Also Read: Baseball Names and How They Got That Way! (Parts I - V) Part VI (A&B) Part VII (C) Part VIII (W&Y) Part IX (D) Part X (M) Part XI (more, C) Part XII (E) Part XIII (F) Part XV (H) Part XVI Part XVII (J&K) Part XVIII (I) Part XIX (M) Part XX (N) Part XXI (O) Part XXII (P) Part XXIII (R) Part XXIV (S, part 1) Part XXV (S, part 2)
Harvey Frommer on Sports
Baseball Names - and How They Got That Way! Part
XIII
(F)
The words and phrases are spoken and written
day after day, year after year - generally without any wonderment as to how
they became part of the language. All have a history, a story. For those
of you who liked Part I, Part II, Part III, X and all the others and wanted
more, here is more. As always, reactions and suggestions always
welcome.
F
ROBBY ("THE JUDGE) Hall of Famer
Frank
Robinson played for the Cincinnati Reds (1956-1965), Baltimore
Orioles (1966-1971), Los Angeles Dodgers (1972), California Angels (1973),
etc. His nicknames indicated an abbreviation of his name and some deference
to his forceful ways.
fallaway slide Used to avoid
a tag, a slide to one side of a base, catching the base with the foot of
a bent leg.
(fall-away slide, fadeaway slide, fadeaway)
FATHER
OF THE EMORY BALL Rookie
right-hander Russ Ford posted a 26-6 record with 8 shutouts, 1910
FENWAY
PARK The Boston Red Sox moved into their new home in 1912 on the property
of the Fenway Realty Company at Landsdowne and Jersey streets. Although it
was rebuilt in 1934, it is essentially the way it was at the time of its
birth. Its "Green Monster"the 37-foot-high wall extending from the
foul pole in left field 315 feet from home plate to the flagpole 388 feet
from home well past left-centeris its most distinctive feature.
FIREBALLER
A fastball-throwing pitcher (HARD CHUCKER;
FIREMAN Johnny Murphy, the first great relief
pitcher, who put out fires. Joe
Page picked up this nick-name for his top relief work later
on.
FIVE OCLOCK
LIGHTNING Back in the 1920s
to attract school kids and the Wall Street crowd, baseball games at Yankee
Stadium began at 3:30 P.M. At five o'clock, a whistle from a nearby factory
blew signaling the end of the workday and often a typical late-inning home
team rally and triumph, earning the Yankees that colorful nickname
FIRST
TELEVISED SPORTS EVENT On May
17, 1939, over station W2XBS, a 16-man NBC crew with equipment costing $
100,000 sent out the first televised sports coverage. The subject was the
Princeton - Columbia baseball game from Baker Field in New York. A single
camera was used, and the total cost of transmittal was $3,000. There were
no close-ups of action. The
players on the television screen looked like white flies. The single camera
was stationed near the third-base line, and it swept back and forth across
the diamond. Instant replay, "slo-mo," split screen, Zoomar lens, hand-held
cameras, instant isolates, overhead blimps, graphics, Monday Night Football,
and Super Bowl were not even dimly perceived by the average fan, but on June
5, 1939, an editorialist for Life magazine showed some
vision:
No
fuzziness (in the telecast) could hide what television will mean for American
sports.... Within ten years an audience of 10,000,000 sitting at home or
in the movie theaters will see the World Series or the Rose Bowl game....
Thousands of men and women who have never seen a big-time sports event will
watch the moving shadows on the television screen and become excited
fans...."
FIRST WORLD
SERIES
Back in the 1880s for a period
of seven years there had been play-offs between the winners in the National
League and the American Association. Once the play-offs went to 15 games
- 1887 between St. Louis and Detroit. Pittsburgh won its third straight National
League pennant in 1903. Boston won the brand new American League title by
14 l/2 games over the Philadelphia Athletics. The Pirates bragged about Honus
Wagner whose .355 average earned him the batting title. Their swashbuckling
manager Fred Clarke was runner-up with a .351 average. Boston boasted about
two 20-game winners in Deacon Phillippe and Sam Leever.
The
first modern World Series came about at the suggestion of Boston owner Henry
J. Killilea and Pittsburgh's owner Barney Dreyfuss. It was called "Championship
of the United States" and it was a five of nine games affair. The first game
was October l, 1903 at Boston's Huntington Avenue Grounds before 16,242.
Deacon Phillippe pitched Pittsburgh to a 7-3 win over Boston's Cy Young.
Throughout the game and the
series Boston's rabid fans serenaded Pittsburgh players with a popular song
of the day, "Tessie," but they substituted their own vulgar words for the
regular lyrics. The routine definitely had a negative impact on the Pittsburgh
players. "It was that damn song that caused us problems," grumbled Buc player
Tommy Leach afterwards.
Deacon Phillippe won three
of the first four games of the series for Pittsburgh but then faltered. Boston
then swept the next four games. Bill Dinneen and Cy Young won all five games
for Boston in the series On October 13, only 7,455 showed up - the smallest
crowd of the series. Phillippe pitched his fifth complete game of the series
but lost, 3-0 to Dinneen and Boston had the
championship.
Right after the game ended
players from both clubs lined up for a combination team photo. It was a
remarkable display of good sportsmanship considering the bitterness that
had existed between the junior American League and senior National
League.
An oddity of the World Series
was that the losing players received more money that than the winners. Owner
Dreyfuss put his club's share of the gate receipts into the players' pool.
Each Pittsburgh player netted $1,316 while each Boston player netted $1,182.
Deacon Phillippe - heroic in
his efforts in the series with five decisions and 44 innings pitched, still
World Series records, was given a bonus and 10 shares of stock in the Pirates.
FLORIDA MARLINS
Named
after the large fish, found off the Florida coast and also a
minor league AAA team, the Miami
Marlins. It was H. Wayne Huizenga, Blockbuster Video founder and owner of
the team, who chose the name. I chose Marlin, he said, because
the fish is a fierce fighter and an adversary that tests your
mettle.
FLYING
DUTCHMAN Honus Wagner played
for the Pittsburgh Pirates for 21 years, winning eight batting titles, collecting
3,430 hits, and establishing team records for most doubles, triples, and
extra-base hits. He played every position except catcher, but he earned his
fame as a shortstop. Of Dutch origin, he was a speedy base runner, leading
the National League five times in stolen bases and recording a career total
of 722 stolen bases. His speed and his Dutch heritage blended together to
form his nickname, the Flying Dutchman.
FORDHAM FLASH Former
New York Giant stalwart, Frankie Frisch, was all of that.
FORDHAM
JOHHNY Ace former Yankee relief
pitcher Johnny Murphy attended Fordham University in the
Bronx.
FOUR
HOUR MANAGER A negative slap
at former Yankee manager Bucky Harris, who put his time in at the game and
was finished.
THE FRESHEST MAN ON EARTH ("Clown Prince of Baseball of 19th Century
Baseball" Arlie Latham played 17 fun-filled major league seasons beginning
in 1880? He delighted in setting off
firecrackers and lighting candles in the dugout a signal to
the umpire of impending darkness
FRIDAY
NIGHT MASSACRE On April 26,
1974, Yankees Fritz Patterson, Steve Kline, Fred Beene, Tom Buskey, and half
the pitching staff were traded to Cleveland for Chris Chambliss, Dick Tidrow,
and Ceil Upshaw.
Harvey Frommer is his 34th consecutive year of writing sports books. A noted oral historian and sports journalist, the author of 40 sports books including the classics: "New York City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," his acclaimed REMEMBERING YANKEE STADIUM, an oral/narrative history (Abrams, Stewart, Tabori and Chang) was published in 2008 as well as a reprint version of his classic "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball." Frommer's newest work CELEBRATING FENWAY PARK: AN ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY OF THE HOME OF RED SOX NATION is next.
Frommer sports books are available direct from the author - discounted and autographed.
FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a
readership in the millions and is housed on Internet search engines for extended
periods of
time.
Also read:
Herb Rogoff's
ONEMOREINNING