Allentown Morning Call - August 3, 1980

LaCoss outduels Carlton, 2-0

 

By Mark Brown, Special to the Call-Chronicle

 

PHILADELPHIA – In the mid-1960s, the Beatles released an album called "The Magical Mystery Tour." 

 

They could have had Steve Carlton in mind as tour director because, through the past half dozen years, he has come to represent both the spirit and letter of the album title. He is certainly a "mystery" to the media which has tried, unsuccessfully, to gain an insight to his thoughts, and he remains "magical" in terms of defeating the opposition. 

 

Except when it comes to the Cincinnati Reds. 

 

Only two clubs have a career-winning record against Carlton – the New York Mets and Cincinnati. And the Reds continued their domination of Carlton, landing him his sixth loss, 2-0, last night before 43.244 at Veterans Stadium. 

 

Carlton is now 9-17 lifetime against Cincinnati. "I guess we're just fortunate enough to get the kind of pitching performances from our guys which enable us to hang in there with him," said Ray Knight, who had the game-winning RBI with a seventh-inning single. 

 

"When you go against Carlton, you just hope that your pitching staff has enough stuff to help you stay in the game.

 

"For my money, he's the best pitcher in the league and when he's on, he's just awesome. 

 

"I really can't tell you why we seem to beat him. I guess you can't beat every body. I hit .318 last season but couldn't hit the Mets to save my life. I don't know why these things happen or what goes on with the other clubs he faces.”

 

Phillies' manager Dallas Green doesn't think Carlton is "snake-bitten" by the Reds. Green felt credit was due opposing pitcher Mike LaCoss, who recorded his second shutout of the season and his fourth complete game. Recovering from back problems, LaCoss has put together two straight solid performances with tight control and pinpoint location. 

 

"LaCoss just pitched a hell of ball game and so give credit where credit is due," Green said. 

 

"I thought we would get to him early but he went out and got his act together. He got tougher as the game went on. 

 

"He kept the ball in great locations and I think that was the reason why he did so well." 

 

Neither team generated much offense early. In fact, only one base runner reached third through the first six innings – the Reds' George Foster, who walked with one out in the fourth and moved to third when Dave Concepcion singled to center. Foster was stranded when Dan Driessen flied to Lonnie Smith in left. 

 

The Reds broke through in the seventh. Hector Cruz led off with a single at center. Carlton then walked Collins. With two out, Knight reached for a low-outside breaking' pitch and punched the ball up the middle. Shortstop Ramon Aviles. diving in shallow centerfield, gloved the ball but had problems getting it out of his glove. He finally flipped to Trillo, too late for the force at second, with Cruz scoring.

 

The Reds scored in the eighth when Concepcion tripled and Driessen singled to right. The Phillies managed to get runners on first and second in the eighth but LaCoss made McBride ground to third ("a real good slider, real good," said catcher Johnny Bench) and Mike Schmidt rolled into a force-out. In the ninth, Garry Maddox led off with a double but was left at second to end the game. 

 

"We have been generally very successful against Carlton for some reason and I don't know why," said Reds' manager John McNamara . 

 

"There is no different preparation in facing Carlton than anyone else. We know he is having an outstanding season but there's nothing different about facing Carlton than any other pitcher." 

 

NOTES… GREEN reported that LARRY BOWA's right calf is responding to treatment and he could play this afternoon. McBRIDE'S sixth inning single extended his hitting streak to nine straight. Phils conclude home-stand this week against St. Louis and then head out to Pittsburgh, Chicago and New York.

Kaline, Snider head Hall inductees

 

By Barry Wilner, AP Sports Writer

 

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) – Things always seemed to come easy for Al Kaline. He never played a day in the minor leagues. At 21, he became the youngest batting champion in American League history. He performed as if born to hit and field.

 

And now he has made the Baseball Hall of Fame on his first try. 

 

In contrast, there is Duke Snider, who also entered baseball's shrine today. It took Snider 11 years to make the Hall, even though he was just as accomplished a ballplayer as Kaline. 

 

Although both Kaline and Snider made the game look ever so simple, neither found it all that automatic. 

 

"Baseball was never easy for me," said Kaline, the star right fielder of the Detroit Tigers for 22 seasons. "Everybody thought I was a natural but they just didn't know. They didn't know about the nights I'd take a bat through the lobby and swing it in front of a mirror to find out what I was doing wrong. 

 

"I wasn't as good a player as I wished I'd been," he added. "I strived to be the best but I fell short." 

 

If so, he didn't fail by much – Kaline 's credentials rival almost anyone's. 

 

Kaline had a .297 lifetime average with 3,007 hits and 399 home runs. In 1955, he won the AL batting championship with a .340 average, making him the youngest – by one day over Ty Cobb – ever to capture the league title. 

 

So impressive was Kaline as an all-around player – he was as good in the field as at bat – that he was named on 340 of 385 ballots by the Baseball Writers Association of America. Only nine other players – Ted Williams, Stan Musial, Bob Feller, Willie Mays, Jackie Robinson, Sandy Koufax, Ernie Banks, Warren Spahn and Mickey Mantle – were inducted in their first year of eligibility, which comes five years after retirement. 

 

"When you realize only nine other players have ever gone in on the first ballot," he said, "it makes it more meaningful. Sometimes I question my right to be in that company." 

 

Snider must have been wondering if he ever would get to Cooperstown.

 

"I'd been sweating it for 11 years," said the onetime star center fielder with the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers. "I was worried if I didn't make it this year I never would make it. 

 

"Sometimes, there's a leveling off for a guy after some years and he doesn't make it. My votes kept going up each year and I was only 16 votes shy the year before, so I wondered if I didn't make it this year if that would happen to me." 

 

With 407 home runs, including five straight seasons with 40 or more homers, a .295 career average, and 11 World Series homers, a National League record, it's a wonder it took so long for "The Duke of Flatbush" to be recognized by the BBWAA voters. 

 

As if those numbers weren't enough, Snider was the consummate outfielder, as steady afield as contemporaries Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle when the three dominated the position in New York – and the majors – through the 1950s. 

 

"That was a lot of fun, reading everyday about who was better, hearing the fans argue about Mickey and Willie and myself," he recalled. "We used to kid about it when we saw each other. 

 

"One guy would say, 'I've got you by five RBI,' and the other would answer, 'I've got you by 10 percentage points." 

 

But, even though he warranted comparisons with Mantle and Mays, it wasn't that easy for Snider either.

 

"I'd like to be remembered as a complete ballplayer and a hard worker," noted Snider. "I'd like kids to know how hard you have to work to make it to the major leagues." 

 

And to the Hall of Fame. Snider feels he might have gotten in sooner if not for a mid-career injury. 

 

"I had my sights set at 500 homers and 3,000 hits," he said, "but I had knee surgery at 31. Otherwise, I would have gotten there. 

 

"I didn't have the numbers some of the others did." 

 

Snider and Kaline each work as sportscasters, the Duke for the Montreal Expos and Kaline for, naturally, the Tigers. In a sense, they are accompanied by a cohort into the Hall – the late Russ Hodges. 

 

Hodges receives the Ford C. Frick Award for baseball broadcasting. Hodges, who died in 1971, is best remembered for his call "The Giants win the pennant! The Giants win the pennant... "when Bobby Thomas hit his "Shot Heard 'Round the World," a pennant-winning home run for the New York Giants in a 1951 playoff game against the Brooklyn Dodgers. 

 

'The 18-man Veterans Committee chose National League slugger Chuck Klein and Boston Red Sox owner Tom Yawkey, both of whom were honored posthumously.

 

Klein spent 17 years as one of the game's finest power hitters, playing for the Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs and Pittsburgh Pirates. In 1932 he was the NL's Most Valuable Player and, in 1933, won the Triple Crown. In 1930, he drove in 170 runs yet finished second to Hack Wilson, who knocked in a record 190. 

 

Klein also led or tied for the NL crown in homers in 1929, '31 and '32, in RBI in '31. in runs-scored in 1930-32 in hits in 1932-33.

 

He died in 1958. 

 

Yawkey, one of the old-line baseball owners who treated his charges like family, bought the Red Sox in 1933 for $1 million. He rebuilt Fenway Park, still the team's home. 

 

The Red Sox won pennants for Yawkey in 1946. '67 and '75 but lost the World Series each time in seven games. He died in 1976. 

 

Also being honored with the J.G. Taylor Spink Award for outstanding reportage by a baseball writer are Bob Broeg of St. Louis and the late Tommy Holmes of New York.