Astros, whose outfielder’s freak check double once launched one of Pappas’s more unpleasant
hours. In Houston.
“I’m still the last guy to pitch a no-hitter for the Cubs in Wrigley Field,” Pappas told the
Chicago
Tribune. (Jake Arrieta’s no-no against the Dodgers was in Dodger Stadium last August.) “That
says something itself.”
So does something else. In 2001, Pappas received a note from a fan named Juan Rosales, asking
whence his nickname, “Gimpy.” The durable old righthander
sent him a reply: When I was 17, I had
my knee operated on. I was nicknamed Gimpy and it stayed awhile. Thxs for the nice letter. If you
want me to personalise your book by me, I would be happy to do it. Thxs, Milt.
A fan-friendly clubhouse lawyer, or a clubhouse mensch who treats fans like interlopers. Which one
would you prefer?
—————————————————————————-
*
— Armando Gallaraga was destined for a sadder fate, alas, than losing his perfect game. Stricken
not long after by elbow miseries, Gallaraga bounced from there between the majors and the minors
and even overseas before calling it a career this past December. But he may yet have a second baseball
act, happily: the Yankees hired him as a minor league pitching instructor in February.**
— For the curious, here’s what eventually became of the other Baby Birds:Steve Barber—He would be moved to the Yankees before becoming an original expansion-draft Seattle
Pilot, after the Orioles decided his elbow issues just weren’t going to be resolved enough to make him
useful, with another crop of young pitchers—including Jim Palmer and Dave McNally—either coming
up or in the works.
Barber would go from Seattle to bounce around four other teams as a spare relief pitcher unable to solve
his elbow issues, before he retired to the Las Vegas area. He ran a car conditioning business for a number
of years (“I got a chuckle out of Steve Barber’s new job—he’s got a bunch of cars lined up getting
diathermy and heat treatments”—Jim Bouton, in Ball Four Plus Ball Five
) before becoming a bus
driver in Nevada’s Clark County School District, responsible for transporting disabled children. He died
in 2007 of complications from pneumonia.
Barber’s prime moment in the sun, other than winning 20 games for the 1963 Orioles: combining with
Stu Miller (for whom Jack Fisher would be traded in 1963) on a losing no-hitter against the Tigers; 2-1
the final.
Chuck Estrada—Like Barber, Estrada would go from promising to elbow-troubled too swiftly, even if
Barber managed to hang in much longer. Estrada would become a journeyman before retiring in 1967.
He became a pitching coach for the Rangers, the Padres, the Indians, and several minor league teams
before retiring in 1995. His prime moment in the sun, other than tying with Jim Perry of the Twins for
the American League lead in 1960 wins—picking up the win in relief as a Met in Hall of Famer Tom
Seaver’s first major league start.
“The thing that bothered me most about my short career,” Estrada would say to author William J. Ryczek
(for The Amazing Mets 1962-69
), “is that fact that I was just learning how to pitch when my arm blew
out. I used to challenge everybody.”
Jack Fisher—He would bounce from the Giants to the hapless 1964-67 Mets, where he pitched well
enough but was done in by lack of run support as often as not. (“Done in” was a polite way to put it
in 1965, when he lost 24 games.) After two terms with the White Sox and the Reds of little note, Fisher
retired and returned to the Baltimore area, where he opened a successful sports bar named for the
nickname Hoyt Wilhelm hung on the husky righthander: Fat Jack’s.
Alas, Fisher is remembered best for surrendering two historic home runs—the one Ted Williams hit in
what proved his final major league at-bat, in 1960; and, the one Roger Maris hit to tie Babe Ruth at
60 in 1961. Not that he’s complaining.
“People are going to remember you however they want to remember you,” Fisher told the Baltimore Sun
in 2010. “I can live with that.”