let's go from a to z with this sheet of cards from the 1990 target dodger set.
cal abrams
abrams was a part-time player who debuted as a dodger in 1949. he peaked in 1951when he hit .280 in 67 games. with a fantastic obp of .419 the following year, the dodgers traded abram to the reds after he had appeared in just 10 games for the blue. abrams was reportedly buried in his brooklyn dodgers uniform following his death in 1997.jack billingham
billingham was 3-0 with 8 saves and a 2.14 era as a rookie for the dodgers in 1968, however, he was lost to the team when the expos selected him in the expansion draft prior to the 1969 season. montreal was forced to flip billingham to the astros before the season began because donn clendenon refused to report to houston after he was traded as part of the package that netted the expos rusty staub. eventually, billingham made his way to the reds, where he won back-to-back world series titles in 1975 and 1976.
ben cantwell
cantwell's career began in 1927 with the new york giants, although he spent most of the next 10 years with the boston braves during which time he won 20 games once and also lost 25 games in a single season. in 1937, he returned to the giants, but was claimed by the dodgers after one bad start. with brooklyn, cantwell had no record as he appeared in 13 games, all as a reliever.
vic davalillo
davalillo was one of the professional pinch-hitters employed by the dodgers when i began my fandom. he and manny mota filled that role on the dodgers (davalillo from 1977-1980), and it was davalillo's pinch-hit bunt that got things going with 2 outs in the 9th on black friday in philadelphia during the 1977 nlcs.
johnny gooch
gooch spent time with the robins during the 1928 and 1929 seasons. he was acquired by the robins via a trade with the pirates during the '28 season, and was traded away to the reds early in the '29 campaign. as a robin, gooch played in 43 games and hit .314.
babe herman
the robins'/dodgers' babe. one of them, anyway. herman was a franchise double dipper who had his best years as a robin, hitting .381 in 1929 and a franchise record .393 in 1930, but finishing second in the batting average race both years.
john hummel
hummel, who played with the superbas/dodgers/robins from 1905 through 1915, was best known as being one of the first utility players in the major leagues. he played everywhere but pitcher, catcher, and third base, and did spend a couple of seasons as brooklyn's primary second baseman.
max macon
macon joined the dodger system in 1939 following his first taste of big league ball in 1938 with the cardinals for whom he pitched and played the outfield. he didn't appear as a dodger until 1940, and even then he played in just two games, both as a pitcher only (he was 1 for 1 at the plate, by the way). macon returned to the majors as a dodger in 1942, and was used as a pitcher and pinch-hitter. he pitched in 14 games and had an era of 1.93 while he pinch-hit 12 times and was 5 for 11 in that role. macon pitched (and hit) for the dodgers again in 1943 before being selected by the braves in the rule v draft following the season's conclusion.
fritz ostermueller
ostermueller spent the first part of the 1943 season with the browns, but was traded to the dodgers in july. he was 1-1 in 7 games for the dodgers over the remainder of the season, and was 2-1 in 10 games for the dodgers in 1944 when he was dealt to the pirates at the end of may.
paul popovich
popovich was traded to the dodgers by the cubs for lou johnson following the 1967 season. he spent 1968 with the dodgers, playing in 134 games and batting .232. the dodgers traded popovich to the expos a couple of months into the 1969 season in the deal that brought manny mota and maury wills to the dodgers (back to the dodgers in wills' case). the expos flipped popovich to the cubs that same day, so popovich was around to witness the infamous collapse of leo durocher's cubbies.
dave sells
sells joins rick waits and davey lopes as players whose names make full sentences. sells spent the majority of his career with the angels, pitching in 85 of his 90 big league games for the halos. the other five were spent as a dodger during the last part of the 1975 season following a trade that sent jim brewer to the angels. sells was 0-2 for walter alston's team in those five games, and he spent the following season in triple-a albuquerque.
bill skowron
skowron spent just one season with the dodgers - 1963 - and he helped his new team defeat his former club in the world series. skowron hit .385 in the 1963 fall classic for the dodgers against the yankees, with whom skowron had won four rings, including the previous two seasons. following the series, skowron was picked up by the senators who later traded him to the white sox.
rick sutcliffe
sutcliffe, who made his big league debut in 1976, was the first dodger to win the rookie of the year award since ted sizemore (1969) when he claimed it in 1979 (the longest stretch the dodger organization had ever gone without one of their players winning the award). even so, sutcliffe seemed to be in tommy lasorda's dog house, and he was used mainly as a reliever the following two seasons. sutcliffe trashed lasorda's office after being left off of the 1981 postseason roster, and was traded to the indians soon thereafter.
jimmy wasdell
wasdell was a member of the dodgers in 1940 and 1941. he hit .289 in 171 games for the dodgers over those two seasons, and he saw some action in the 1941 world series as well.
geoff zahn
zahn was a member of the dodgers' famous 1968 draft class. he made it to the bigs in 1973, going 1-0 in his six appearances that season. in 1974, zahn pitched in 21 games for the nl champs, but did not appear in the postseason. he started the 1975 season with the dodgers, but was traded to the cubs in the burt hooton deal early on. i approve of that deal.
see you back next week with another sheet from the 1990 target dodgers set...
Spahn was drafted three other times before he signed with Dodgers. The redsox drafted him in 67 and he didn't sign
ReplyDelete