Posted on 05/13/2019 9:12:55 AM PDT by Rummyfan
On May 12, 1969, the St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 6-2 at Busch Stadium. Bob Gibson pitched a complete game for the Cards, allowing two runs on seven hits. He struck out six and walked one.
There was nothing exceptional about Gibsons pitching performance that day. It was a typical one for him that year, except for the relatively low number of strikeouts.
But Gibsons contributions werent limited to pitching. At the plate, he went 3-3 with a walk. He also stole a base.
Gibson singled to lead off the bottom of the third inning, but did not score. In the bottom of the fourth, he came to the plate with the bases loaded and two out. The Dodgers had walked Steve Huntz intentionally to get to Gibson. Huntz, a rookie, was batting less than .100. Gibson had consistently batted around .200 throughout his career.
Gibson singled off of Claude Osteen to drive in Joe Torre and Joe Hague, giving the Cardinals a 3-0 lead. These were are all the runs they would need that day.
Gibson singled again to lead off the home half of the seventh inning. His hit triggered a two run inning that gave St. Louis a 6-1 lead.
The lead was 6-2 when Gibson batted in the bottom of the eighth with one out and no one on base. This time, he drew a walk from reliever Pete Mikkelsen, a teammate of Gibsons the previous season.
Gibson proceeded to steal second base.
As I understand it, baseball etiquette at the time (and maybe still) did not frown on stolen bases by teams with leads of four runs or less. The notion was that as long as a grand slam could tie the game, it was not showing the opposition up to get a runner into scoring position by stealing second base.
The Cardinals were four runs up when Gibson stole his base. Its true that a four-run lead in the bottom of the eighth with Gibson pitching must have felt more like a six-run lead. Nonetheless, Gibson did not violate any unwritten rule by swiping the bag.
Im not sure whether he cared.
In my opinion, there hasnt been another Bob Gibson since he retired in 1975. However, the Washington Nationals have perhaps the closest thing to Bob Gibson since then.
Im talking about Max Scherzer. He resembles Gibson in the intensity with which he competes, including the visible effort he puts into every pitch. Both hate to come out of a game and they pitch pretty much the maximum number of innings that the practice of their eras permits (280-290 for Gibson; 220-230 for Scherzer).
Both compete not just on the mound, but at the plate. Gibson retired with a batting average of .206. In an era when pitcher batting averages have declined, Scherzers is .194.
Scherzer even has a stolen base to his credit. It came last year. Hed have more, Im guessing, if management didnt discourage its ace from base running escapades. Gibson stole 13 bases during his career, but was caught 10 times, which means his escapades were counterproductive. Anything less than about a two-thirds success rate hurts the team, though the analysis that shows this hadnt been performed back when Gibson was playing.
Gibson and Scherzer were both relatively late bloomers. Gibson didnt become a premier pitcher until his age-26 season. Scherzer didnt gain that status until even later.
Both made up for lost time. Gibson won two Cy Young awards and made the all-star team nine times. Scherzer has won the Cy Young award three times and has been an all-star six times so far.
If Scherzer resembles Gibson, its probably not a coincidence. Scherzer is from St. Louis and I understand that his father was a big fan of Gibson.
Maybe Brad Scherzer was at Busch Stadium on May 12, 1969. Or perhaps he caught the game on radio or television.
In any case, its likely that Brad held out Gibson as a model for Max. So its not surprising that almost every time I see Scherzer battling on the mound and at the plate, I think of Bob Gibson.
Bob Gibson was one of the greatest of all time. in 1968 he had an ERA of 1.12 for the season! In Game 1 of the '68 Series he struck out 17 Tigers.
"Bob Gibson is the luckiest pitcher I ever saw. He always pitches when the other team doesn't score any runs."
- Former Cardinal Catcher Tim McCarver
BTW, he also played NCAA basketball while at Creighton.
Mirengoff compares Scherzer to Bob Gibson.
Cletus wants to share his sad with you.
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Also during an era in which a starter regularly logged 20+ complete games in a season. Nowadays, they rarely go past the fifth inning, yet their careers aren’t being lengthened by shortening their time in the game.
Greatest pitcher of the modern era, and I’m a Tigers fan.
I wonder if he ever ‘took a knee’.
The country was different then...even if people wanted to take knees, they knew better.
Kirk Gibson was a pretty good player too. It must run in the family?
That's what I liked about Pete Rose. He always gave it maximum effort, I think, partly, because he felt obliged to give the fan his money's worth. No one wants to pay good money to see a game and have the players give less than all they've got.
Bob Gibson was one of the best pitchers of an era that had many: Juan Marichal, Steve Carlton, etc.
The last batter Gibson faced in his major league career hit a home run off of him. Years later in an old-timers game, Gibson threw at him. Wish I could remember names, but that is my favorite Bob Gibson story. The guy was truly great, an unbelievable competitor, and tough as nails. One of my all time favorite baseball players!!!!
I certainly expected a lot more trouble with converting an outfielder (Mickey Stanley) to a shortstop in the closing days of the season to get Ray Oyler out of the lineup. But that also went pretty smooth.
Thanks for the memories.
Woo-hoo! Go Cards, boo Cubs. Fourth generation (and maybe more) Cards fan here.
Sandy Koufax?
Sandy Koufax?
Of course.
How did I forget him?
Maybe because he retired 9 or 10 years before Gibson.
But yes, absolutely, Koufax was unbelievably great.
I had the good fortune in my youth to see in person Gibson, Drysdale, Koufax, Marichal, and Spahn. They were skilled craftsmen at the art of pitching. Today's game sadly lacks skill coupled with finess.
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