By Kevin Glew
Cooperstowners in Canada
My weekly observations and notes about some Canadian baseball stories:
– With the Atlanta Braves completing a sweep of the Miami Marlins in their National League Division Series on Thursday, Alex Anthopoulos (Montreal, Que.) became the third Canadian general manager to build a team that has advanced to the National League Championship Series (NLCS). He joins Doug Melvin (Chatham, Ont.) whose Milwaukee Brewers reached the NLCS in 2011 and Farhan Zaidi (Sudbury, Ont.) whose Los Angeles Dodgers competed in the NLCS from 2016 to 2018.
– Forty years ago, Melville, Sask., native Terry Puhl set a then NLCS record with 10 hits in 19 at bats (.526 batting average) in the Houston Astros’ epic five-game series against the Philadelphia Phillies. Puhl is the last Canadian to appear in a postseason game with the Astros. Abraham Toro (Longueuil, Que.) has seemed destined to break that drought this postseason, but despite being on the club’s Wild Card Series and Division Series rosters, he has yet to see game action. The switch-hitting infielder played in more than half of his club’s regular season games. Scouted by fellow Canadian Jim Stevenson (Leaside, Ont.), Toro was the Canadian Baseball Network’s Minor League Offensive Player of the Year in 2019.
– Almost any longtime Toronto Blue Jays fan can tell you exactly where they were 28 years ago today when Roberto Alomar walked to the plate against Oakland A’s closer Dennis Eckersley in the top of the ninth inning in Game 4 of the American League Championship Series (ALCS) at the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum and belted a two-run home run to tie the game at six. The Blue Jays had trailed 6-1 until the eighth inning. Alomar’s home run sent the game into extra innings and the Blue Jays eventually won 7-6 in 11 innings when Derek Bell scored on catcher Pat Borders’ sacrifice fly. The win gave the Blue Jays a commanding 3-1 series lead. You can watch the home run by clicking on the link below.
– For another project I was working on this week, I put together a list of the Canadian pitchers with the most appearances for the Montreal Expos. Here’s the list: 1) Claude Raymond (St. Jean, Que.), 111 games; 2) Bill Atkinson (Chatham, Ont.), 98 games; 3) Mike Johnson (Edmonton, Alta.), 67 games; 4) Rheal Cormier (Cap-Pele, N.B.), 34 games; 5) Mike Gardiner (Sarnia, Ont.), 24 games; 6) Denis Boucher (Lachine, Que.), 15 games; 7) Larry Landreth (Stratford, Ont.), 7 games; 8) Shawn Hill (Georgetown, Ont.), 3 games; 9) Derek Aucoin (Lachine, Que.), Matt Maysey (Hamilton, Ont.) and Dave Wainhouse (Toronto, Ont.), 2 games each.
– National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee and New York Yankees legend Whitey Ford passed away on Friday at the age of 91. The New York native was the go-to pitcher on many of the World Series-winning Yankees teams of the 1950s and early-1960s. His 236 wins are the most in Yankees history and he led the American League in that category three times. A 10-time all-star, he twice topped the American League in ERA and shutouts and won the 1961 AL Cy Young Award. He also owns several World Series records, including most wins (10) and strikeouts (94). Among his Canuck connections are that he was managed by Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame inductee George Selkirk (Hunstville, Ont.) with the class-A Binghamton Triplets in 1949. Thanks also to author and baseball historian Maxwell Kates for reminding me that Whitey Ford served as the TV analyst, alongside play-by-play man Don Chevrier, for the first ever Blue Jays game (April 7, 1977). As Kates noted in a Facebook post, it was the only Blue Jays game that Ford would call.
– Five years ago, with his Blue Jays club down 2-0 to the Texas Rangers in the best-of-five ALDS and facing elimination, right-hander Marco Estrada pitched a gem, holding the Rangers to one run on five hits in 6 1/3 innings at Globe Life Ballpark in Arlington. Blue Jays shortstop Troy Tulowitzki hit a three-run home run in the sixth inning to help secure the 5-1 win and keep the team’s playoff hopes alive. You can watch some highlights by clicking on the link below.
– Please take a moment to remember former Blue Jays pitcher Cory Lidle who died 14 years ago today when the small plane he was in crashed into an apartment building in New York City. He was just 34 years old. The 5-foot-11 right-hander made 31 starts for the Blue Jays in 2003 and posted a 12-15 record and a 5.75 ERA. In all, he recorded 82 big league wins and a 4.57 ERA in 277 appearances in parts of nine seasons with the New York Mets, Tampa Bay Rays, A’s, Blue Jays, Cincinnati Reds, Phillies and Yankees.
– Thanks to Bob Elliott for forwarding me this fascinating list of Little League World Series alumni. The list features Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Jason Bay, who suited up for a team from his hometown of Trail, B.C. in 1990 and former Blue Jays outfielder Michael Saunders who played for his hometown Victoria, B.C. squad in 1999. I didn’t know that Saunders had competed in the event.
– While the Astros have advanced to the ALCS, they will do so without right-hander Joe Biagini. The former Blue Jays right-hander, who had been designated for assignment by the Astros last month, has elected to become a free agent. Biagini struggled to a 10.42 ERA in 17 appearances with the Astros after he was acquired, along with Aaron Sanchez, in exchange for outfielder Derek Fisher on July 31, 2019. Prior to his tenure with the Astros, Biagini had a been a popular pitcher with the Blue Jays, compiling a 4.74 ERA in 204 appearances from 2016 to 2019.
– Please take a moment to remember former Montreal Expos pitcher Clay Kirby who died 29 years ago when he was just 43. The 6-foot-3 right-hander pitched his final 22 big league games with the Expos in 1976, posting a 1-8 record and a 5.72 ERA. Earlier in his career, he was a standout pitcher for the San Diego Padres and Cincinnati Reds. In all, in eight big league seasons, he won 75 games and recorded a 3.85 ERA in 261 appearances. According to his SABR bio, he died of a heart attack in his easy chair at his home in Arlington, Va.
– This week’s trivia question: What Canadian pitcher has made the most regular season appearances for the Toronto Blue Jays? Please provide your answer in the “Comments” section below. Please note: I’m going to hold off awarding prizes until after the COVID-19 pandemic. Hope you understand.
– The answer to last week’s trivia question (According to the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame when Josh Naylor (Mississauga, Ont.) registered four hits in Game 1 of the Cleveland Indians’ Wild Card series against the Yankees, he became the third Canadian to register four hits in a postseason game. Can you name one of the other two Canucks to have four hits in a playoff game? Hint: They both played for National League teams.) was one of Terry Puhl (Melville, Sask.), with the Astros in Game 5 of the 1980 NLCS and Larry Walker (Maple Ridge, B.C.) with the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of the 2004 World Series.
I want to say Paul Quantrill
Yes, you’re correct again, Mike. Happy Thanksgiving to you! Thank you for your support.
Happy Thanksgiving to you as well! I really enjoy your posts
Paul Quantrill
You got it, Dan! Nice job. Thanks for your support.
I could watch Alomar’s HR every day! What a moment.
Yes, indeed, Tom. A great moment in Blue Jays’ history. Thanks for your support. Happy Thanksgiving to you!
Thanks for another Canadian baseball Sunday morning fix.
Thanks for your support and for reading.
Great work as always Kevin! Happy Thanksgiving sir.
Thanks, Brent. Happy Thanksgiving to you as well!
Yes I remember Roberto Alomar’s home run against Dennis Eckersley because I was at that game and the others in Oakland Alameda County Stadium that weekend. My wife and I went there for the three games over the Thanksgiving weekend (Canadian Thanksgiving for those of you in the USA) as a gift from our three kids for our 25th wedding anniversary. What a weekend. We happened to sit next to the Jays’ pitcher David Wells on a cable car in San Francisco the evening before the first game in Oakland. Then I sold our game tickets and bought two from an Australian scout for the Blue Jays who had extra tickets. So we were sitting with other scouts, Blue Jays VIPs and Blue Jays’ wives waving their big foam Js for that Alomar-homer game. When Oakland went up by a lot early, the entire Stadium (except for the 90 or so of us) were on their feet cheering wildly. But when the Jays came back, our group was on our feet cheering and cheering while the rest of the crowd sat absolutely silent. What a moment when Alomar homered! Growing up and living all my life in Vancouver, I don’t get to see a lot of major league games in person – maybe around 75 total I’d guess – although I have been to games in over 20 mlb stadiums and many of the spring training stadiums. The Alomar game and the one I saw in Kansas City in August 1961 when Roger Maris hit his 51st home run on his way to 61 would be my most memorable although I also saw three games in Seattle that were also very memorable: Ken Griffey Jr.’s walk-off-winning hit in his last mlb at bat in 2010, Cal Ripken Jr playing the Mariners with just a few games to go to beat Lou Gehrig’s consecutive-game record in 1995 and Griffey’s massive second-tier home run in the bottom of the ninth to beat the Yankees on August 24, 1995, in the very game that began the Mariners famed “Refuse to Lose” rallying cry as they went 25 and 11 over their last 36 games to win the division.
Wow. Thanks for sharing this, Len. You’re the first person that I have communicated with who was actually at the game. What a memory! It sounds like you have been to some very memorable games over the years. Hope you’re having a good Thanksgiving.
Paul Quantrill with 386 appearances is 6th on the all time list for Blue Jay pitchers.
Nice work, Terry. You are correct. Thanks for your support. Happy Thanksgiving!
I thought it was Dave Stieb
Hi Cath. Thanks for your support and your guess. I was looking for a pitcher born in Canada. Stieb is American, but an “adopted” Canadian in many ways. Hope you had a great Thanksgiving.
Let’s hope Toro gets to play, but since he’s the backup to Bregman, Correa and Altuve it might be hard to find playing time. Great to see so many names on the Expos pitching list.
Estrada was a life saver a few times for the Jays over his years in Toronto
Thanks for your comment, Scott. Hopefully Toro gets in there at least for a pinch-hit at bat.