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 other pieces and wanted
more, here is more. As always, reactions and suggestions always
welcome.
MAN,
THE (STAN THE MAN) Stanley Frank Musial, St. Louis Cardinal baseball immortal,
batted .315 as a rookie in 1942, when he was 21 years old. In 1962, at the
age of 41, he hit .330-one point under his lifetime batting average. Musial
is the all-time Cardinal leader in games played, runs, hits, doubles, triples,
homers, and total bases. His twisted, crouched, coiled stance at the plate
enabled him to slash the ball with power or stroke it with finesse to any
part of the playing field. Musial was an especially successful hitter in
the small confines of Ebbets Field. His specialty was slamming frozen rope
doubles off the outfield walls. Dodger fans had difficulty pronouncing his
name, sometimes calling him "Musical." Many of the black Dodger fans simply
referred to Musial as "the Man" in tribute to the power and style he displayed.
Eventually fans all over the league used this nickname-a reference not only
to Musial but to the respect due his power and authority.
MAN IN THE IRON HAT Yankee owner Captain Tillinghast L'Hommedieu Hutson
wore the same squished derby hat over and over
again.
MAN NOBODY KNOWS Catcher Bill Dickey, Yankee immortal, because of his
blandness.
MAN OF A THOUSAND CURVES His nickname was a bit hyperbolic, but the major
league batters who swung at his stuff and came up empty might not disagree
with it. For Johnny Sain, talented star of the Boston Braves and other teams,
curveball pitches were a trademark and the reason for his nickname. He allegedly
had such pitching skill that his curves dropped, darted, hesitated, broke
wide, broke fast, broke slow, broke twice. There may not have been a thousand
curves, but there were enough variations on these curves Sain possessed that
the effect on batters was the same (see "SPAHN AND SAIN AND PRAY FOR
RAIN").
MAN O' WAR Sam Rice was a fleet-footed outfielder and was
called Man O' War" after the famous racehorse of his
era.
MANDRAKE THE MAGICIAN During the late 1940s and into the 1950s, Don Mueller
of the New York Giants appeared to have a special gift with a bat in his
hands. His lifetime batting average was a respectable .296, yet he never
led the league in any hitting category. His nickname came from his expert
bat-manipulation and his ability to hit the ball where he wanted it to go.
MAJOR Ralph Houk, for rank held in the Armed Forces and
demeanor
MARSE JOE Hall of Fame Manager Joe McCarthy, , for his commanding
style.
MARVELOUS MARV Marvin Eugene Throneberry was perhaps born to be a New York
Met. His initials spelled out the name and his personality and limited skills
underscored the characteristics of the 1962 New York expansion team.
Throneberry, who looked like Mickey Mantle batting but did not get the same
results, labored through a seven-year, four-different-team major league
career- the Mets were his last team. He is a gentle, fine humored man, and
sportswriters hung the nickname on him in good-natured jest. Throneberry
loved it and went along with their efforts to depict him as a clown. Once
a teammate dropped an easy fly ball. Marvelous Marv smiled and shouted, "What
are you trying to do anyway, steal my
fans?"
"MASTER
BUILDER IN BASEBALL Jacob Ruppert, and that he was.
MASTER MELVIN Mel Ott was a power-armed right fielder for 22 years with the
New York Giants. He smashed 511 home runs in a fabled career that saw him
average better than a hit a game while compiling a lifetime batting average
of .304. Ott became a Giant at the age of 16-and that's how his nickname
came about. Ott's Hollywood-type beginning was recalled by Eddie Logan, Giants
equipment manager, who was about the same age as Ott at the time and was
sent to pick up the youth: "We had the 9th Avenue El at the time. Mr. McGraw
had told him to ride the El to the last stop, which was the Polo Grounds.
He took the El the wrong way and wound up at the Battery. I looked for the
straw suitcase. I found him. I said, 'C'mon boy, let's go.' He got the biggest
thrill riding back on the train." Labeled "McGraw's baby," Ott was in only
35 games in 1926, then 82 in 1927. "He's too young to play big-league ball,"
McGraw said, "but I am afraid to send him to the minors and have a manager
there tinker with his unorthodox batting style. The style is natural with
him. He'll get results as soon as he learns about big-league pitching." And
he
did.
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