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Thread: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

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    breath westofyou's Avatar
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    Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.c...6664/index.htm

    September 15, 1969
    Second Time For Vander Meer
    He had pitched a no-hitter in Cincinnati four days before. Could he repeat the performance now in Ebbets Field?
    Billy Reed
    As soon as he came out on the field to begin his warmup pitches, he was conscious of the crowd. Brooklyn's Ebbets Field was not exactly a joyful place for young Johnny Vander Meer. The Flatbush fans—the loudest and loyalest in baseball history—loved to mock, his pitching motion, his "rocking chair," as the sportswriters dubbed it. "One" the crowd would chant as he dipped down, "two" as his arms came overhead, "three" as the right leg kicked, "four" as the torso rocked forward and the ball was released. Anytime Vander Meer pitched in Flatbush it was an adventure, but this night was something more.

    Maybe it was the lights. It was the first official major league game ever played at night in New York City or anywhere outside Cincinnati, for that matter. The 615 floodlights tinted the grass a surrealistic green, and already, in the dugouts, the players were grumbling.

    "This screwy schedule gets your stomach shot to hell," said one Dodger. "You're eating a steak dinner at midnight and colliding with yourself getting up for batting drill the next day."

    More likely it was not the night game but that other thing, the no-hitter, that was in the mainstream of Vandy's consciousness. Four days earlier he had pitched it against the Boston Bees in Cincinnati, and the fans in Flatbush were letting him know they knew all about it—with razzberry jam Brooklyn style.

    Official paid attendance that night was 38,748—one of the largest crowds ever to attend a game at Ebbets Field. Three bands performed on the field, and Jesse Owens, the Olympic star, gave an exhibition of running as if to prove to what depths sports heroes can be reduced in short periods of time. Only two years after his historic Olympic triumphs in Hitler's Germany, Jesse was barely getting along as a promoter of all-Negro baseball and basketball teams. Trying to make ends meet, he moonlighted by doing exhibitions.

    It was 9:23 when the first pitch was thrown to Cincinnati's leadoff batter, Second Baseman Lonnie Frey. In the third inning the Reds scored four runs, thanks mainly to Frank McCormick's three-run homer into the left-field bleachers. Meanwhile, although the chanting fans were doing their best to psych him out, Vander Meer hung goose egg after goose egg next to Brooklyn's name on the scoreboard. The sixth inning passed, then the seventh, and still the Dodgers didn't have a run—or hit. However, by now Vander Meer was thinking about it—and so were his teammates.

    Then, in the bottom of the eighth inning, a strange thing happened. The Brooklyn crowd got to its feet, not to further harass the man with the rocking-chair pitch, but to cheer him. As Vander Meer walked toward the mound for the bottom of the ninth, illuminated by 92 million candlepower, the crowd was beside itself. The first Dodger batter, Buddy Hassett, hit a slow roller down the first-base line and Vandy tagged him out.

    Two to go.

    Then Babe Phelps walked. So did Cookie Lavagetto. And Dolf Camilli. On the mound Vander Meer looked anxiously at the Reds' dugout and, sure enough, here came the manager, Bill McKechnie. A pitcher began warming up in the Reds' bullpen. The crowd yelled, "Leave him in," which is exactly what McKechnie intended to do.

    "John, you're trying to put a little too much on the ball," said McKechnie in reassuring tones. "Just throw your stuff. Don't give up anything cheap."

    The next batter was Ernie Koy, who had raced against Owens in one of the exhibitions and beaten him at 100 yards, albeit with the aid of a 10-yard handicap. Koy grounded to Third Baseman Lew Riggs, who fired a strike to Catcher Ernie Lombardi, forcing out Goody Rosen (running for Phelps) at home.

    Two outs, bases loaded, bottom of the ninth. Baseball's classic tableau for hero-making, but never before quite like this. Only one man stood in Vander Meer's way now, and there he was, digging in at the plate. Some players might have taken a dive for Vandy's sake, but not this guy. This guy's name was Durocher—Leo Durocher.

    The count ran to one ball, two strikes and now the pitcher was coming in with The Big One. It popped into Lombardi's mitt. Umpire Bill Stewart called a ball.

    "I had to call it a ball," Stewart said later. "It was a little high, as I saw it. Golly, I was pulling for the kid as much as anybody in the stands. It was mighty lonely out there. Everybody wanted that pitch to be a third strike, but it just wasn't. I would have kicked myself in the pants if Durocher had hit the next one safely."

    He didn't. Leo the Lip lifted a high fly to Harry Craft in center field, and now Vandy knew it was in the bag. "I watched the ball going out toward center," he said later. "Craft probably played the shallowest of any outfielder, but I knew he had it all the way. If it had to be hit to the outfield, he's the outfielder that I wanted to catch it."

    Never was a 6-0 loss by the Dodgers so celebrated at Ebbets Field. Fans vaulted over the railings to rush at Vander Meer, who seemed to be in a daze. Mobbed before he got to the third-base line, Vandy needed help from his teammates and the cops to make the dugout, and it wasn't until he got there that the full realization of what he had done began to dawn on him. He was the first pitcher ever to rack up two no-hitters in a row.

    "I had a real good fastball." he told reporters. "I stayed with it pretty much until the seventh inning. Then I threw about 15 curveballs in the last two innings, where I had thrown only about five in the first seven. I was staying with a good pitch. The curveball comes to you as the game progresses."

    Almost lost in the crowd that night was a bulky fellow who came back to the dressing room after the game to say, "Nice game, kid" and shake Vander Meer's hand. Later Vandy would say that meeting Babe Ruth was his biggest kick of the night.

    Thirty-one years ago this summer—June 15, 1938. It was a time when baseball truly could claim to be "the national pastime" and the country rushed to embrace its new hero. Editorials spelled out his virtues, the Ohio senate passed a resolution in his honor, a move started in Cincinnati to replace a downtown statue of former President James A. Garfield with one of Vander Meer, his home town of Midland Park N.J. wanted to name a ball park after him, newspapers serialized his life story and Cincinnati General Manager Warren Giles said that all writers wishing to do pieces on Vandy should be prepared to fork over 50% of their profits. Oh, yes. Vandy's $3,000 salary was raised.

    Nobody could foresee in those wonderful days that near the end of that season Vander Meer would twist his shoulder so badly that his control would be impaired forever, that a season later Vandy would be voted biggest disappointment of 1939, that two years later he would voluntarily be back in the minors, looking for his lost control. Vander Meer was never the same again, and later he would remember something else about that June night—the specter of young Jesse Owens, Olympic hero, putting on exhibition races to keep from starving.


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    My clutch is broken RichRed's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    What a scene that must have been that night. Brooklyn fans cheering an opposing pitcher after he no-hit their beloved team, and with Jesse Owens in the house, to boot. Thanks for posting that.
    "I can make all the stadiums rock."
    -Air Supply

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    Just The Big Picture macro's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    I've got an official NL ball signed by Vander Meer that means quite a bit to me. Thanks for posting, west.

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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    ok, that might clinch it, I've been looking for an old time set of seasons to replay on strat, might have to be the 1938-1941 period. Great story.

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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    Quote Originally Posted by RichRed View Post
    What a scene that must have been that night. Brooklyn fans cheering an opposing pitcher after he no-hit their beloved team, and with Jesse Owens in the house, to boot. Thanks for posting that.
    And Babe Ruth, my goodness, I suppose it was too much to ask Joe Louis to make an appearance?

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    Be the ball Roy Tucker's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    That SI Vault is a good way to lose quite a few hours.
    She used to wake me up with coffee ever morning

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    Big Red Machine RedsBaron's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    Quote Originally Posted by Hoosier Red View Post
    And Babe Ruth, my goodness, I suppose it was too much to ask Joe Louis to make an appearance?
    Good point.
    Vander Meer finished his career with a record just under .500 at 119-121. Baseball-Reference.com's Stats Neutralizer shows him as deserving a better record than that, projecting him at 123-104. He missed two seasons due to WWII.
    Thanks WOY for the article.
    "Hey...Dad. Wanna Have A Catch?" Kevin Costner in "Field Of Dreams."

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    My clutch is broken RichRed's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    Quote Originally Posted by Hoosier Red View Post
    And Babe Ruth, my goodness, I suppose it was too much to ask Joe Louis to make an appearance?
    It really is like one of those biopics where the protagonist just happens to meet all the big stars of the day.

    Come to think of it, Vandy's back-to-backs would make a terrific movie.
    "I can make all the stadiums rock."
    -Air Supply

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    Redsmetz redsmetz's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    Quote Originally Posted by macro View Post
    I've got an official NL ball signed by Vander Meer that means quite a bit to me. Thanks for posting, west.
    I think I've probably shared this before, but I was at my bank talking with the branch manager. He walked away and I noticed an autographed baseball and could make out the "Johnny" (or so I thought) and when he came back I asked if it was a Johnny Bench ball. He told me that it was a Johny Vander Meer ball. This was a couple of years before his death, although I was unaware that he was still alive then. He told me Vander Meer had been in town for his aunt's 104th birthday and he signed a bunch of balls for the Kiwanees as a fund raiser. He told me I could get one for $25. I called my wife to run it by her (things were tight at that point in our life) and she said that as long as I'd let her buy something completely frivolous too, I could go ahead and get one.

    Now Ive' got it here with my Barry Larkin ball my brother-in-law gave me for Xmas one year. I keep meaning to have someone put up a shelf here in my office for those two balls and some other items for a little baseball shrine. One of these days...
    “In the same way that a baseball season never really begins, it never really ends either.” - Lonnie Wheeler, "Bleachers, A Summer in Wrigley Field"

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    nothing more than a fan Always Red's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    great post, woy.

    Johnny Vander Meer of the Reds pitching his second consecutive no-hitter in 1938, against the Dodgers at Ebbets Field. The Dodgers barred radio broadcasts from the stadium. (NY Times)
    sorry we're boring

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    breath westofyou's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    The Dodgers barred radio broadcasts from the stadium.
    An agreement of all 3 teams in the NYC area, spearheaded by the Yankee's, broken by the Dodgers and Larry MacPhail.

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    Member Spitball's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    I thought this might be an old story about old friend Wetzel (aka Johnny Vander Meer).
    "I am your child from the future. I'm sorry I didn't tell you this earlier." - Dylan Easton

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    My clutch is broken RichRed's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    Digging this back up: An interesting note about Vander Meer is that he was originally signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers who then sold him to the Boston Braves/Bees. Boston sold him to Cincy in 1935. Who are the two teams he no-hit? Why, Brooklyn and Boston, of course.

    You can't make this stuff up.
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    Rally Onion! Chip R's Avatar
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    Re: Dipping into the Vault - Johnny Vander Meer

    Quote Originally Posted by RichRed View Post
    Digging this back up: An interesting note about Vander Meer is that he was originally signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers who then sold him to the Boston Braves/Bees. Boston sold him to Cincy in 1935. Who are the two teams he no-hit? Why, Brooklyn and Boston, of course.

    You can't make this stuff up.

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