March 6, 1969: Montreal Expos’ first spring training game

Advertisements
Canadian Baseball Hall of Famers Jim Fanning (left) and John McHale (right) are considered the architects of the Montreal Expos, who played their first spring training game on March 6, 1969 in Fort Myers, Fla. (Photo courtesy of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame)

On February 24, I wrote about the Toronto Blue Jays’ first spring training game that took place on March 11, 1977 in Dunedin, Fla.

But what happened in the Montreal Expos’ first spring training contest eight years earlier?

To find out, I trekked over to the D.B. Weldon Library at Western University to track down an account of the game on microfilm. I managed to uncover a Montreal Gazette article written by Ted Blackman.

Here are the details:

– On March 6, 1969, the Expos defeated the Kansas City Royals 9-8 in front of 1,768 fans at Terry Park Ballfield in Fort Myers, Fla. This stadium was the Royals’ spring training home from 1969 to 1987 and was known for its hard and unpredictable playing surface. Blackman wrote that half of the hits in this game were due to “strange bounces over the fielders’ heads.”

– It was only fitting that the Expos play the Royals in their first professional game. From 1928 to 1960, the International League team that played in Montreal was nicknamed the Royals. Blackman notes in his account of the game that the Kansas City Royals players were “wearing uniforms identical to those of the old Montreal club.”

– Florida governor Claude Kirk threw out the first pitch, while Expos owner Charles Bronfman made a short speech in French to the fans prior to the game.

– Trailing 8-6 in the top of the ninth, Expos first baseman Bob Bailey belted a 423-foot, three-run home run over the left field wall to put the Expos ahead 9-8. Hard-throwing rookie right-hander Bob Reynolds, who pitched just one game for Montreal in the 1969 regular season, registered the final three outs for the Expos in the bottom of the frame.

– The first pitcher to take the mound for the Expos in their spring training debut was Jack Billingham, who later starred on two World Series-winning Cincinnati Reds teams in 1975 and 1976. Billingham, who allowed four runs on eight hits in three innings in Montreal’s first spring contest, was dealt to the Houston Astros prior to pitching a single regular season game for the Expos.

– The rest of the Expos staff was also hit hard. Left-hander Dan McGinn was the most impressive, limiting the Royals to one run in three innings. But Carroll Sembera, a slender, 155-pound righty, allowed four runs on four hits and three walks to the Royals in his two innings of work.

– In fact, Blackman indicates in his game report that Sembera was so wild that the Royals almost scored three runs on a wild pitch. In the eighth inning with the bases loaded and a full count on the batter, all of the Royals runners were on the move when Sembera uncorked a wild pitch. Two runs scored while Expos catcher John Bateman retrieved the ball. But Bateman managed to tag the third runner out that was attempting to score.

– The Expos’ second spring training game took place the next day at West Palm Beach Municipal Stadium. This was the Expos’ home stadium that they shared with the Atlanta Braves. That day, they would compete against the Braves. Propelled by a lineup that included Hall of Famer Hank Aaron, future Blue Jay Rico Carty and Aaron’s brother Tommie, as well as three shutout innings from Phil Niekro, the Braves prevailed 4-3.

– It’s interesting to note that Felipe Alou, later a beloved manager with the Expos, was the starting centre fielder and leadoff hitter for the Braves in that game.

– Also, in that second Expos spring game, St-Jean, Que., native Claude Raymond, who later pitched for the Expos, hurled the final three innings for the Braves.

10 thoughts on “March 6, 1969: Montreal Expos’ first spring training game

Add yours

  1. fantastic. I love the photo for sure. This history is is amazing. Wish we had some artifacts for the museum from this game.

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Thanks, Scott. Yes, it’s too bad the Hall doesn’t have any artifacts from the game. I think there is a Bob Bailey bat on display in the Blue Jays/Expos room.

  2. Tom Valcke – Stratford, Ontario – Tom Valcke put his iCASE Baseball Academy as well as his position of Head Coach at George Brown College into hiatus, when Hong Kong brought him there in 2018 to serve as head coach of their Men's Olympic baseball team, where he finished with unprecedented success in the 2018 Asian Games held in Jakarta, Indonesia, spiking their WBSC World Ranking from #41 to #28 in just one year under his tutelage. China then scooped up Valcke, as he became the GM and Head Coach of Panda Sport and Culture, a division of the China Olympic Federation, overseeing baseball and softball, and training the national team coaches of baseball and softball, men's and women's teams. Panda Sport and Culture is based in Zhongshan, China's nationally recognized "#1 Baseball City," located on the southeast tip of China, and has a climate much like Florida. On his own initiative, he spent his evenings working with the local coaches of Zhongshan's local amateur youth baseball teams. For the first time in history, the same city won all four 2019 China National Championship gold medals, in 18U, 15U, 12U and 10U, that city being Zhongshan! Valcke worked with the China Baseball Association and Major League Baseball in helping the world's largest country accelerate their evolution into baseball, and helped them design and build a professional baseball stadium, a 600-room dormitory, and a new HQ for Panda Sport and Culture, where he held the role of CEO, in charge of a staff of 60. Valcke, former Technical Director, and Executive Director of Baseball Canada, and former coach of Team Canada, remains a baseball analyst with CBC Canada Radio and TV. The former president/CEO of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, who spent a decade as the Canadian Supervisor with the Major League Baseball Central Scouting Bureau, served as a television broadcaster for the Montreal Expos, the GM of the Calgary Cannons Triple-A club, and the CEO/Head Coach of the World Children's Baseball Fair. He is the proud father of Alanna, Jaxon and Mia, and lucky husband of Paula since 1987. Jaxon and Mia are current star players and captains, respectively, of the University of British Columbia Thunderbirds baseball and softball teams. Mia also became the second female in history to play in World Cups for Team Canada Women's baseball team as well as Team Canada Women's softball team. https://www.canadianbaseballnetwork.com/canadian-baseball-network-articles/baseball-nomad-valcke-a-top-amateur-executive http://www.wbsc.org/csta-prestige-awards-honors-tom-valcke/ https://cooperstownersincanada.com/2012/01/23/valcke-recognized-for-global-baseball-efforts/
    tomvalcke says:

    Fantastic piece Kevin – I really enjoyed that … lots of familiar names. Carroll Sembera, who now is deceased, trained me when I joined the MLB Scouting Bureau. He made and drank Shiner Beer in Texas.

    Sitting in Bogota, Columbia as I read this … a nice slice of home!

    Tom

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Thanks, Tom. Hope things are going well for you in Columbia. Great story about Sembera. I’m still trying to picture how the Royals tried to score three on a wild pitch.

  3. Great photo, Great memory of a team that I still dearly miss. I was just a young lad in ’69 and it’s a treat to have the chance to read about the Expos first Spring Training game so many years later. In 1988 I lived with a family in a small town in Quebec while studying French . I’ll never forget the nights listening on the radio to the Expos in the garage with the family, with plenty of food and drink and talking baseball (in French) with my host family. Quebecers throughout La Belle Province loved that team! Many still do!!

    Seeing Jim Fanning in ’69 is amazing. I’ve had the opportunity to meet him and see him at several CBHFM inductions and events. He’s a real gentleman and a Canadian baseball legend.

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Thanks for the comment, David. I didn’t realize you lived in Quebec for a stretch. I totally agree with you about Jim Fanning. He’s a great man.

      1. I was in a town called St. Georges de Beauce that is about an hour SE of Quebec City on the other side of the St. Lawrence. It has about 20,000 people. I spent two summers there as a French student in university. I returned once more for vacation. I had the chance to board with two Quebec families and really get to know a lot about Quebec and its people. I used to read the Quebec City daily “Le Soleil” which was a tabloid that often put the Expos on the front, similar to the T.O. Sun. It’s quite easy to see how Expo players took to the culture, people and places of Montreal. It’s really a fantastic and friendly place!

  4. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
    cooperstownersincanada says:

    Thanks for sharing this, Dave. I’ve been to Hull and Montreal, but I would definitely like to explore the province of Quebec more.

  5. Thanks for writing this. I love the team and I met Jim Fanning last 2nd of september 2012 in Toronto when he came to assist the ExposNation in their first reunion at an mlb game. He will probably be there this year also on july 20th 2013 when we meet again.

  6. I’m not sure where you are getting your info, but good topic.
    I needs to spend some time learning more or understanding more.
    Thanks for fantastic info I was looking for this info for
    my mission.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Powered by WordPress.com.

Up ↑

Exit mobile version
%%footer%%