Yankees Magazine
|
Frank
Crosetti
By Marty Appel
To say Frankie
Crosetti was “old school” is putting it
mildly. Trained in the corporate efficiency of Joe McCarthy, he joined
the team in 1932, in time to be there for Babe Ruth’s last Yankee
pennant and his “Called Shot Home Run” in the World Series.
By the time young Cro became “The Old Cro,” he had witnessed
Lou Gehrig’s retirement, Joe DiMaggio’s hitting streak, Roger
Maris’ 61st home run and Mickey Mantle’s last game. And about
1,000 other memorable moments in between.
When Frank Crosetti
died on February 12 in Stockton, California, an important part of Yankee
history went
with
him. At 91, he was alert and
spry and still fishing until a broken hip in January felled him. Although
he never journeyed back to New York after his retirement – he never
made an Old Timers’ Game – he was a frequent visitor to Yankee
games in nearby Oakland, and as chirpy with his high pitched voice as
ever.
Maybe he didn’t
need any more road trips after 43 years in pro ball. Maybe his suitcase
had
experienced
enough wear and tear.
Crosetti played
his minor league ball in his native San Francisco from 1928-1931, and
then was purchased
by
the Yankees for $75,000, for whom
he played from 1932-48. He was the team’s regular shortstop from ‘32-’40,
and then Phil Rizzuto’s backup through the end of his playing days.
In 1947, he became
a player/coach, and was the team’s third base
coach until 1968, waving home more than 16,000 runners. He finished his
career with the Seattle Pilots in ’69 and the Minnesota Twins in
1970-71. His responsibilities were more than giving the signs and slapping
the backs of home run hitters. (He shook hands only once - Mickey Mantle’s
walk-off homer off the Cards’ Barney Schultz in the 1964 Series).
He was, for instance, responsible for the ball supply. And dare anyone – even
a player – try to sneak a free baseball out of his ball bag – Cro
was on the case. If a batting practice ball went into the stands before
the gates opened – Cro would hurdle the fence and run it down.
He was a company man.
He made the famous
cross country auto trip with fellow Bay-area teammates Tony Lazzeri
and Joe DiMaggio
in 1936,
delivering Joe D. to his first
Yankee spring training (and learning that Joe didn’t drive),
Besides learning
how to pack a suitcase, Cro also learned how to endorse a World Series
check. It
was his good
fortune to accumulate 23 of them
as a player and a coach, and when such things seemed enormous, it was
often publicized that he earned $142,989.30 in additional World Series
money. (Today’s winning shares approach $300,000 per year).
Perhaps the greatest
tribute to Crosetti however, was in his corporate way of approaching
his business.
Schooled
in the discipline McCarthy
brought to the franchise, he knew that there was a “Yankee Way” to
do things. When he hit .194 in 1940, although only 29 years old, he graciously
acknowledged the gifts of young Phil Rizzuto, and helped tutor his successor
and ease his way into the big leagues. His classy approach to the transition
endeared him to McCarthy and to Yankee management, and cemented his “job
for life” position with the franchise.
He was there for the managerial transfers to Bucky Harris, Casey Stengel,
Ralph Houk, Yogi Berra, Johnny Keane, and Houk again. He went with the
franchise - a new manager could name his own staff, but Crosetti stayed.
He wore number 2 for all those years, but when he left after the 1968
season, it was felt that rather than retire it, it should go to a hot
young prospect who would put it back on the playing field in the Crosetti
tradition. That player was Jerry Kenney. Twenty-eight years later, it
finally made its way to Derek Jeter.
Although only
165 pounds, he had some punch in his bat. He hit 98 home runs, which,
when he left
the team in ’68,
was still 20th on their all-time home run list, and when he retired
as a player, 11th. He also
could take one for the team, leading the league in being hit by pitches
eight times.
And then there was his moment, the 1938 World Series, Wrigley Field,
Chicago. Game Two. Lefty Gomez against Dizzy Dean. Cubs leading 3-2,
going to the eighth. Cro came to the plate with two out, a runner on
first. Dean, in his declining years, was pitching an inspiring game,
one that had the typewritters humming in the press box.
But Crosetti
swung and sent one into the Wrigley Field bleachers, giving the Yanks
the win, taking
two from
the Cubs in their home park and breaking
their backs. They easily took the next two and swept. Crosetti’s
homer was the big hit of the Series, the one that broke the hearts of
the Cubs fans.
Frank Crosetti
had little to say to the press after the game. Might have accidentally
fired up the
Cubs, you
see. The company man left his
talking for the field. It’s the way it was done in Joe McCarthy’s
clubhouse, and ol’ Cro carried that tradition on longer than anyone
else in pinstripes.
|