Thurman
Munson #15
By Marty Appel
Thurman
Munson was a fan’s player.
But
it took a special breed of fan to see it – a New York fan – and it was
Thurman’s good fortune to play before
such a knowledgeable bunch of devotees.
Munson,
you see, was not about smiling for the cameras
or ponying up to the press, not
about posing for pictures with sponsors or
taping video promos about upcoming gift days.
In fact, if you’d ask him to do those
sort of things, you would never be left in
doubt about his willingness to do it. And so
you’d move on and ask someone else.
Yes, he could be a bit of a grump.
But he was a winner.
He
played baseball the way it was intended to
be played. He didn’t come out of a
losing game thinking, “well every team
loses at least 60 games, this is just one of
those 60.” He hated every loss.
That kind of attitude sat well with an owner
who felt pretty much the same way, one George
Steinbrenner, and although the two would butt
heads from time to time, there was no doubt
they both had the same approach to the game.
And that was why Steinbrenner named Munson
the team captain in 1976.
It was a major move for the team, and certainly
an unlikely appointment, because, frankly,
a team captain is usually expected to be a
little more media friendly. But Steinbrenner,
in his wisdom, saw the leadership that Munson
exerted on the field, and knew he was a logical
choice. And he felt that the Yankees ought
to have a captain for their impending assault
on the American League. They had gone 12 pennant-less
seasons, and now, as 1976 approached, as a
newly refurbished Yankee Stadium awaited them,
the time seemed right for such a move.
It
was not without controversy. The team had
not had a captain since Lou Gehrig’s
passing in 1939. Manager Joe McCarthy had “retired” the
position at that time out of respect to Lou.
So not Dickey, not DiMaggio, not Rizzuto, not
Berra, not Mantle, not Murcer, not White had
been given the job.
Informed
of the McCarthy edict, Steinbrenner said, “If Lou Gehrig or Joe McCarthy
knew Thurman Munson, they’d know the
time was right and he was the right man for
the job.”
Predictably
blasé about the selection,
unwilling to discuss it with the press, but
privately very prideful of the honor, Munson
was nevertheless confused by the responsibilities
that went with the job. “What am I supposed
to do?” he said. “Take out the
lineup card?”
No. He was supposed to continue to do what
he had always done, lead by example, play the
game hard and true, play to win. And that was
what the fans, in their wisdom, were able to
see.
They
wouldn’t find Munson’s postgame
quotes in the morning paper. They’d see
the occasional newspaper criticism of his grumpiness
towards the press. But they also saw the guy
pumping his fist, guiding a pitching staff,
playing in pain, getting his uniform dirty,
and exhorting his teammates to glory.
The
glory would come at the end of his first
season as captain, as the 1976 Yankees broke
the 12-year slide, and captured the 30th American
League pennant in team history. And for Munson
came the league’s Most Valuable Player
award, the first to a Yankee in 13 years, when
Elston Howard took home the honor.
The appointment to captain had paid off in
a big way.
In winning, Munson also had accomplished
the daunting feat of winning both the Rookie
of the Year award and the MVP.
The rookie honor came in 1970.
He had arrived in spring training to compete
for the job with veteran Jake Gibbs and burly
John Ellis, who actually won the Dawson Award
as the top rookie in camp. But in the mind
of Ralph Houk, Munson was a throwback, and
surely the guy who was going to be his regular.
Ellis was moved to first, Gibbs to a backup
role. Houk saw Munson as the successor to Dickey,
Berra and Howard, and he had that right.
Munson’s ascendancy was rapid. Born
in 1947 in Akron, Ohio and raised in nearby
Canton, he had played three sports in high
school and then gone to local Kent State University,
where he had been everyone’s All-American
at catcher. Munson sometimes considered that
his highest honor. “How many rookies
was I competing with in 1970 to win that award?” he
said. “Compare that to how many college
catchers I had to beat out to be All American!”
In June of 1968, at the age of 21, he was
scouted by ex-Yankee outfielder Gene Woodling
and drafted number one by the Yankees in the
amateur draft. General manager Lee MacPhail
went to the Munson home in Canton to personally
sign him.
Thurman
played 71 games for Binghamton in the summer
of ’68, including a regular
season contest at Yankee Stadium where the
stands contained more Yankee personnel than
paying customers, there to see the future.
They liked what they saw.
He
played 28 more games for Triple-A Syracuse
in ’69, and then began to see his first
big league action in late ’69, even getting
into the Yankees team photo.
In 1970, despite a slow start at bat that
shook his confidence a bit, Houk stuck with
him and his game kicked in. A big moment in
his relationship with the fans took place one
Sunday in August when he emerged from the dugout
to pinch-hit in the second game of a doubleheader.
Munson had been away on Army reserve duty for
the weekend. He got to leave his New Jersey
base in time on Sunday to drive up the Jersey
Turnpike and make it into uniform in time to
get into the game. When number 15 popped out
of the dugout, the fans exploded in cheers,
not expecting his presence. It was, in a sense,
the day his love affair with the fans was first
noticeable.
He
hit .302 in that rookie campaign, but he
was not happy with the team’s 93 wins
and second place finish. He wanted more. He
didn’t come to the Yankees to finish
second.
The
promised land would not arrive for another
six years, and in the meantime, other puzzle
parts were assembled. The team was sold. In ’72
came Sparky Lyle, in ’73 Graig Nettles,
in ’74 Lou Piniella, in ’75 Catfish
Hunter, in ’76 Willie Randolph and Mickey
Rivers. But it all began with Munson in ’70.
He was the first piece of the puzzle.
In
1975, Thurman drove in 102 runs with only
12 homers. As a right hand hitter, Yankee Stadium
robbed him of power numbers, but it didn’t
deprive him of major run production. He hit
.318 that year, a career high. In ’76,
he had 105 RBIs with a .302 average, and in ’77,
his first world championship, he had 100 RBIs
and a .308 mark. Quietly, he had put up amazing
stats: his three consecutive .300 seasons with
100 RBIs made him the first player in the majors
to accomplish that since the Cardinals’ Bill
White (by then a Yankee announcer) had done
it in 1962-64. And he was the first American
Leaguer to accomplish it since the Indians’ Al
Rosen (by then the Yankees general manager),
had done it a quarter of a century earlier,
1952-54.
Munson
swung the bat and made contact. His highest
walk total was his rookie total of
57, and his highest strikeout total was 66.
The game was always in motion when he came
to bat. He’d step out, adjust his batting
glove, step in, and beat you. He brought the
game to you.
Behind
the plate, he was a genius at calling games.
He knew every hitter’s strength
and weakness after one series. A bulldog at
his position, he made only one error in 1971,
setting a team record with a .998 percentage.
On the one error, he had to be knocked unconscious
blocking the plate, and dropping the ball.
Tough scoring call.
The
way he battled eventually took a toll on
his body. He wasn’t going to be a
catcher much longer. By 1979 he was playing
the outfield, third base and first base, in
addition to catching. He played first base
in the last game he ever played as a Yankee,
before the tragic crash of his private jet
cost him his life and set the sports world
in mourning. His death, as captain of a world
championship club, at the age of 32 with year
of productive play ahead of him, was almost
unprecedented in sports. When had a player
of this stature, still at the peak of his ability,
been so suddenly lost in such a horrific way?
And ironically of course, his death ranked
with his captain predecessor Lou Gehrig, as
one of the saddest moments in the history of
the New York Yankees.
The Hall of Fame will apparently not happen,
his career was, alas, just too short. But how
about a plaque which would cite his captaincy
of three pennant winners, two world champions,
his Rookie of the Year, his MVP, his .339 mark
in ALCS games and .373 in the World Series
(including .529 in 1976, highest ever by a
player on his losing team). How about those
seven All-Star game selections and three Gold
Gloves?
To
Yankee fans, he doesn’t need Cooperstown
to affirm his place in team history. Just as
he didn’t need to talk to the press to
win over their hearts, he let his actions speak
for him.
He will always be the captain, a champion,
a ballplayer, and a Yankee.
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