Jim Fregosi 1988 Topps – Sully Baseball Card of the Day for October 15, 2017

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The late Jim Fregosi was a baseball lifer who made his way from organization to organization, earning respect wherever he went. The eulogies for him when he passed away in 2014 were over flowing with affection.

An All Star and MVP candidate as a player is a career that spanned 18 seasons, he managed a pair of teams to the post season. One was the first ever Division Title for one franchise. The other was one of the most unlikely pennants in baseball history.

And yet for all of his achievements, he is best remembered for two negative things. He was on the wrong end of one of the worst trades in the history of baseball when he was a player. And as a manager, he made a decision with the season on the line that everyone on the planet Earth knew was going to backfire, and it did.

And frankly that is a shame that those two things overshadow his legacy. But look at what I am doing with this blog post. I can not write about him without bringing it up.

One of many stars to come out of Serra High School in San Mateo, Fregosi played ball at the University of New Mexico when the Red Sox signed him in 1960.

As a farm hand in Boston, he was left unprotected in the first ever expansion draft. The new Los Angeles Angels (not of Anaheim) selected him before their first season in 1961. A 19 year old Fregosi made his big league debut that year.

By 1963, he was a regular. By 1964, the 22 year old Fregosi was an All Star. He hit for a good average as a shortstop and knocked 12 triples along the way. In 1964, he was the first player in Angels history to hit for the cycle.

He would develop into a Gold Glove winning shortstop and lead the AL with 13 triples in 1968, which was one of his six All Star appearances with the Los Angeles and now California Angels.

Fregosi had foot issues in 1971. There was a tumor in his foot that hampered his productivity and one would assume his trade value. That would be a bad assumption. The Angels, hoping to get SOMETHING in return for their injured former All Star shortstop, shopped him around.

They found a willing trade partner with the New York Mets. They sent Fregosi… alone… nobody else… no prospects or anything… to the Mets. The Mets sent four players back. Right there, pat new GM Harry Dalton on the back. Flipping an injured shortstop for 4 players is a nice pick up.

Ohhh… it gets worse Met fans. Three of the players were Frank Estrada, Don Rose and LeRoy Stanton.

The other player was Nolan Ryan.

The Mets gave up on the man who would pitch from the 1960’s to the 1990’s, strikeout more batters than anyone in history and throw more no hitters than anyone in history.

Ryan had barely scratched the surface in his time in New York, which included a pair of critical relief performances in the 1969 post season and World Series victory.

Now the Mets would no long have Ryan and they would watch him rewrite all the strikeout records in the book. Fregosi would struggle through an injury plagued 1972. In 1973, the Rangers purchased him contract from the Mets. A little bit of money was all the Mets had left for Nolan Ryan.

He never played 80 games in a season again as he struggled the rest of the 1970’s with Texas and later the Pittsburgh Pirates.

In 1978, while being a utility infielder for the Pirates, Fregosi was coveted again by the Angels, the team where he starred. They wanted him to be the manager of the team. The Pirates released him and he took the job.

In 1979, partially because of the splendid pitching of Nolan Ryan, he managed the Angels to their first ever post season appearance. In the ALCS, California took on a powerful Orioles team. They held their own, losing an extra inning game 1 and a one run affair in game 2. They held back elimination with a 4-3 walk off win in Game 4 before losing the final game.

The goodwill in Anaheim was shortlived. In fact it left with Ryan’s departure to Houston. The Angels pitching fell apart without Ryan and in 1981, they lost Frank Tanana was well. Fregosi was fired midway through the 1981 season.

After success managing for Triple A Louisville, Fregosi resurfaced with the White Sox in 1986. The team was floundering after the dismissal of Tony LaRussa. The rebuilding team had some solid veterans like Harold Baines and Carlton Fisk along with rising young players like Jack McDowell, Ozzie Guillen and Bobby Thigpen. But they could not put together a winning season with those curly C hats and he was let go after the 1988 season.

Many of the players he helped develop were on the 1993 AL West Champions. But by 1993, he was on another team’s payroll.

The 1993 Phillies are truly an odd fluke in baseball history. They won the NL East based upon a talent vacuum. The Pirates won the East the previous three seasons but they had lost all of their stars. The Mets were a mess, the Cardinals and Cubs were in transition and the Marlins were an expansion team. The talented Expos team offered the greatest challenge to the Phillies, who won the Division with 97 wins.

They were a strange potpourri of veterans who were OK and a few solid pitchers with post season experience. Everything clicked for that one year as the sloppy, tobacco chewing Phillies went to the NLCS against the 104 win Braves.

Atlanta had just finished their division race with the Giants on the last day of the season. San Francisco had won 103 games and missed the post season. Atlanta, who lost dramatic World Series in 1991 and 1992, brought in Greg Maddux and Fred McGriff to close the deal.

Playing the Phillies in the NLCS was a mere formality before the inevitable World Series rematch with Toronto.

The Braves outhit the Phillies in terms of team batting average, .274 to .227. They out pitched Philadelphia with a team ERA of 3.15 to 4.75. By all metrics, the Braves outplayed the Phillies.

Yet the Phillies pulled of the stunning upset. And they did so in 6 games. Each game Philadelphia won was razor thin. Each game Atlanta won was a blowout. But in the end, the title goes to the team that won 4 games, which is what the Phillies did.

They did so despite closer Mitch Williams blowing two Curt Schilling leads. Schilling was the NLCS MVP despite not getting a decision. They won despite three relievers other than Williams posting ERAs above 9.00.

In the World Series, they took on the defending champion Blue Jays. After three games, Toronto was up 2-1. Game 3 was a surreal affair with the score 4-3 after one inning. The Phillies bats kept scoring inning after inning while the Blue Jays would score in bursts.

Philadelphia led 14-9 with one out in the 8th. A Phillies victory would put Curt Schilling on the hill for Game 5 and a chance to be up 3-2 heading back home. But the Blue Jays rallied off of reliever Larry Anderson.

Fregosi turned to Williams again. The Blue Jays bats torched Williams, the final blow being a 2 run triple by Devon White to take a 15-14 lead.

The Braves had solved Williams and it was clear the Blue Jays were not being fooled by him. It wasn’t like they had Rollie Fingers or Goose Gossage in their prime sitting in their pen to replace him. But the time had come to realize loyalty was not as important as recognizing a pitcher was not being effective.

Bobby Thigpen, who had been a closer with Fregosi’s White Sox and a few years prior had set a big league record for saves in a season was in the pen.

The Phillies didn’t need a reliever for a whole season. Just for 3 more wins. Schilling kept his end of the bargain up by going the distance in a Game 5 win.

In Game 6, the Phillies fell behind 5-1 in the 7th and elimination was inevitable. But Lenny Dykstra hit a 3 run homer off of Dave Stewart. Then Dave Hollins got an RBI single to tie the game. A sacrifice fly by Pete Incaviglia gave the Phillies the lead.

They needed 9 outs to force a Game 7 where anything was possible. Roger Mason, who threw a shutout 6th, kept the Blue Jays off the board in the 7th and he got the first out in the 8th.

David West and Larry Andersen wiggled out of trouble in the 8th. Now the Phillies were 3 outs away from Game 7.

Fregosi turned to Williams for the 9th. Williams who had blown save after save was on the mound. Everyone on the planet Earth knew he was going to blow the lead. Rickey Henderson evidently was giddy when he took the mound, knowing at least one run was inevitable.

Henderson walked to lead off the inning. With one out Molitor singled. And then Joe Carter came up.

There was no second guessing. Williams was not the man for the job anymore and the point was moot after Carter’s homer. A crushed Fregosi after the game deflected any notion of not using Williams in that inning by saying “he got us here.”

That’s right. But maybe give the ball to someone else for those three outs.

Either way, he managed a remarkable pennant for a Phillies team that is still beloved by their fans.

He was let go after the 1996 season, criticized for his handling of players. After a stint with, ironically, the Blue Jays in the late 1990’s and early 2000’s, his career was over.

While participating in an MLB alumni cruise, he suffered a series of strokes in 2014 and died in a hospital in Miami.

Sadly he is best remembered for the Ryan trade and the 1993 World Series. But his was a baseball life that spanned 5 decades, saw great success and great frustration.

Perhaps that is one of things that made Fregosi so beloved. He wasn’t superhuman. He seemed like one of us.

Either way, he had a career worth celebrating.

 

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast – February 19, 2014

Phillies.com

Phillies.com

The 1993 NLCS between the Phillies and Braves was bizarre, unpredictable, unexplainable and incredibly under appreciated.

Remembering it is the topic of today’s episode of The Sully Baseball Daily Podcast.

To subscribe to The Sully Baseball Daily Podcast on iTunes, click HERE.

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Sully Baseball Daily Podcast – February 19, 2014

Sully Baseball Salutes Jim Fregosi

Jonathan Daniel - All Sport

Jonathan Daniel – All Sport

Jim Fregosi died last night. There has been an outpouring of emotion for the former, player and manager over the last few days that seem to confirm what people have been saying for years: Few people in baseball were as well liked and respected as Fregosi.

There was not much that Jim Fregosi did not do in his baseball life.  For 53 years, he was either a player, a manager, a scout and was a special assistant to the general manager in Atlanta when a stroke took his life this week.

By all accounts, the San Francisco native had an infectious personality and enthusiasm that made him a favorite teammate or manager wherever he went.

Along the way he had great successes and set backs. In a way, it is impossible to remember the highlights of Jim Fregosi without the lowlights.

Topps

Topps

He was an All Star with the Angels and had his number retired by the organization. But he flopped with the Mets as part of the notorious deal that sent Nolan Ryan from New York to California.

He had success with the Angels as a young manager, leading them to the 1979 AL West title. But could not match the success with the White Sox later.

As the manager of the Phillies, he took a scrappy and unkempt group to the post season in 1993 and pulled off one of the greatest upsets in baseball history when they toppled the mighty Braves for the pennant.

He never matched that success again, but left a legacy of class, intelligence and love for baseball behind him.

Fregosi showed loyalty to his players that sometimes paid off. Remember Kim Batiste made a critical error in Game 1 of the 1993 NLCS that tied the game in the 9th? Fregosi stuck with him and he hit the walk off single to end the game.

Sometimes it backfired as he stayed with Mitch Williams too long in the playoffs and World Series. But he never waivered in the post game interview in his loyalty to his players.

And maybe that is his main appeal and why is was loved. He was not a baseball God who walked on water. Jim Fregosi was someone we can all relate to. A man with peaks and valleys. He was a man with highlights we can only dream of and lowlights that were heart breaking, yet he handled himself the way we hope we all would.

Gracious in both victory and defeat, he was clearly a man who loved the game and what he gave to the game. And the game loved him back, even if that loved looked cruel.

Jim Fregosi lived a full life in baseball with dignity, humor and in a manner that did not make enemies but left many 25 man rosters in his wake respecting him to the end.

Baseball needs more Jim Fregosis. May he rest in peace.

In his honor, let’s all watch the pinnacle of his career: The clinching of the 1993 National League Pennant.