Master Index of Archived Threads
Franchises at Birth: The Colt .45s and the Mets (Part One)
SwitchHitter Aug 11 2005 04:23 PM |
[url=http://www.hardballtimes.com/main/article/franchises-at-birth-the-colt-45s-and-the-mets-part-one/]Franchises at Birth: The Colt .45s and the Mets (Part One)[/url]
|
MFS62 Aug 11 2005 04:40 PM |
Wow! That was painful. Its like a 40-something person being reminded every year about how they threw up at the table during Thanksgiving dinner when he was three years old.
|
Willets Point Aug 11 2005 04:44 PM |
Nice work with the metaphors, but I would think that in the 1960's if there was an association of "Colts" and "sports franchise" it would be to one of the dominant football teams of the era.
|
Edgy DC Aug 11 2005 05:09 PM |
Kranepool and Staub were free agents. Thems were pre-draft days.
|
MFS62 Aug 11 2005 05:16 PM |
You're right. But what I said about who each team went ofter and signed is still valid.
|
TheOldMole Aug 11 2005 10:32 PM |
It wasn't that bad. It really was fun rooting for the Mets in those days.
|
Edgy DC Aug 12 2005 01:21 PM |
That Staub had a better career than Kranepool is indisputable. I don't have any clue as to the depth and nature of George Weiss's motivation in signing Kranepool and neither does anybody. Nor does one signing of a free agent seventeen-year-old sum up anything. Two weeks after the Mets signed Kranepool, they signed Cleon Jones, who was neither local nor, to my knowledge, a big name. (Was Kranepool really a big name? Was any amateur at the time?) Nor does the signing of Cleon Jones fit your previous baseless notion that the Mets were blinded by racial bias in their signings of amateurs.
|
metirish Aug 12 2005 01:35 PM |
Thanks for the article SwitchHitter, I look forward to next weeks edition.
|
MFS62 Aug 12 2005 01:36 PM |
|
Edgy, I have never, nor would I ever, say that. Bias in the signing of amateurs was a tpoic I never have thought about until I just read your post. Honest. But from day 1 the Mets tried to push the "Local" image. Look at all the ex-Giant and Dodger players they had. And I remember Bob Murphy constantly reminding us when the Braves were coming to town with "Hank Fisher from Yonkers". Every time. My thoughts were, if you were from Yonkers, you already knew he was from there. If you weren't from Yonkers, you didn't give a flying rat's rectum. And Kranepool was a local hero. He had broken all of some Hall of Famer's (Lou Gehrig? Hank Greenberg?) home run records at James Monroe high school in the Bronx. I remember the to-do because my wife went there. And I remember the newspaper storis about him when he was in high school. And I feel his signing was in keeping of the "Push a local product" philosophy of the team. It had nothing to do with race. It was about scouting being sawyed by marketing strategy. That's all I meant. Nothing more. I apparently give you enough things to comment about, disagree with and criticize me for. But this is not one of them. Later
|
Edgy DC Aug 12 2005 01:47 PM |
Sure you have. You posted as fact the baseless notion that the Mets selected Steve Chilcott over Reggie Jackson in the 1966 draft because Jackson was a black man with the gaul to date a white woman (who apparently was actually a Mexican-American).
|
Johnny Dickshot Aug 12 2005 01:53 PM |
You're right. But what I said about who each team went ofter and signed is still valid.
|
Edgy DC Aug 12 2005 02:05 PM |
|
And that's the greater point. Wringing our hands over the Mets inablity to put out a fire as well as the Astros is silly while both teams were denied any real water pressure. (I can never come up with the metaphors when I really needed them. Weiss was out of his depth? Maybe, but who wouldn't be? His legacy as a great baseball figure should be nonetheless unassailable though. He flourished as minor league coordinator and GM (even more than Branch Rickey) under one set of rules, and when he took over the Mets, he (as well as the Astros) was given a set of rules that applied to nobody before or since. Did the Mets fielding familiar names past their prime win them many games? No. But, given few good options, it did help them to their initial popularity which gave them more to invest. I'm sure Weiss did his homework. He was a scouting legend.
|
Yancy Street Gang Aug 12 2005 02:08 PM |
At this point, it's hard to get too upset over the Houston team being better than the Mets in the 1960's. Sitting here in 2005, I'd take the Mets' past over that of the Astros in a heartbeat.
|
MFS62 Aug 12 2005 02:18 PM |
|
There was much written about it at the time, and this topic was discussed adequately in other threads. And your responses mayhave convinced me that I was misteken, because, as you pointed out, a majority of the GMs would have picked Chilcot, too. And IIRC, I admitted so at the time. So on that I stand corrected. It is you who is focusing on one incident and turning it iinto a theme of another post. My post in this thread was purely based on a local selection versus not selecting a better player for marketing reasons. But I have also told the story that when Weiss passed over both Luis Taint and Dick Allen in that year's version of the Rule V draft, after they both had excellent seasons in the minors, the reason he gave was that they were "too colorful". Don't forget what the Mets roster was like at that time (1963/64). Don't you think he might have found a spot for either, if not both, of them? And that the Yankees under Weiss were the next to last team to integrate? I'm not making that up either. Or when ElstonHoward came up to the Yankees, Casey Stengel was quoted as saying that "When they finally gave me a N...er, they gave me the one who can't run". Both of those quotes were widely reported, too. It was upon that that I based my opinions. Baseless? Those make a pretty good base IMHO. Where there's smoke there's fire. What is your proof to the contrary? Later
|
Edgy DC Aug 12 2005 02:29 PM |
||
No there wasn't, as we discussed in other threads, as nobody was able to find a drop of archival material to substantiate it. And it apparently wasn't discussed adequately enough to keep you from denying the accusation you made and it's nature, nor for you to keep up the notion that there was "much written about it at the time" when nobody can find anything.
I'm not sure what this means.
|
Johnny Dickshot Aug 12 2005 02:31 PM |
There was much written about it at the time,
|
MFS62 Aug 12 2005 02:40 PM |
|
I meant that I was talking about local players/ marketing strategy in this thread. I talked about signing Kranepool over Staub. The last time I looked, Staub was White. It was you who introduced the race issue into this thread, and you had to go back to posts I made almost a year ago in order to do it. Read my posts in this thread. Where did I mention race until you did? As they would say down in Colt .45 country, "Do you have a burr up your saddle today?" Later
|
Edgy DC Aug 12 2005 02:57 PM |
No, I'm arguing that you're taking cheap shots, making unsupportable statements about how the franchise has let you down, and I think it's counter-productive.
|
MFS62 Aug 12 2005 03:33 PM |
You're entitled to your opinion.
|
Edgy DC Aug 12 2005 03:59 PM |
||||||||||
But you're not entitled to your own facts.
No, it's not.
Burden of proof should rest with the accuser. The attitutde that it shouldn't is what makes such accusations cheap shots.
Nonsense. (1) When you alleged that the Mets drafted Kranepool over Staub, I pointed out that that didn't happen at all. (2) When you continued to frame Kranepool's signing as a selection over Staub, I clarified that it was never an either/or choice. I think this is true. (3) I spent perfectly good time looking for any references to the Mets' allegedly much-written-about racially motivated selection in in the 1966 draft, evidence that it should be the accuser's respoinsibility to provide, and found nothing. (4) When you denied ever making such an accusation, I reminded you that you most certainly did.
Never said you did. You do, however, very often personally insult Mets players and management personnel, sometimes very harshly.
I'm trying to clarify the facts as available on the record, not what you do or don't remember.
Those are really weird questions. No.
Way to throw a passive accusation.
Nobody was attacked.
To seek the truth so that we may all bask in it.
|
MFS62 Aug 12 2005 04:27 PM |
:)
|
mlbaseballtalk Aug 12 2005 07:45 PM |
|
Plenty of sources have stated this through the years, basically saying that it was M. Donald Grant whom was squeamish. Also I've seen places where the future Mr. October was showing many signs of being that "24 and 1" guy that he would be during his big league career and that may have made the Mets squeamish as well. Not sure if the "Ali-effect" (brining in a polarizing outspoken black superstar athlete) was a cause, or just plain not wanting a polarizing outspoken guy on the team, but there were plenty of non-baseball reasons why the Mets did not select Reginald Martinez Jackson Steve
|
mlbaseballtalk Aug 12 2005 07:55 PM |
|
Not to mention the Stros have played in what have to be three of the greatest NLCSs ever (including two individual games that have to rank up in the top as well) and have nothing to show for it Mets, 2-2 in the World Series including one of the top 10 ever, won one in one of the greatest upsets ever and damn nearly got a second 4-1 in LCS play including two of the best ever played, also in the first LCS ever. And surely the 73 ranks as one of the most memorable 2-0 in DS play. Not quite sure where to rank them, but the Mets's series have to rank near the top with dramatic moments Astros untill last year were punked out every year, including 1981 Only postseason record Mets and Stros are even in are Play-In Games Astros beat the Dodgers in NL West Playin in 1980 Mets beat the Reds in NL Wild Card Playin in 1999 Steve
|
mlbaseballtalk Aug 12 2005 08:19 PM |
http://boss.streamos.com/wmedia/yesnet/wmedia/cs_jackson2.wvx
|
Johnny Dickshot Aug 12 2005 09:22 PM |
But this is all well-after-the-fact recollections by a guy who obviously had a horse in this race. Not to mention how unfair it is to poor Steve Chilcott.
|
Frayed Knot Aug 12 2005 11:26 PM |
The story that Reggie told in his "auto"biography (written by Mike Lupica) is that his college coach told him that the Mets didn't want him for the girlfriend and (in the parlance of the times) "uppity nigger" reasons. Not sure if the coach ever commented on this publicly or not and Reggie's been known to have a vivid sense of self-importance.
|
Edgy DC Aug 13 2005 12:43 AM |
So, instead of examples of much written about it at the time, as claimed, we get a contemporary recount from Jackson in response to a leading question from Kay on the Yankees propaganda network, where even Jackson shrugs his shoulders as to whether it's actually true.
|
mlbaseballtalk Aug 13 2005 03:51 PM |
|
Okay, fine, I withdraw my assumtions then. I just checked "Amazin'" the Peter Golenbock book and it has Whitey's version. Granted Golenbock is pretty pro Herzog, Golenbock's style tends to be overtly pro-player/anti-management (like I said about Wallace Mathews earlier) and if that tidbit happened the way Jackson said it did, then it would have made its way into the book I'll stand corrected... Steve
|
Edgy DC Aug 13 2005 04:26 PM |
For all I know it did happen. I'm just not going to base my opinion on whether I fancy myself an iconoclast or a pollyanna, or somebody accuses me of either of those, but rather based on evidence. And the evidence so far is mighty thin.
|
TheOldMole Aug 13 2005 05:11 PM |
It's not totally out of the question that racism was involved. Men from a different generation were running the Mets back then. But Chilcott was considered a blue-chip prospect.
|
Frayed Knot Aug 13 2005 05:34 PM |
That Met mgmt was run by a bunch of older conservative looking men is, I think, part of what gives legs to the story. That they would make a decision based on Jackson's persona rather than his talent "fits the profile" so it's easy for many to assume it to be fact (which ironically makes some of those claiming prejudice guilty of stereotyping themselves).
|
mlbaseballtalk Aug 13 2005 06:04 PM |
BTW one thing that sort of would poke a hole in Reggie's Center Stage story is that Winkles said it was Scheffing who was the guy who ixnayed the whole thing.
|
Johnny Dickshot Aug 16 2005 08:00 AM |
Part II
|
MFS62 Aug 16 2005 08:40 AM |
Y'know what I just noticed?
|
Johnny Dickshot Aug 16 2005 09:25 AM |
Scheffing who was the guy who ixnayed the whole thing.
|
Edgy DC Aug 16 2005 10:08 AM |
It's a shame (or telling, you decide) that the 1966 draft comes up not at all.
|
seawolf17 Aug 16 2005 10:08 AM |
Hey, you can't spell Scheffing without "effing."
|
Johnny Dickshot Aug 16 2005 10:36 AM |
I'd sure like a solid high-profile writer to do some digging and come up with a definitive recount of what is known and unknown while there are still perhaps enough witnesses alive to piece it together.
|
Edgy DC Aug 16 2005 11:33 AM |
Yeah, I did a lot of reading also. I only long for a high-profile writer so he or she can (1) use her or his clout to interview all the living witnesses and check the accounts against each other, and (2) publish it in a high-profile reputable outlet and put the mythmaking to rest.
|
seawolf17 Aug 16 2005 11:36 AM |
It's too bad that Feaver kid never panned out. He coulda been somebody.
|