1/20: DJ, Octavio, Zach, John, Tyler, Adam, Hans, Lloyd & Heinie Sign, KY Replaces BB, Dapper Dale, Arriba Note, Gene Joins Gunner, MLB.com; RIP Josh, HBD Ali, David, Brian, Cecil, Carl, Jesse & Denny
- 1904 – OF Denny Sothern was born in Washington. Originally, his last name was Southern, but it changed, along with his age, so he could enlist in the Marines while underage. Sothern had been a fairly effective leadoff hitter for Philadelphia going into his fourth season (.289 BA) and the Bucs sent OF Fred Brickell to the Phils in August of 1930 for him. Denny’s bat went cold (he hit .176) and the Pirates sold him to Baltimore, who flipped him to Brooklyn. He played 17 games for the Robins in 1931, ending his MLB career at age 27. Brickell didn’t set the world afire, either, but he did last three plus seasons with the Phillies, hitting .258.
- 1933 – RHP Heinie Meine stopped by the Pirates office and signed a $10,000 contract. It was feared that the 34-year-old workhorse, who had notched 31 wins and 450+ IP in 64 outings (60 starts) during the 1931-32 campaigns, would be difficult to sign after holding out in ‘32, but he came back and anchored the staff with a line of 15-8/3.65 during the season. Heinie was the poster boy for pitch-to-contact hurlers. In six seasons here, he averaged 1.8 strikeouts per nine innings.
- 1936 - C Jesse Gonder was born in Monticello, Arkansas. Jesse caught the final two seasons (1966-67) of his six-year career in Pittsburgh, batting .209 while backstopping 70 games. He came to Pittsburgh as a Rule 5 pick from Atlanta hoping to win the starting spot from Jim Pagliaroni, and although he didn’t, Jesse did see a lot of action in 1966 (59 games). Relegated as the third man the following year, he faltered and the curtain dropped on his stint in MLB.
- 1937 – The Waner brothers didn’t do everything in tandem. Club President Bill Berswanger announced that Lloyd’s contract was returned signed, with a salary guesstimate of $10K or so, while big bro Paul returned his unsigned. No worries, though – Big Poison, like Hans Wagner, was a notorious malingerer as spring camp approached, but always returned to the flock. He played all 154 games in 1937, eventually inking a deal estimated at $15-16,000. Veteran lefty Ed “Dutch” Brandt, newly obtained from Brooklyn, also agreed to his terms (the amount was undisclosed) and the next day shortstop Arky Vaughan signed for $12,500.
Press Sports – 1/20/1937 Chet Smith |
- 1940 – Honus Wagner, 65-years-old, signed his 29th Bucco contract as he joined Frankie Frisch’s staff for his eighth season as a Pirates coach He played until 1917, took some time off from baseball and then returned to the coaching ranks in 1933 before retiring for good in 1951. Hans joined with holdovers Jake Flowers and Mike Kelly as Frisch’s aides returned intact. Young southpaw Ken Heintzelman also returned a signed agreement and joined the rotation in ‘40.
- 1944 – UT Carl Taylor was born in Sarasota, Florida. He caught, played first and pinch hit for the Bucs in 1968-69 and was brought back again in September of 1971 for their pennant drive from KC; he returned to the Royals after the title run to complete the final two years of his career. His best season far and away was 1969, when he slashed .348/.432/.457 in 221 AB.
- 1947 – Homestead Gray and Pittsburgh Crawfords C Josh Gibson, the “black Babe Ruth,” died of a stroke at the age of 35. The future Hall of Fame catcher was put to rest in an unmarked grave in Allegheny Cemetery. In 1975, Negro League teammate Ted Page, Puerto Rican baseball scout/exec Pete Zorrilla, Bucco Willie Stargell and Commissioner Bowie Kuhn paid for a red granite marker that read: “Josh Gibson, 1911-1947, Legendary Baseball Player,” a prototype for SABR’s Negro Leagues Grave Marker Project to memorialize lost players.
- 1954 – The Sporting News first mentioned Roberto Clemente in a notes column that read “Three major league organizations – the Giants, Braves and Dodgers – are attempting to sign Roberto Clemente, Santurce (Clemente’s Puerto Rican club) outfielder.” The Dodgers may have won that early tussle, but quickly lost The Great One in November’s Rule 5 draft to Pittsburgh.
- 1957 – Dale Long won the Dapper Dan Man of the Year honor for his eight-game home run streak and was presented with the award at the annual dinner at the Penn-Sheraton Hotel. He became the sixth Pirate to receive the DD and the first to be recognized since pitcher Murry Dickson in 1951.
Post Gazette – 1/21/1957 |
- 1963 – OF Cecil Espy was born in San Diego. He hit .254 in his two Bucco campaigns of 1991-92, part of Jim Leyland’s title clubs’ bench corps. Cecil was a highly touted guy who never quite panned out; the speedster was the eighth overall selection in the 1980 draft. The Pirates had originally landed Espy in 1985 as part of the Bill Madlock deal with LA. He spent the next season in AAA Hawaii, then the Rangers took him in the Rule 5 draft before Cecil reunited with the Pirates as a free agent in early 1991. His last MLB campaign was with the Reds in 1993.
- 1970 – The Pirates announced the hiring of Gene Osborn to replace Jim Woods in the KDKA booth after Woods left to join the Cardinals crew. He joined Bob Prince and Nellie King for both radio and TV broadcasts. Osborn had experience as an MLB voice in Detroit with Ernie Harwell from 1965-66 and was doing college announcing when Pittsburgh beckoned. He lasted a year as the Pirates went to a two-man radio booth from 1971-84, keeping the three-man format for TV only.
- 1971 - RF Brian Giles was born in El Cajon, California. In five years with Pittsburgh (1999-2003), he put up a line of .308/.426/.591 with 165 HR/506 RBI/158 OPS+ and two All-Star berths. A power guy who hit 35+ homers for four straight Bucco seasons, Giles also had a great eye, walking nearly 350 more times during his career than he whiffed. He retired in 2010 after a rough season with San Diego while trying to play through an arthritic knee at age 38.
- 1975 – Pirates former Special Assistant David Eckstein was born in Sanford, Florida. He played for a decade in the show for the Anaheim Angels, St. Louis Cardinals, Toronto Blue Jays, Arizona Diamondbacks and San Diego Padres, winning the 2006 World Series MVP with the Cards and a WS title with the Angels in 2002. The Bucs hired him in early 2019, a few weeks after his bro Rick was picked as batting coach, with David placed in player operations; he’s had teaching experience in the Anaheim and Arizona organizations. The brother act broke up quickly as David left in early 2021 to dedicate time to his family while Rick was dismissed a few months later.
Al Martin – 1993 Score Select Rookie |
- 1993 – The Barry Bonds era officially ended with Jim Leyland’s announcement that rookie Al Martin, 25, would man left field as Bond’s replacement after Barry took his heart (and bat) to San Francisco in the off season. “I’m not really looking at it as replacing Barry,” Martin said. “Hopefully, I can start a name for myself.” Al had gotten a September cup of coffee in ‘92 and went on to have a solid rookie campaign, batting .289 w/18 HR, coming in fifth in the Rookie of the Year voting. His Achilles heel became apparent though, as the lefty swinger had a big L/R divide (.191 v LHP, .302 v RHP), a gap that would prove consistent over his career. Even with that daunting split, he posted 113 games/425 PAs or better in six of his eight Bucco campaigns and hit .280.
- 1997 – C Ali Sanchez was born in Carora, Venezuela. The Pirates signed him as a free agent in December, 2023 as a depth guy; he had seven MLB games under his belt from 2020-21 while with the Mets and Cards. The Pirates had Sanchez briefly in 2022 when they claimed him off waivers from the Tigers in October, but a few weeks later they tried to slip him through the wire and lost him to the D-Backs. But Ali ws DFA’ed as the season started, cleared the wire and then declared free agency. He spent ‘24 with the Chicago Cubs and Miami Marlins and is now with Toronto Blue Jays organizations.
- 2000 – Big league baseball does occasionally think forward. The team owners voted to cede their digital rights to the Commissioner’s office, allowing for the creation of a new cash cow, mlb.com. Bud Selig split the new pot of cyber gold equally among the franchises, in effect tossing the low-revenue markets that were treading water financially a fiscal life preserver.
- 2009 – 1B Adam LaRoche, 29, signed a one-year/$7.05M contract to avoid arbitration. Adam then hit .247 with 12 homers, 40 RBIs and 81 strikeouts in 87 games, slumping badly after a hot ‘09 start, and was shipped to the Red Sox on July 22nd for SS Argenis Diaz and RHP Hunter Strickland. The Pirates also agreed to one-year deals with LHP Zach Duke for $2.2M, LHP John Grabow ($2.3 million), and RHP Tyler Yates ($1.3M). Like LaRoche, neither Grabow (traded to the Cubs on July 30th) nor Yates (injury/TJ surgery) made it through the season.
Octavio Dotel – June 2010 Pirates First Pitch Magazine |
- 2010 – Free agent RHP Octavio Dotel was signed to a one-year/$3.5M deal w/an option by the Bucs, the only team that offered the right-hander the opportunity to save games rather than be a set-up guy (they needed a replacement for Matt Capps). The 36-year-old reliever hadn’t been a closer since 2007 with Kansas City, but reclaimed the role, saving 21 games (in 26 opportunities w/4.28 ERA) before being traded at the deadline to the Dodgers for Andrew Lambo and James McDonald. Dotel worked into the 2013 season and appeared in two WS after leaving the ‘Burg. J-Mac showed early promise that remained unfulfilled while Lambo couldn’t carry his minor league production over into the show.
- 2010 – RHP DJ Carrasco was signed to a one-year/$950K contract. The reliever stuck around (2-2/3.88) until the deadline, and was packaged as part of a deal with Arizona. His last MLB gig was in 2012 with New York. Carrasco was a part of the Pirate organization from 1999 – 2002 before Kansas City took him in that year’s Rule 5 draft from Pittsburgh’s High A Carolina League club, Lynchburg.
Source: https://oldbucs.blogspot.com/2025/01/120-dj-octavio-zach-john-tyler-adam.html
Anyone can join.
Anyone can contribute.
Anyone can become informed about their world.
"United We Stand" Click Here To Create Your Personal Citizen Journalist Account Today, Be Sure To Invite Your Friends.
Before It’s News® is a community of individuals who report on what’s going on around them, from all around the world. Anyone can join. Anyone can contribute. Anyone can become informed about their world. "United We Stand" Click Here To Create Your Personal Citizen Journalist Account Today, Be Sure To Invite Your Friends.
LION'S MANE PRODUCT
Try Our Lion’s Mane WHOLE MIND Nootropic Blend 60 Capsules
Mushrooms are having a moment. One fabulous fungus in particular, lion’s mane, may help improve memory, depression and anxiety symptoms. They are also an excellent source of nutrients that show promise as a therapy for dementia, and other neurodegenerative diseases. If you’re living with anxiety or depression, you may be curious about all the therapy options out there — including the natural ones.Our Lion’s Mane WHOLE MIND Nootropic Blend has been formulated to utilize the potency of Lion’s mane but also include the benefits of four other Highly Beneficial Mushrooms. Synergistically, they work together to Build your health through improving cognitive function and immunity regardless of your age. Our Nootropic not only improves your Cognitive Function and Activates your Immune System, but it benefits growth of Essential Gut Flora, further enhancing your Vitality.
Our Formula includes: Lion’s Mane Mushrooms which Increase Brain Power through nerve growth, lessen anxiety, reduce depression, and improve concentration. Its an excellent adaptogen, promotes sleep and improves immunity. Shiitake Mushrooms which Fight cancer cells and infectious disease, boost the immune system, promotes brain function, and serves as a source of B vitamins. Maitake Mushrooms which regulate blood sugar levels of diabetics, reduce hypertension and boosts the immune system. Reishi Mushrooms which Fight inflammation, liver disease, fatigue, tumor growth and cancer. They Improve skin disorders and soothes digestive problems, stomach ulcers and leaky gut syndrome. Chaga Mushrooms which have anti-aging effects, boost immune function, improve stamina and athletic performance, even act as a natural aphrodisiac, fighting diabetes and improving liver function. Try Our Lion’s Mane WHOLE MIND Nootropic Blend 60 Capsules Today. Be 100% Satisfied or Receive a Full Money Back Guarantee. Order Yours Today by Following This Link.