With the sad news about Tom Seaver’s dementia diagnosis this
week, it got me to thinking about the 1969 Amazin’ Mets World Championship
team. A lot of time has passed since
that momentous and unexpected miracle year a half century ago, but I remember
it clearly as it was the apotheosis of my sometimes harrowing childhood. The team for which I was taught to root and
love as a bunch of losers all of the sudden was able to overcome the Chicago
Cubs late in the season, then make it past the mighty Atlanta Braves and onto
the national stage for the Baltimore Orioles against superstars like Boog
Powell, Frank Robinson, Brooks Robinson, Jim Palmer, Mike Cuellar and Dave
McNally. All we had to offer were some
decent but hardly memorable names that on paper didn’t have a prayer. And thus it began with the Orioles beating
the Mets and The Franchise, Tom Seaver, in game 1 of the Series. That was, of course, all they would get as
the Mets reeled off four straight to launch them into the history books and the
resulting ticker tape parade.
Where are they now?
Donn Clendenon –
The former Pirate and Expo joined the Mets midway through the season to share 1st
base with Ed Kranepool for the remainder of the season. He provided 12 HRs and 37 RBIs in less than a
half-season’s work which helped propel them into the World Series where he was
the driving force to provide a victory over the Orioles in the World Series,
hitting .357 with 3 HRs, 4 RBIs and was named the Series MVP. His 3 HRs in a 5-game series was tied by Ryan
Howard, but the mark still stands. After
leaving baseball he earned a law degree but also succumbed to drug addiction in
his 50s which led to his efforts to keep others from taking the same path. He died from leukemia at age 70 in Sioux
Falls, SD in 2005.
Ken Boswell – The
slick fielding second baseman got the lion’s share of the work at the keystone
position along with some assistance from Bobby Pfeil. While only a .250 hitter for his Mets career,
he stepped it up when it counted, hitting .333 in both the playoffs and the
World Series. Since retiring from
baseball, he’s been involved in the sale of antique cars and lives on a ranch
outside Austin, TX.
Buddy Harrelson –
The sad news of Buddy’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis came in 2016 and he’s been
struggling to live with the awful disease ever since. He used to throw batting practice for the
Long Island Ducks, but nowadays is simply doing his best to live a healthy
lifestyle and keep the illness at bay.
Ed Charles – The
Glider was also known as the Poet Laureate of Baseball, a man who would sit on
his stool in the locker room and compose verse about aspects of his life as a
ballplayer and as an African American man.
He is well remembered for the photo of he, Jerry Grote and Jerry Koosman
celebrating the final out of that World Series.
His long career began in 1952, he broke into the majors as a 29 year old
rookie. After baseball he worked in
promotions in the music and entertainment industry, then returning to the game
as a scout and later as a regular in the Fantasy
Camps. We lost Charles last year.
Jerry Grote – The
man who Johnny Bench once said he would step aside to have him catch, Grote
threw out 44% of baserunners who were foolish enough to attempt to steal on
him. After coming to the Mets he
flourished under Gil Hodges and was the All-Star catcher in 1968, finishing the
year batting .282. His bat never quite
lived up to that one fabled season, but his glove and arm were enough to keep
him a regular for quite some time. After
baseball he spent some time as a minor league manager and then retired
altogether to be a cattle rancher and meat packer in Texas.
Cleon Jones – The
man was the Mets’ first real offensive threat, coming very close to capturing
the batting title in 1969 when he finished the season hitting .340. While there were a few notable moments in his
career that were not exactly highlights – the Gil Hodges walk to the outfield
to take him out of the game and the incident in Florida where he was arrested
for indecent exposure in the company of a young woman not his wife. Still, all was eventually forgiven as Jones
became a part of the Mets organization again in 1981 as a minor league
instructor. Now he builds homes in his
native Alabama.
Tommie Agee – The
flashy centerfelder would provide both slugging and highlight reel defense as
the Mets moved from laughingstock to World Series Champion. He made what is one of the all-time great
catches off the bat of Paul Blair in that series, though that one might pale
next to the Elrod Hendricks drive that resulted a backhanded grab against the
396 mark on the outfield fence. He ran a
successful bar in Queens called The Outfielders Lounge and later worked for the
Stewart Title Insurance Company. He left
too young at age 58 when a fatal heart attack took him in Manhattan in 2001.
Art Shamsky – The
sweet swinging lefty hitter platooned in RF with Ron Swoboda. He was second on the team in offensive
production with a .300 AVG and 14 HRs despite only playing part-time. He batted cleanup in the World Series,
hitting .538. After baseball he had two
careers, one as a broadcaster and now in real estate.
Ed Kranepool – Signed
out of high school, Ed Kranepool did something almost no players ever
accomplish – spending his entire career with one team. He was the lefty half of the first base
platoon that emerged once Donn Clendenon arrived. He played off and on at 1B but then started a
career as a pinch hitter extraordinaire, still holding the all time record for
batting average off the bench. He became
a restaurateur and spent some time as a stockbroker. Right now he’s suffering ill health as a
result of diabetes, having suffered toe amputation and now awaiting a kidney.
Ron Swoboda –
Nicknamed Rocky for his shaky fielding ability, it’s ironic that most people
remember him for a diving catch off the bat of Brooks Robinson during the World
Series that preserved the 1-1 tie and sent the game into extra innings. Swoboda has had a long and successful career
as a television news sportscaster.
Tom Seaver – What
can be said about the man that hasn’t been covered everywhere when his dementia
diagnosis broke earlier this week. The Franchise
transitioned from baseball to vintner and still lives at his California winery
that bears his name with his wife, Nancy.
Jerry Koosman – Somewhat
overshadowed by Cy Young Award winner Tom Seaver, Koosman turned in an All-Star
worthy season that he finished with a 17-9 record with a 2.28 ERA. After catching the final out of the 1969
World Series, left fielder Cleon Jones gave the ball to Koosman for getting
them to the championship. When he
attended the 40th anniversary celebration of the Amazin’ Mets
miracle season little did anyone know he would wind up behind bars for tax evasion
a few months later.
Gary Gentry – A rookie
in 1969, the Mets’ number three starter finished the year with a 13-12 record
and a 3.43 ERA. He started Game Three of
the Series (the first ever played at Shea Stadium) and was saved not once but
twice by amazing Tommie Agee catches.
Some young flamethrower named Nolan Ryan saved the game by pitching the
final 3.1 IP to preserve Gentry’s victory.
Like many other retired ballplayers, Gentry has developed a second
career in real estate, though his start came a bit earlier as severe arm
trouble caused him to leave the game at just age 28.
Jim McAndrew –
The soft tossing pitcher was plagued by injuries throughout his career, but at
one point in 1969 reeled off 23 consecutive scoreless innings and had a streak
of nine starts over the August/September push for the pennant in which he
covered 73 IP and delivered a 1.60 ERA.
Unfortunately he did not appear in the post-season. He worked as a coal industry executive for
the remainder of his post-baseball career.
Don Cardwell –
The unheralded hurler was probably more renowned for his bat than his arm. He did have an important streak at the end of
the 1969 season in which he won five straight starts before moving to the pen
for the World Series where he pitched flawlessly in relief of Tom Seaver in
Game One. He got involved in cars after
baseball, working for Ford and Ford dealerships over the next 36 years. He passed away in 2008 at age 72.
Ron Taylor –
After being purchased from the Astros, Taylor was for awhile the Mets career
leader in saves, though he shared closer duties during 1969. After baseball, Taylor went back to school,
got his medical degree and served as the team doctor for the Toronto Blue
Jays.
Tug McGraw – In his
up and down Mets career, Tug was the left handed half of the two headed closer during
the Miracle Mets season. He delivered a
0.47 ERA over his final 19 appearances on the way to the NL East title. He didn’t get into the World Series, but went
on to star as the closer and as an All Star through the middle 70s. Nowadays another generation knows him more as
country music superstar Tim McGraw’s dad, but he is fondly remembered both in
New York and Philadelphia where he was honored in both cities for all he had
done prior to succumbing to the aggressive brain cancer in 2004 at just age
59.
There were others who were a part of the 1969 team, but this
nucleus is what most people remember when they think about the team that took
the entire world by surprise.
Don't undervalue your miracles when they arrive. Sometimes there aren't happy endings. Good for the guys who are still alive and kicking.
ReplyDeleteVery good job here.
ReplyDeleteYou may have a future smeday as a sportswriter
Great post but sad considering the recent news on Tom terrific and knowing we'll never see those pre free agent days again when it was about love of the game. I was lucky enough to meet Wayne Garrett through a friend in 15' and he looked very good and spoke highly of his time with the Mets.
ReplyDeleteGary
ReplyDeleteI miss your comments here.
I hope you are still a frequent reader.
Wayne Garrett was a real jerk at one of the Mets Welcome Home Dinners where he literally knocked over chairs (and one person) in his hurry to escape having to sign autographs for the people who paid a lot of money to attend,
ReplyDeleteGarrett could work a walk, though - 561 walks vs. 529 Ks. He made a lot of contact - including, it appears, with chairs.
ReplyDeleteDonn Clendenon hit just 3 homers in 272 at bats in 1966 in cavernous Forbes Field, and 25 in 295 at bats on the road. Just saying.
ReplyDeleteHeartbreaking News Out
ReplyDeletePaul Seawall cut.
Carry On Mets fans.
If you are going to keep Juan Lagares, why would you also keep Kenny Broxton?
ReplyDeleteNot sure.
Tim Tebow up by mid May is my own prediction here.