"When the Giants Come to Town..." is my blog intended to chronicle my thoughts on San Francisco Giants baseball. My special interest is in prospects and the farm system, but of course, will comment on all aspects of the San Francisco Giants. I will also comment on baseball in general, particularly from a fantasy baseball perspective. I hope you will find the site informative, and invite you to join in the discussion.
Friday, April 3, 2020
Blast From The Past: Dusty Rhodes 1954
The scout who signed James Lamar Rhodes to a contract gave him the nickname "Dusty" because "all ballplayers named Rhodes were called Dusty." The story goes that the day he was signed, Dusty Rhodes played a semipro game in Alabama barefoot because he didn't know he was going to play and left his spikes at home. He cultivated a reputation for being a country bumpkin in the big city with a taste for nightlife and alcohol. He later downplayed this part of his life as a self parody for entertainment value. For more colorful anecdotes of Dusty's off-field exploits, look up his biography on the SABR website.
He was a terrific lefthanded hitter but a terrible outfielder and spent a 7 year MLB career as a 4'th OF/lefthanded bat off the bench. After struggling in a PH role his first two seasons, he became one of the best PH's in the history of the game. His career year by a wide margin was 1954. Here is his batting line for the regular season:
.341/.410/.695, 7 2B, 3 3B, 15 HR, 12.4 BB%, 12.0 K%, 186 PA.
That success carried over into the World Series in which Rhodes won Game 1 in extra innings with a pop fly HR down the RF line that travelled a little more than 257 feet. He basically won Game 2 with a bloop single to drive in the tying run and later got up from a knockdown pitch by Early Wynn to hit a bullet of the RF roof as the Giants won the game 3-1. He got his 4'th and final hit of the series in game 3 with a bases-loaded 2-run single to extend the Giants lead to 3-0 in an eventual 6-2 win.
He continue to enjoy success in a part-time/bench role in 1955 but his career tailed off after that. After spending a very successful year in the AAA PCL in 1958, he played one season for the San Francisco Giants in 1959 exclusively as a PH.
No comments:
Post a Comment