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10/27: Meyer MoY, Spud Joins, Bush In & Clarke Out, Pena Dangled, '24 Cub Swap, FSN Pgh Booth Filled, Craws Tour, Flood Anti-Trust Signed; HBD Ralph, Jon, Jason, Mike, UL, Pete, Rube & Charlie

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  • 1876 – IF Charlie Kuhns was born in Freeport. The local lad made his MLB debut in 1887 for the Bucs as a 20-year-old one-game fill-in, going 0-for-3 with a walk. He almost lost that line (and maybe wishes he did): the game he played in was at Philly, and the Pirates were losing but threatening weather was rolling in. Warming up between innings, the ball was zinged over his head and into the crowd, and the Bucs went on a recon mission to find it. Philadelphia pleaded their case to the ump that the Pirates were playing a delay game, hoping for the storm to hit. The ump agreed, but the Pittsburgh players remained a bit leisurely despite his warning, so he called the game in favor of the Phillies. Pity – the rains came shortly after the field was cleared; the Bucs likely would have got their wish for a washout if they had played it straight. As for Kuhns, he got a cup of coffee at Boston the next season and ended up with nine minor/indie league campaigns under his belt, mostly in the Eastern League, before retiring and heading back home. 
  • 1918 – RHP Ed “Rube” Albosta was born in Saginaw, Michigan. The Bucs drafted Ed from the Dodgers in 1942 after he had made a couple of September starts for Brooklyn, but he entered the service afterwards and was in the military from 1942 through 1945. Albosta spent the entire 1946 season with Pittsburgh and made 17 appearances. He finished with an 0-6 record and 6.13 ERA, ending his MLB days. Although he had a strong campaign or two in the minors, he never got another call up and retired from baseball after the 1954 season. Ed returned home and was selected to the Saginaw County Sports Hall of Fame. 
  • 1922 – OF Ralph Kiner was born in Santa Rita, New Mexico. He led the NL in home runs for seven straight seasons as a Buc. Mr. Swat hit 301 bombs, drove in 801 runs, and had a .971 OPS in his eight Pittsburgh seasons (1946-53) and was named an All-Star six times. Kiner played part of 1953 and all of ‘54 with the Chicago Cubs, finishing his career with the Cleveland Indians in 1955 before a back injury forced him to retire from baseball at the age of 32. Ralph was elected into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1975 and the Pirates retired his #4 in 1987. 
  • 1924 – 1B Charlie Grimm, LHP Wilbur Cooper and SS Rabbit Maranville were traded to the Chicago Cubs for RHP Vic Aldridge, 1B George Grantham and rookie 1B Al Niehaus. Cooper was nearing the end of his career, Maranville would have two more strong seasons with Boston, and Grimm played for Chicago for the next dozen years, hitting .296 with 1,079 RBI and became their player-manager. Grantham hit .300 over six seasons with Pittsburgh, Aldridge won 40 games in his three-year Bucco tenure and Niehaus, 26-years-old and a key component in the deal as a highly rated minor league infielder, split 1925 between the Pirates and Reds in his only MLB campaign. 
George Grantham – 1928 Strip Card
  • 1926 – Barney Dreyfuss received Fred Clarke’s resignation letter and named Donie Bush, the manager of Indianapolis of the American Association, as the Bucs new skipper. The switch was the final shake of the broom that cleaned out the ABC Affair fallout. Bush would have his own reckoning – although he won the pennant, he irked the fanbase by his benching and eventual trading away of Kiki Cuyler, and then a fourth-place finish in ‘28. Though in second in ‘29, he was 14-1/2 games behind the Cubs in August and resigned, jumping to the White Sox.
  • 1935 – According to Charlton’s Baseball Chronology, a touring group of American League All-Stars topped the Negro League champion Pittsburgh Crawfords, 7-2, in Mexico City in the final match of a three-game barnstorming series. Rogers Hornsby drove in three runs against Bert Hunter after having driven in three more the day before when the All-Stars won, 11-7. The first game ended in a 6-6 tie. The AL squad featured Hornsby, Jimmie Foxx, Ted Lyons and Vern Kennedy while the Crawfords roster included Josh Gibson, Judy Johnson and Cool Papa Bell. 
  • 1939 – The Pirates purchased C Spud Davis from the Phils. Spud caught 99 games in 1940, but in 1941 Al Lopez took over the Pirates starting catcher’s role. The next season, Spud became a coach for the Pirates before returning to the active roster in 1944-45 due to player shortages of WW2. In his four Pirate seasons, he hit .301 and continued as a Bucco coach (he also served as the manager for a short stint after Frankie Frisch resigned in 1946) and a scout. He then played minor league ball and coached for the Cubs, retiring in 1953. 
  • 1948 – Manager Billy Meyer was selected as The Sporting News MLB Manager of the Year, edging out Boston’s Billy Southworth by an 89-87 vote tally. After 22 years in the minors, he improved the hapless Pirates by 21 games to fourth place with an 83-71 record, 8-1/2 games behind Southworth’s first place Braves (and just 2-1/2 games off the pace on September 12th before a late season nosedive). The glow wore off quickly after new GM Branch Rickey dealt the vets and rebuilt; Meyer and his Pirate puppies lost 112 games in 1952 and Billy resigned. 
Bill Meyer – 1952 Eureka Sports Stamps
  • 1952 – RHP/coach Pete Vuckovich was born in Johnstown. In his 11-year MLB career, he never tossed for the Pirates, but in 1992 he was hired by Pittsburgh as a pitching instructor. Vuckovich served as the pitching coach during the 1997–2000 seasons for Gene Lamont, then worked his way through the organization to become the Special Assistant to the General Manager until joining the Seattle organization in 2012. Pete also had a role in the movie “Major League,” uttering the snarky “How’s your wife and my kids?” line. Pete is a member of the Clarion University Sports Hall of Fame, the Western Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame and the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame. 
  • 1953 – IF UL Washington was born in Springtown, Oklahoma. He closed out his 11-year big league visit in 1986-87 with the Pirates, batting .207 off the bench. After ending his playing career, Washington coached in the minors for the Pirates (1989), Royals (1991–98), Dodgers (1999), Twins (2001–02) and the Red Sox (2003–2014). Two UL factoids: UL isn’t shorthand for anything; it’s actually his given name. Also, the toothpick he always had in his mouth was a by-product of Astroturf. UL had always played with a blade of grass in his mouth until he got to the show and there were no more grass fields, so he substituted a toothpick. 
  • 1962 – RHP Mike Dunne was born in South Bend, Indiana. The US Olympian from 1984 came to the Pirates as part of the Tony Pena trade and paid immediate dividends, going 13-6 with a 3.03 ERA in 1987 and finishing second to Benito Santiago in the Rookie-of-the-Year balloting (he won the TSN NL Rookie Pitcher of the Year award). He then encountered arm problems and couldn’t match his first-year numbers, winning just eight more games before being traded to Seattle in 1989. His Pittsburgh slash was 21-18/3.65. Dunne’s last MLB campaign was in 1992 with the White Sox, and he left there to coach at his alma mater, Bradley University. Now he ‘s involved with instructional baseball and basketball camps.
  • 1973 – RHP Jason Johnson was born in Santa Barbara, California. He was signed by the Pirates in 1992 out of high school and made his debut in 1997, working six innings and giving up four runs before being lost to Tampa Bay in the expansion draft. He turned into a journeyman, working 11 seasons for eight teams and spending another year in Japan. Jason played through lifelong Type 1 diabetes; he was the first MLB player to wear an insulin pump on the field. 
Jon Niese – 2016 Topps
  • 1978 – LHP Jon Niese was born in Lima, Ohio. After working eight years as a Met, Niese was traded to Pittsburgh for Neil Walker in 2016. He was 8-6 for the Bucs, but a 4.91 ERA and 1.545 WHIP were more indicative of his performance. On August 1st, the Pirates sent him back to NY for Antonio Bastardo, a trade tree Neal Huntington would like to forget about. The Mets bought him out after the season, and he signed a minor-league deal with the Yankees but was let go in June. He didn’t have any better luck in 2018, auditioning with the Rangers but being released in camp and ditto with the Mariners in 2019, his last hurrah. 
  • 1986 – The Post Gazette’s Bruce Keidan wrote that C Tony Pena, who was entering the walk year of his contract, was available; Syd Thrift had already tried to get Glenn Wilson from the Phils in a deal that Philly declined. But Keidan was right in that Thrift wasn’t going to sign Pena, who was approaching 30, to a long-term deal, and before camp broke in 1987, Tony was on his way to St. Louis for Andy Van Slyke, Spanky LaValliere and Mike Dunne in one of the GM’s better deals. 
  • 1998 – President Bill Clinton signed the Curt Flood legislation that overturned part of baseball’s 70-year-old antitrust exemption, putting baseball on a par with other professional sports on labor matters after Congress approved it unanimously earlier in the month. The new law overrode part of a 1922 Supreme Court ruling that exempted baseball from antitrust restrictions on grounds that it was not interstate commerce. The law took three sessions of Congress to pass and revoked the antitrust exemption only for labor relations, kicking the other issues down the road for another day. 
  • 2005 – Color man Steve Blass signed a one-year deal with an option while analyst John Wehner inked a straight one-year contract to broadcast with FSN Pittsburgh. They joined Lanny Frattare, Greg Brown and Bob Walk, who were already signed for the upcoming season, in the booth.


Source: https://oldbucs.blogspot.com/2024/10/1027-meyer-moy-spud-joins-bush-in.html



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