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Thread: Elijah Dukes - Discuss

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    breath westofyou's Avatar
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    Elijah Dukes - Discuss

    We can all agree that baseball is WAY different than the back and forth sports, and the "code" is a vague and long standing tradition and is a large slice of the oft used term, "Playing the game the right way"

    Apparently Duke is causing strife with his approach to the game.

    http://tinyurl.com/5stads

    Dukes Needs to Kiss the Antics Goodbye

    By Thomas Boswell
    Friday, September 12, 2008; E01

    Elijah Dukes's talent is now indisputable. So is his temper. Both are huge. Which will win? The stakes: star or burnout.

    Both sides of Dukes were on display Wednesday at Shea Stadium: the titanic homer, the double after a brush-back, the near-brawl, the crude gesture to fans, the mocking kiss toward the Mets, the boo-me-more waves to the Big Apple crowd and one last foolish smooch to 52,431 new enemies. Now, after a no-news-is-good-news season, the battle for Elijah is out in the open again, but on a bigger scale.

    Dukes arrived as a rumor. Now, he's verified. Not based on bush league tall tales or the eyeballing of scouts, but documented in major league facts. In his last 44 games, the 24-year-old, 240-pound outfielder has hit, slugged and gotten on base at a rate surpassed by only two men in the National League: Albert Pujols and Lance Berkman. But they can't steal 30 bases or possess a cannon arm.

    Can Dukes, if he puts together a couple of healthy 150-game seasons, be one of the dozen best players in the NL, along with elite young players such as Ryan Braun, David Wright, Chase Utley, Ryan Ludwick, Matt Holliday, Hanley Ramírez and, if hits like '06 again, Ryan Zimmerman?

    Dukes probably can. That is, if he stops having nights such as Wednesday's when the combustible, immature traits that scarred his past, and made the Nats the only team that would touch him, come to the surface and make you fear for his future.

    Last week, a Nationals executive said: "Does Elijah have Hall of Fame ability? Maybe not. Probably the next level. Will he fulfill it? Or will he blow it up? I have no idea. But everybody here likes him. So far, so good."

    Then came Wednesday -- not a disaster, but a huge wake-up call for everyone, especially Dukes.

    Nobody -- not Pujols now or Barry Bonds before Balco, not Mickey Mantle or even Babe Ruth at their peaks -- can get away with very much of the junk Dukes pulled in New York. Once in a blue moon, maybe.

    But if such selfish, disrespectful, inflammatory behavior becomes part of your identity in baseball, it makes you a marked man to your foes and, eventually, toxic in your own clubhouse no matter how great your talent or how fierce and sincere your passion for the game.

    Dukes did nothing evil in New York, just self-destructive. But in baseball, like the NFL, that can be enough. Both sports enforce their internal codes.

    "We are dealing with it" internally, Nationals President Stan Kasten said yesterday. "But let me just ask -- what interim grade would we, and he, have gotten before Wednesday night? The Nationals' handling of Dukes was a great success story. This was something that worked -- so far, the best news of the year for us."

    Now, like so much of this Nats season, that optimism is up in the air. The facts are simple, the implications chilling.

    Dukes hit a 450-foot homer that almost cleared the Shea Stadium bleachers, a blow typical of his performance since his first Nats homer on June 5. In 177 at-bats, he's hitting .322, slugging .605 with a .415 on-base percentage and 11 homers, plus 10 steals. Could he do that for a full season? You've got to prove it. But it'd be near 200 hits, 40 doubles, 38 homers, 120 RBI and 35 steals. Total superstar. *

    Dukes responded to his homer by showing up the Mets, blowing a kiss toward their dugout. Basic "disrespect" isn't a new concept. In his next at-bat, the Mets brushed him back, as any team since 1869 would and should. Many pitchers would have thrown at his head. The Mets didn't.

    Elijah screamed, moved toward the mound and could have started a brawl. The all-night fuss was on.

    One standard doesn't fit all sports. In the NBA, trash talk and anything short of throat-slash gestures is colorful, part of the game. Fine. But just try blowing a kiss to Bill Belichick after you catch a scoring pass on the Patriots or mocking an NHL team as you skate past its bench.

    Terrell Owens can taunt a Redskins crowd to boo him louder and it's considered byplay. But, in baseball, players and fans are too close to one another for too many hours on too many days for players to think they can take on a city.

    Pitcher "John Rocker was Mr. Anti-New York, like a wrestling character," said Kasten, who then ran the Braves. "It worked for him for a while. But I could see what was coming. He ran off the rails" in a racist interview.

    And Rocker's career quickly disintegrated into rubble.

    No sport changes its nature for any player. "You have to act differently in baseball than you do in the NFL," Deion Sanders told me. "It's not wrong. It's just how it is."

    Nats players are visibly inspired by Dukes's fierce style. Since he got hot on June 5, the Nats are 21-23 when he plays, but 10-31 when he's been out.

    However, the Nats also know the limits of behavior in their own sport, no matter how much they crave a star like Dukes, who, if he established his long-term stability, would probably be a defensive upgrade in center field.

    "He's an emotional player, but I don't know if there's really a place for that in this kind of game," Zimmerman said. "But he's a great player. He's got a lot to learn, but he showed that kind of talent he has, too."

    The Nats have tried to provide Dukes with every kind of support system to overcome his copiously documented troubles in the past. He seldom even speaks to reporters and never without a team representative beside him.

    In a season of boredom and disappointment, Dukes has been, by far, the best reason to watch the Nats. In their search for core pieces of their future, youngsters Lastings Milledge, Jesús Flores and John Lannan have shown promise, but hardly greatness. Others, including Collin Balester, Emilio Bonifacio and Joel Hanrahan, are on the horizon. But besides Zimmerman, Dukes stands alone.

    When he smiles, or connects with a fastball, electricity hits his team and you can see the vague outline of a future.

    But when he beats his chest after a walk-off walk, infuriating the pitcher, or glares at the home plate ump as his walk-off home run is still leaving the park, the Nationals' room grows darker.

    The choice is clear. Soon, Dukes has to grow up. Not totally, but enough. Adults adapt. Elijah, you have to be the one to change, because the game, like the world, never will.
    *Total Superstar.

    FYI here are the only two players to achieve close to what Boswell calls a Total Superstar.

    Code:
    SEASON
    HITS >= 190
    HOMERUNS >= 35
    DOUBLES > 40
    STOLEN BASES >= 30
    RBI >= 110
    
    AGE                           YEAR     AGE       H       HR       2B       SB       RBI    
    1    Ellis Burks              1996       31      211       40       45       32      128   
    2    Larry Walker             1997       30      208       49       46       33      130


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    Rally Onion! Chip R's Avatar
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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Kind of reminds me of Jose Guillen. I imagine Mr. Dukes isn't going to stick around with one team for very long.
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    How did his teammates not tell him to expect one in his ribs? I guess when you have your whole team being less than 30 years old on average?
    You think someone would point out to him that he is bush....but i doubt he cares.

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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Albert Belle topped out at 23 stolen bases.
    http://www.baseball-reference.com/b/belleal01.shtml

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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    I know when I went down to GABP and saw the Nats play the Reds, I was very impressed with Duke. Both at-bat and in the field. Some guys you see play and just say "dang, this guy has it". Absolute bolts off his bat, great coverage in CF, and the guy played *hard*.

    But all the rest of the behavioral stuff is going to bleed his career if he doesn't get a handle on it. It sounds like the Nats are doing everything they can to put a lid on his behavior, but you can only do so much.

    Blowing kisses after a HR is going to get you a fastball in the ribs. Do it again and it may be at your noggin. And his teammates will put up with it only for a while. It's up to him if he wants a All Star career or (like Chip said) a Jose Guillen-level one.
    She used to wake me up with coffee ever morning

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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    *Total Superstar.

    FYI here are the only two players to achieve close to what Boswell calls a Total Superstar.
    And both were Coors products.

    ...

    Dukes looks like a combination of Milton Bradley and Jose Guillen DNA. Neither of those two has been able to overcome their personal demons. I'm hoping Dukes will turn out differently, but the odds are not in his favor.
    "I prefer books and movies where the conflict isn't of the extreme cannibal apocalypse variety I guess." Redsfaithful

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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Quote Originally Posted by klw View Post
    Albert Belle topped out at 23 stolen bases.
    http://www.baseball-reference.com/b/belleal01.shtml
    Yep, take away the steals and you get this list

    Code:
    SEASON
    HOMERUNS >= 35
    DOUBLES >= 40
    HITS >= 200
    RBI >= 110
    STOLEN BASES displayed only--not a sorting criteria
    
    AGE                           YEAR     AGE      HR       2B        H       RBI      SB     
    1    Rogers Hornsby           1929       33       39       47      229      149        2   
    T2   Lou Gehrig               1934       31       49       40      210      165        9   
    T2   Albert Belle             1998       31       49       48      200      152        6   
    T2   Ellis Burks              1996       31       40       45      211      128       32   
    T5   Ripper Collins           1934       30       35       40      200      128        2   
    T5   Larry Walker             1997       30       49       46      208      130       33   
    7    Rogers Hornsby           1925       29       39       41      203      143        5   
    T8   Babe Ruth                1923       28       41       45      205      131       17   
    T8   Al Simmons               1930       28       36       41      211      165        9   
    T8   Stan Musial              1949       28       36       41      207      123        3   
    T11  Lou Gehrig               1930       27       41       42      220      174       12   
    T11  Chuck Klein              1932       27       38       50      226      137       20   
    T11  Babe Herman              1930       27       35       48      241      130       18   
    T11  Matt Holliday            2007       27       36       50      216      137       11   
    T11  Stan Musial              1948       27       39       46      230      131        7   
    T16  Hank Greenberg           1937       26       40       49      200      183        8   
    T16  Babe Ruth                1921       26       59       44      204      171       17   
    T16  Frank Robinson           1962       26       39       51      208      136       18   
    T16  Todd Helton              2000       26       42       59      216      147        5   
    T16  Rogers Hornsby           1922       26       42       46      250      152       17   
    T21  Chuck Klein              1930       25       40       59      250      170        4   
    T21  Hank Aaron               1959       25       39       46      223      123        8   
    T23  Lou Gehrig               1927       24       47       52      218      175       10   
    T23  Chuck Klein              1929       24       43       45      219      145        5   
    T23  Hank Greenberg           1935       24       36       46      203      170        4   
    T23  Don Mattingly            1985       24       35       48      211      145        2   
    T27  Hal Trosky               1936       23       42       45      216      162        6   
    T27  Albert Pujols            2003       23       43       51      212      124        5   
    29   Hal Trosky               1934       21       35       45      206      142        2   
    30   Alex Rodriguez           1996       20       36       54      215      123       15

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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    I really would love to see the numbers Belle would have put up in 1995 with the extra 18 games lost to the strike. He would likely have come close to but still short of the 200 hits for the above list but how high the 50 hrs and 52 doubles would have been would have interesting.

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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Quote Originally Posted by klw View Post
    I really would love to see the numbers Belle would have put up in 1995 with the extra 18 games lost to the strike. He would likely have come close to but still short of the 200 hits for the above list but how high the 50 hrs and 52 doubles would have been would have interesting.
    Here are the guys that are outliers, and Robby was in a expansion year, and Musial was at the cusp of a hitting era. But the rest are post strike or Ruth/Depression era.

    Code:
    AGE                           YEAR     AGE      HR       2B        H       RBI      SB       
    T8   Stan Musial              1949       28       36       41      207      123        3      
    T11  Stan Musial              1948       27       39       46      230      131        7    
    T16  Frank Robinson           1962       26       39       51      208      136       18   
    T21  Hank Aaron               1959       25       39       46      223      123        8   
    T23  Don Mattingly            1985       24       35       48      211      145        2

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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Baseball history is replete with superstars who were difficult personalities, head cases, and downright SOBs to the fans, their teammates, and the media.

    Babe Ruth made rude gestures to fans and even went into the stands once after one. The list is enormous.

    The difference between now and then though, IMHO, is the media, and the amount of exposure these situations would get.

    They didn't have ESPN back then.

    When I look at guys like a Belle, Guillen, Dukes,and so many others with similar traits/personalities, it makes me wonder what makes them that emotional ticking time bomb? Their background environment, and how they were raised? It always seems to point to a maturity issue that leads to this self-destructive behavior.

    Team shrink time?
    "In my day you had musicians who experimented with drugs. Now it's druggies experimenting with music" - Alfred G Clark (circa 1972)

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    Rally Onion! Chip R's Avatar
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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Quote Originally Posted by GAC View Post
    Baseball history is replete with superstars who were difficult personalities, head cases, and downright SOBs to the fans, their teammates, and the media.

    Babe Ruth made rude gestures to fans and even went into the stands once after one. The list is enormous.

    The difference between now and then though, IMHO, is the media, and the amount of exposure these situations would get.

    They didn't have ESPN back then.

    When I look at guys like a Belle, Guillen, Dukes,and so many others with similar traits/personalities, it makes me wonder what makes them that emotional ticking time bomb? Their background environment, and how they were raised? It always seems to point to a maturity issue that leads to this self-destructive behavior.

    Team shrink time?
    Reading Marvin Miller's autobiography he brings up the case of Alex Johnson. He was a little before my time but was probably a young whippersnapper to people like GAC : He was a former Red and I believe he was with the Angels when he was suspended for something or other. Miller and the Players Association fought the suspension and eventually found out that Johnson had some kind of chemical imbalance that made hem act the way he did. Perhaps players like Dukes and Guillen have some sort of problem like that. But if they do, will the meds hamper their performance(s)?
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
    I was wrong
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
    Chip is right

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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Quote Originally Posted by Chip R View Post
    Reading Marvin Miller's autobiography he brings up the case of Alex Johnson. He was a little before my time but was probably a young whippersnapper to people like GAC : He was a former Red and I believe he was with the Angels when he was suspended for something or other. Miller and the Players Association fought the suspension and eventually found out that Johnson had some kind of chemical imbalance that made hem act the way he did. Perhaps players like Dukes and Guillen have some sort of problem like that. But if they do, will the meds hamper their performance(s)?

    July 5, 1971

    Tell Alex Johnson you're a longtime fan and receive one of three replies:

    "Uh-huh."

    "And?"

    "What do you want from me?"

    Johnson is bitter, caustic and slightly funny Ask him what he's up to, and expect a quick snap: "Putting a clutch in a truck. That O.K.?"

    Fine, Alex. Fine. If nothing else, Johnson more than lives up to the billing on his lone SI cover: THE FALLEN ANGEL. At the time, Johnson , a slugging leftfielder for the California Angels , was being ripped by teammates, coaches and fans for about a zillion reasons—from poor attitude to lazy fielding to flat-out lying. These days, as owner of Johnson Trucking Service in Detroit , Johnson says, "I can do whatever the hell I want."

    When he was released by the Detroit Tigers in December 1976, Johnson , now 55, all but annulled his relationship with the game and plunged into his truck-repair and leasing business as if his rocky, 13-year major league career had never happened. "I used to think, f—-the game," he says.

    That bitterness stemmed from his second season with the Angels . In 1971, the year after he had won the American League batting crown—his .3290 average was .0004 better than that of the Boston Red Sox ' Carl Yastrzemski—Johnson was fined, benched five times and suspended for 88 games for a lack of hustle and a lousy attitude. In a way, he was the original Rodman (without neon), a brooding, confounding sort who could go 4 for 4 one day and fail to run out grounders the next. Managers were enticed by his talent, but not his personality.

    "There came a point when I was stereotyped wherever I went," says Johnson , a divorced father of two. "I remember showing up for the first day of spring training with a new club, and the manager called me into his office. He said, 'You've got no trouble with me, I've got none with you. Understood?' That shows how people thought of me."

    So, at age 34, with a .288 career batting average, 1,331 hits and a scarred reputation, Johnson hung it up. The ensuing 21 years have been enough to change him from Alex Johnson , troublemaker, to Alex Johnson , truck guy, at least in the minds of most Detroiters. "Do I enjoy my life?" Johnson asks rhetorically. "I enjoy not being on an airplane all the time. I enjoy not having to face everything I did. I just want to help people with their vehicles. It's a nice, normal life—the thing I've always wanted."


    uly 05, 1971
    For Failure To Give His Best...
    Alex Johnson, baseball's troubled and troublesome batting champion, is suspended for indifference by the California Angels
    Ron Fimrite

    Fred Koenig, a large and friendly bald-headed man who has the bad luck to be employed as a coach for the California Angels , was sitting in a Chicago tavern last week, washing down another of his team's acrid defeats with a cold beer, when he was overtaken, as so many Angels are these days, by a compulsion to explain.

    There is an endearing fragility to these explanations, all of which dangle helplessly from one of two prefaces: "I like Alex personally, but..." or, heard as often, "This thing has been blown out of all proportion...."

    Koenig drew deeply from his glass, turned finally and, clearing his throat, began: "You know I like Alex personally, but...."

    "Hey," interrupted the dapper sort on the next stool, "are you guys talking about Alex Johnson ?"

    "I like Alex personally," Koenig said, brushing aside the interruption, "but I despise him professionally."

    "That Johnson is really something, isn't he?" the intruder persisted. "Now there's a personality. I think he's good for the game.... Hey, where's your friend going? He's got my matches."

    But Koenig had swiftly exited, escaping what obviously was shaping up as yet another Johnson imbroglio. It is unlikely that any Angel coach, player, front-office functionary or even casual fan would long sit still for such blasphemy, even from the mouth of an innocent. In fact, if any of them were carrying a gun....

    Alex Johnson (see cover) is the prime anti-hero in baseball's strangest play. He is at the core of a complex drama that has been only temporarily muted by his suspension last weekend "for failure to give his best efforts to the winning of games." If the suspension should last longer than 10 days, Johnson can appeal his case to Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn .

    Despite his tremendous ability—he was the 1970 American League batting champion—Johnson's absence will not be lamented by his teammates, many of whom had been wondering why it took Angel General Manager Dick Walsh so long to get around to suspending him. Johnson 's slipshod play, which had torn his team apart and led to wild rumors and accusations, dates back to spring training in Arizona , where he was observed during one exhibition game positioning himself in the shadow of an outfield light standard. He followed the moving shadow throughout the long hot day, ignoring normal defensive alignments against the various hitters. Figuratively, he has been playing in the shade ever since.

    It was not so much that Johnson was simply having an off year; it was that his non-efforts seemed so calculated. Singles hit to Johnson 's field became doubles; runners freely took extra bases on him and he refused to run out ground balls, although he was the fastest man on the team. These offenses, coupled with a consistently low batting average, did not sit well with his teammates.

    "He showed management he was going to do things his way," said Outfielder Billy Cowan shortly before the suspension, "and he's still in the lineup. It looks like he has a point to prove, and he's proving it."

    Now Alex Johnson is no longer in the lineup, and his point, whatever it was, may now be irrelevant. But the mystery of his behavior and the destructiveness of it persist.

    "It's tragic," says Walsh , who had unsuccessfully tried to deal Johnson away before the June 15 trading deadline. "Here is a man with so much talent going to waste. And careers are so short in this field. Alex Johnson just isn't motivated by some of the things that motivate other people."

    Motivation, let it be said, docs not seem of the least concern to this moody, unpredictable man.

    "I'm in baseball," he said, "because it is a healthy activity. It associates itself with creativeness and is a source of refinement.... To put money above everything is wrong. You've got to put things in perspective. Baseball is not first. The individual is first. A lot of people forget that. A ballplayer is under contract for his ability on the field, not as a human being."

    It is as if Johnson were groping for respect of a different kind, for an appreciation of the person, not the athlete. And in his groping he has developed a super-sensitivity to any slight, real or imagined.

    "Last year when I won the batting championship on the last day, the guys shook my hand," he says. "But some guys didn't want me to win and they gave me the weakest handshakes I've ever felt."

    Conspiracies spring up for Johnson like clover in an outfield. No area is immune. Take the batting cage.

    "Batting practice is supposed to be for hitting. But on this club, guys don't pitch so you can hit. I'll stand up there and say, 'Ball one, ball two, man on first, call the bullpen.' Then in the shower you hear those pitchers say, 'Hear what that Johnson was saying? Hear what that Johnson was saying?' On a good major league team pitchers would accept what I said so they could help the hitters. On other clubs I say, 'Ball one,' and the pitcher says, 'O.K., O.K., I'll get the ball over for you.' "

    What other clubs? In fewer than eight seasons in the major leagues, Johnson has played for Philadelphia , St. Louis , Cincinnati and the Angels . Walsh nearly shipped him off to Milwaukee for Tommy Harper last month, but Harper , dormant most of the season, suddenly sprang to life and the transaction was called off. One general manager, says Walsh , seemed hurt by the suggestion that Johnson might be a valuable acquisition for his team.

    "Gee," Walsh quoted him as saying, "I thought you were my friend."

    Walsh has not entirely abandoned his quest. "There are always problem players," he says, "and there is always someone who feels he can handle them."

    In the past, however, Johnson 's problems seemed merely temperamental. He was uncommunicative and frequently sullen, although the "I-like-Alex-but" contingent has always said that he is amiable enough out of uniform. Neither Walsh nor Angel Manager Harold (Lefty) Phillips claim, for that matter, that Johnson is a problem anywhere but on the field. He is good with children, and his most recent notoriety seems even to have improved his disposition with outsiders. He was talking to newspapermen and radio and television broadcasters as never before, cheerfully granting interviews that, because of his elliptical rhetoric, invariably failed to reveal the source of his deep discontent. The trouble was locked within Alex Johnson , and there it remains.

    "Ever get sick of a thing?" Johnson asked. "I mean sick, sick, sick? I mean really sick, sick, sick? That's the way it is with me and this club. I didn't consciously decide to do this [not hustle]. But things are just so disgusting, it drills on my mind, drills on my mind. It hurts to look back on a game like that, but I can't do it any other way. I'm not playing any part of the game up to par. I can't. I can't get my mind to want to play the game the way others do."

    Black journalists have quoted Johnson as saying his troubles are racial, but Johnson , while not entirely disavowing the issue, is as vague in discussing it as he is with other topics. He is more inclined to blame the insensitivity of his teammates, the "dishonesty and hypocrisy" of Walsh and Phillips and, preeminently, Chico Ruiz , his teammate, former friend and the godfather of his adopted daughter.

    "He is the cause of dissension," Johnson says of the utility infielder who seems generally popular with the other Angels . "He keeps trying things against me.... I never knew a man to be so determined in a negative way...."

    Johnson touched off the biggest brouhaha on this truly star-crossed team when he accused Ruiz of menacing him with a pistol in the Angel clubhouse during a game with Washington on June 13.

    "We had both been pinch hitters," Johnson said. "The game was still on, but I was done, so I showered. I had my street clothes on. Ruiz was in the clubhouse, too. He was rattling something, making a noise, so I looked up. What he was doing was tapping his gun on a chair. I looked up and he pulled the gun out of its holster. He did it one time last year and was more jovial about it. This time he was not jovial."

    "It did not happen and I can swear to it on a Bible with both hands, with my whole body—even sit on it," says the embattled Ruiz .

    There were no witnesses to the alleged incident, and a club investigation has failed to establish the facts. But it did lead to some murmurings about armed Angels and it excited believers among them as well as nonbelievers.

    "This thing has been blown out of all proportion," said Jim Fregosi , shortstop, team leader and nonbeliever. "I've never seen a gun or anything you would consider a weapon in the clubhouse."

    But there had been guns, as well there might be on a team owned by Gene Autry . The old movie cowboy himself had been known to tote a six-shooter or two into the locker room. Only last year he gave one of his pistols to Pitcher Eddie Fisher .

    "It's one of my prized possessions," said Fisher , a gun collector. "He used it in one of his movies. I own about 65 guns and I've kept them in my lockers for the past five or six years. Most of them are antiques. I've even had Tony Conigliaro's shotgun in my locker. But all of this has nothing to do with violence. And I'll tell you one thing, I don't have any guns there now. Not after all this."

    The gun stories have made the Angels the butt of some predictably bad jokes. A bellman carrying a player's suitcase felt obliged to quip, "I better not drop this, it might go off." A sign above a hotel cigar stand read, "Please check your guns here." Opposing ballplayers, enjoying a bench jockey's field day with the hapless team, inquire whether the Angels would prefer to take batting or target practice.

    The Angels themselves have converted this potential serious situation into a running gag. They will stalk each other in the clubhouse in mock shootouts or leap upon unwary newsmen in make-believe death struggles. A full-blown pregame riot seemed well under way in the outfield among various Angels in Milwaukee last week. It was strictly for big laughs.

    There was, however, nothing remotely funny about Johnson 's curious rebellion. His mockery of the game cut his fellow players doubly deep. In a world of performance, to refuse to perform seemed to make fools of those who did, seemed to make nonsense out of the pure patterns of the game they played. The most strenuous exercise Johnson permitted himself at the ball park was putting on his uniform. He did not take outfield practice before games, and his actions in games approached parody. Occasionally, as in last week's doubleheader at Milwaukee , he would give tantalizing flashes of his old brilliance, running at full speed or leaping against a fence for a fly ball. But these brief episodes were followed by long stretches of inertia.

    At best, Johnson was barely adequate as an outfielder, and his defenders used this deficiency to excuse his shoddy showing in the field. But he was making plays that would shame a Little Leaguer.

    Two days before his suspension, in a game against the Brewers , Johnson broke late on a line drive to left field that bounced by him for a double, igniting a five-run Milwaukee fourth inning. In the seventh, with Harper on first, Gus Gil hit a ground single to left which Johnson failed to charge. Harper raced all the way to third base, from where he eventually scored on an infield hit. Not even base runners of Harper 's acknowledged speed can expect to advance routinely from first to third on balls hit to left field.

    Johnson also did himself no favors at bat. Leading off the ninth, he slapped a hard ground ball up the center of the diamond that Milwaukee Shortstop Ted Kubiak fielded off balance. Normally, an excellent throw would have been required to catch a runner as swift as Johnson moving at full speed. But excellence was hardly necessary since Johnson never reached the vicinity of first base, jogging barely two-thirds of the distance down the line before sauntering off into the dugout. Phillips benched him the next night in Chicago , and Walsh flew in from California .

    Walsh , who acquired Johnson in a trade with Cincinnati , admitted he had tried unsuccessfully to persuade him to perform up to his capabilities. The suspension is testimony to the failure of those powers of persuasion.

    Phillips , who had been the man in the middle throughout the long ordeal, is now at least temporarily relieved of his burden. But for how long? Five times during the season Phillips benched Johnson , only to be overruled, apparently from on high. And throughout his travail, Phillips found it hard to believe that anyone of Johnson 's exceptional skills would willingly play so far beneath himself.

    Lefty Phillips is a near-perfect victim. He has the face for it—a long, sad-eyed countenance on which the skin hangs in loose folds like a hound's. He has the disconcerting habit of speaking with his mouth full of either tobacco or an unlit cigar, both of which he chews forcefully. These are the mannerisms that have made him vulnerable to all sorts of clubhouse mimics.

    Phillips was never a major league player. He turned to scouting after a sore arm cut short his career while he was still in the low minors. But for all of his down-home personality, he is an apt student of baseball. He was an excellent pitching coach for the Dodgers, and three years ago he was made the Angels ' director of player personnel. In May of 1969 he succeeded Bill Rigney as the team's manager. The next year he piloted the Angels to an 86-76 won-loss record, equaling their best season. Now in 1971 he seems cruelly destined to lead them to one of their worst—just when they looked like pennant contenders.

    The Angels have not been hitting. Some of their stars—notably Fregosi and Conigliaro—have been playing with injuries, and lesser lights have fallen prey to some unusual accidents. Pitcher Rudy May hurt his arm after he tripped over his dog, and Pitcher Andy Messersmith survived a 90-mile-an-hour auto collision. But Phillips is convinced that Johnson is the villain of the piece.

    "I came up in this game the hard way," he said recently from behind his cigar. "I can understand if a man plays bad when he has no ability, but this fellow has great ability, super ability. There's always been players who couldn't get along with their teammates. Cobb was one, and Tinker and Evers almost never talked to each other. The difference was, they played good. This fellow won't even try. And that's not just bad for us, it's bad for baseball."

    This last is a recurring theme: by refusing to play as well as he is capable, Johnson was not only hurting his team, but attacking the game's basic ethic.

    "I wouldn't take a kid of mine to see Johnson play," said Fisher , echoing sentiment popular among the Angels . "A kid seeing him play might say, 'So that's how they do it in the major leagues.' Well, that's not how they do it in the major leagues. I've never been on a team where the players didn't give 100%. This thing just leaves you disgusted. Finally you end by compromising the things you really believe in. That's the hard part. This man is the most unusual ballplayer I've run into in 14 years in the game. Every man on the team has tried to reach him. None of it has worked."

    "What do you see when you see a person walking down the street like this?" said Conigliaro , hunching his shoulders in a poor imitation of a Lon Chaney creation. "You know that person is sick, right? That's how I feel about Alex. He's got a problem deep inside him that he won't talk about. He's so hurt inside, it's terrifying. He's a great guy off the field. On the field, there's something eating away at him."

    Johnson seems convinced "there are those who want to see me break down. I'm not close to breaking down. Probably 99% of human beings would be. Not me. And that frustrates them even more."

    He is playing his own game now, but it isn't baseball. Despite his protests to the contrary, there is a possibility that Johnson simply has lost his taste for the sport. He hinted as much the other day in what amounted to a parable. "When I was about 13 or 14," he said, "I kept hearing about pizza. I didn't know what it was. I thought they were saying, 'piece of,' like 'piece of pie.' One day I went into a place and ordered the biggest pizza there. I ate and ate and then left and got sick. It wasn't what I had expected. I had expected a sweet taste."

    On the team bus carrying the Angels to yet another defeat, Pitcher Jim Maloney sat contemplating the humming Chicago traffic. " Alex Johnson ," he said, just trying the name out. " Alex Johnson . Now that's not a difficult name, not a name like Yastrzemski or something like that." Maloney seemed onto something. "You know, it's really just a simple name."

    Just a simple name for a complex and troubled man whom no one, Alex Johnson least of all, can quite understand.

    Maloney probably appreciated the irony of that.


    l

  14. #13
    Member 15fan's Avatar
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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    From the original article:

    "But they can't steal 30 bases or possess a cannon arm."

    That's some piss-poor sentence construction from a professional writer.

  15. #14
    Goober GAC's Avatar
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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Quote Originally Posted by 15fan View Post
    From the original article:

    "But they can't steal 30 bases or possess a cannon arm."

    That's some piss-poor sentence construction from a professional writer.

    But he has a cannon arm! :
    "In my day you had musicians who experimented with drugs. Now it's druggies experimenting with music" - Alfred G Clark (circa 1972)

  16. #15
    Member Highlifeman21's Avatar
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    Re: Elijah Duke - Discuss

    Not sure about the rest of you, but Dukes is the kind of talent this roster desperately needs.


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