Remembering Ted Williams: Selected Oral History
By Harvey Frommer
Ted
Williams and Yogi Berra at Fenway
(FrommerArchives)
This
is the centennial week of the birth of Ted Williams, August 30, 1918.
The
Splendid Splinter did it his way. From the Frommer archives please
enjoy
memories of those who had the pleasure of experiencing him.
JON
MILLER: "Geez," they said, “We have this
great left-handed hitter and he keeps losing home runs out there so
we’ll pull
the bullpens in and make it a little easier for him.” They called the
area
Williamsburgh after
JAMES
JIMMIE GREENE: We quickly found
out where players parked their cars. Ted Williams used to put on such a
show
for us. He'd choreograph the whole thing, line us up and say “Now you
girls get
in front. Tall kids get in the back.” He
looked very Californian, always in a sport coat. He never wore a tie.
DICK
FLAVIN: Ted used to say Dom DiMaggio was
the smartest
outfielder. Every time a ball was hit to left-center he’d yell, “You
take it
Dommie.”
ROGER
KAHN: Every once in a while,
Williams would lose his temper and give them the finger. People out in
left
field would jeer. There was a constant clash between Williams and the
customers.
BOB
BRADY: But in those years he was the only
reason to
go to
ROGER
KAHN: At that time, the Red Sox
clubhouse closed something like 40
minutes before a game at the request, no the demand of
Williams who called reporters the “Knights of
the Keyboard.”
IKE
DELOCK: He didn’t like the press. He
wanted to ban
them from the clubhouse. The players said, “You can’t do that.” So he eased up. But
whatever he wanted he damn well got.
FRANK
SULLIVAN: I went up from A – ball in ‘53. I was 23. I saw buck shot wounds all
over the walls and learned that Ted Williams was out shooting pigeons.
I heard
Yawkey also shot along with him.
BILL
LEE: The long-time guy in charge
of the grounds keeping, Joe Mooney, told me that the cops came to
Williams and
asked: “Ted, didn’t you worry about your stray shots going to
Ted
was supposed to have said: “You
know I was thinking about that.”
IKE
DELOCK: Most of the time Ted Williams
arrived very
early for games. I was like two lockers away from him. He had so many
bats in
his lockers. There was a certain
respect for him from the other players. He was a good-looking guy. He
could be
loud; you couldn’t miss him. Pleasant
when he wanted to be but pretty scary when he wanted to be.
BILL
NOWLIN: Ted Williams was my
favorite. I thought he was going to hit
a home run every time up. I
got to
see a lot of great play by him as I sat in those bleachers. I touched his home run ball - - I can’t
remember if it was Number 494 or 497 -- after it had been caught by
somebody
else.
JERRY
CASALE: My biggest thrill was
being next to Ted Williams. How many times we sat in that little locker
room
and he would take off his pants coming in from a game, rip off his
shirt, throw
them and hit me with them. Thousands of
dollars right in my face. Who thought of it then?
BOB
SULLIVAN: Dad wanted my brother
Kevin and me to see Williams play before he retired. We were going to
go in
early and we were going to come back relatively late considering we
were so
young.
I,
of course, was a young Williams
fan. And Dad was a World War II veteran,
a Master Sergeant, and he was a Williams devotee. There’s
a myth now that all of the
CURT
GOWDY (Game Call) "Everybody quiet now here at Fenway Park after they
gave
him a standing ovation of two minutes knowing that this is probably his
last
time at bat. One out, nobody on.
BOB
KEANEY: Ted dug in, wiggled his
fanny, and glared at pitcher Jack Fisher. Everyone stopped breathing.
Ted swung
as hard as he could, but he missed the fat pitch and nearly sprained
his
arms. Some dreamers said later
that
Ted missed on purpose, so that Fisher would be fooled into throwing
that fast
ball again.
CURT
GOWDY (Game Call) Jack Fisher into his
windup, here's the pitch. Williams swings -- and there's a long drive
to deep
right! The ball is going and it is gone! A home run for Ted Williams in
his
last time at bat in the major leagues!"
FRANK
MALZONE: When he hit a home run,
it was usually high—it wasn’t no line drive.
This time he got it all. When he hit a home run, he had a way of
loping.
This time his running was like a hop.
TED SPENCER: Williams hits
the home run. I
hear it on the radio. I said to myself,
“Damn, I should have been there.”
BROOKS
ROBINSON: I was playing third base. He went running around the bases, and I
looked at him as he passed second base. I had my arms folded as he
passed me.
That was absolutely a magical moment.
STEVE
RYDER: He had that regal trot
around the bases. Didn’t tip his cap,
didn’t look at the stands, just right into the dugout.
FRANK SULLIVAN: We all wanted him
to stop and at least take his cap off but that sonofabitch, he just ran
into
the dugout.That was the way that Ted was.
He went down the dugout steps straight into the tunnel. We didn’t know that that was his last game
but we all suspected it.
A professor for more than two
decades in the
MALS program at Dartmouth College, Frommer was dubbed “Dartmouth’s Mr.
Baseball” by their alumni magazine. He’s also the founder of www.HarveyFrommerSports.com.
He
is the author of the acclaimed
The Ultimate Yankee Book http://www.frommerbooks.com/ultimate-yankees.html