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Showing posts with label Stan Hack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stan Hack. Show all posts

Sully Baseball Presents THE ALL STAN TEAM



















You don't meet too many Stans any more. Not sure why. It is a good reliable name. But for whatever reason it has faded away as a name the way that Edith and Ethel have fallen out of style for girl names.

But to honor that fading from memory name, I decided to create a 25 man roster using only guys named Stan.

As always, I list 8 starting players, 5 starting pitchers, 5 relievers, a pinch hitter, 2 reserve infielders, 2 reserve outfielders, a back up catcher and a 25th player who could be any position.

So let's span the Stans... from Musial to Papi.


THE SULLY BASEBALL ALL STAN TEAM


STARTING CATCHER
STAN LOPATA

A big league catcher played from 1948 to 1960 with the Phillies and Braves. A two time All Star, he earned his biggest star before his big league debut:

He got a Bronze Star as well as a Purple Heart serving with the 14th Armored Division in Europe during World War II.





STARTING FIRST BASEMAN
STAN BENJAMIN

The Massachusetts native played five seasons in the bigs, mainly with the Phillies and a cup of coffee with Cleveland.

Later he became a scout for the Astros and told them to try and pick up another native New Englander first baseman named Jeff Bagwell from the Red Sox. Smart guy.




STARTING SECOND BASEMAN
STAN PAPI

In the great documentary Spaceman - A Baseball Odyssey, I kind of sort of trashed Stan Papi. I felt that he wasn't NEARLY enough compensation for the trade involving Bill Lee.

In the Red Sox defense, they DID get the best second baseman named Stan that I could find.

And he gave me and my brother an autograph in 1980. Maybe I was too harsh on him.


STARTING SHORTSTOP
STAN ROJEK

The "Happy Rabbit" played one game for the 1942 Dodgers and then decided to make the world safe for Democracy.

He flew bomber missions in the Pacific before returning to baseball after the war. He played from 1946 to 1952 in the bigs, helping the Dodgers win the 1947 pennant (Jackie Robinson's first year) and finishing 10th in the 1948 NL MVP vote.


STARTING THIRD BASEMAN
STAN HACK

Hack was a 5 time All Star who twice finished in the top 10 in the MVP vote. He played in 4 different World Series with the Cubs, including in 1945 their last pennant to date. He was a career .301 hitter and got a few Hall of Fame votes.

And he was a part of a Bill Veeck promotion gone wrong. The Cubs handed out mirrors with a picture of Hack on them during a game... and fans used them to reflect light in the players eyes. They were all confiscated.


STARTING LEFT FIELDER
STAN JAVIER

Named by his father, former St. Louis Cardinal Julian Javier, after the greatest Stan of all (Musial... spoiler alert) Stan never was a star, but he had a nice career.

He played 16+ seasons in the bigs, won a ring with the 1989 A's and played for 5 other playoff teams.

He was traded to the A's in a deal involving Rickey Henderson and later dealt from Oakland to the Dodgers for Willie Randolph. Anytime you can be swapped for All Stars, you know you are a good player.


STARTING CENTER FIELDER
STAN SPENCE

A four time AL All Star, he lead the league in triples in 1942 and drove in 100 runs in 1944.

He scored the eventual winning run in the 1947 All Star Game with his smart baserunning.

There is a Little League in his native Kentucky named after him.



STARTING RIGHT FIELDER
STAN MUSIAL

Is it possible for a first ballot Hall of Famer who got more than 93% of his only vote to be underrated? A 3 time MVP, a 3 time World Series champ and the 4th all time in hits has stats that could make everyone happy. He was a .331 career hitter... had a career .976 OPS and in the category of Adjusted Batting Wins, he is 5th All Time.

I have no clue what Adjusted Batting Wins means, but who are the only players in history with a higher number of Adjusted Batting Wins? Babe Ruth, Barry Bonds, Ty Cobb and Ted Williams. Any time you have a player mixed in with THOSE players, you have an all time player.

(Seriously, who were the 7% of writers who DIDN'T vote for him?)




STARTING ROTATION



STAN COVELESKI

The other Hall of Famer on the All Stan Team, Covelski was a pitching star for the World Champion Cleveland Indians.

Man, doesn't that look odd even seeing that in type?

A spit ball artist (hey, it wasn't outlawed then!) he was 5 time 20 game winner.

Also sports writers never seemed to know how to write his name and evidently his Hall of Fame plaque was misspelled as well. I wish I had a Hall of Fame plaque that was misspelled!
Baumgartner pitched over 8 seasons with both Philadelphia teams including the 1915 National League pennant winners. His best season was 1924 when he went 13-6 with a 2.88 ERA and saved 4 games for the A's.

At one point he left playing baseball to be the football coach for the University of Delaware. Eventually he was a writer for The Sporting News. I guess nobody ever had to say to him "Yeah you write about the game, but can you PLAY it?"

In the 1950s, he co wrote a history of the Phillies... available here.


STAN BAHNSEN

Bahnsen was a beacon of hope for the Yankees in the late 1960s when the team was in serious decline. The 1968 Yankees put together a winning season after losing 90 in 1967 and Bahnsen was a big part of the turn around. He won 17 games and posted a 2.05 ERA over 267 1/3 innings as a rookie. (No Joba rules for him.)

He was elected Rookie of the Year that year. He won 18 and 21 games with the White Sox in the 1970s and pitched for 16 seasons.

He didn't bring the Yankees back to post season glory, but he WAS teammates with Mickey Mantle AND Julio Franco... making him a great connector in a "Six Degrees of Separation" game.



STAN WILLIAMS

"Big Daddy" was 6'5" and 230 lbs, big in ANY era. The New Hampshire native made his big league debut with the Dodgers in 1958, their first year in LA.

He pitched in the 1959 World Series for the Champs and was an able 14-15 game winner. But a team that already had Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale and Johnny Podres could afford to deal an arm for a bat and off Williams went to the Yankees for Moose Skowron. He pitched in the 1963 World Series for the Yankees against his former team. The Dodgers won the Series but Williams threw three shutout innings in his only appearance.

He struck out Skowron.


STAN FANSLER

In 1986, the last year the Pirates wore their bad ass "We Are Family" hats, the Pirates recalled a 21 year old pitcher from their minor league team in Hawaii.

Fansler pitched in 5 games and won none of them... but actually didn't pitch badly. He finished with a respectable 3.75 ERA. In a game on September 18th, he pitched 6 strong innings against Montreal and Dennis Martinez. In fact it was a scoreless tie until the bottom of the 6th when Andres Gallaraga drove in a run. He looked like he was going to be a hard luck loser until the Bucs rallied in the 9th, scoring 3 off of Jeff Reardon.

Despite his young age and his decent numbers the following season in AAA, the Pirates never brought him back up. Odd. He seemed to pitch well enough to warrant another chance.



BULLPEN



STAN BELINDA

I can't help but wonder what a beloved Pirate Belinda would have been if Francisco Cabrera popped up... or if Jose Lind didn't boot that grounder in the 9th inning of Game 7 of the 1992 NLCS. He's a native of Pennsylvania, a hard worker who didn't have the best stuff and made it all the way to the big leagues. He was part of three straight division titles in Pittsburgh and saved double digit games. And he is battling MS, showing is grit and resolve in real life as well.

But none of that matters. He'll always be the guy who let up Francisco Cabrera's hit. Doesn't seem fair, does it?


STAN FERENS

A lefty for the St. Louis Browns, he pitched well out of the rotation and the bullpen. He missed the 1944 World Series for the Browns. Why? Because he was out fighting to keep the world free and safe.

The former coal miner, he is honored at the Hutchinson Coal Miners Memorial.


STAN CLARKE

On June 12, 1983, the rising Toronto Blue Jays were playing the star studden defending Division Champion Toronto Blue Jays in Anaheim. It was a back and forth game with the Blue Jays breaking a scoreless tie in the 7th and the Angels taking the lead in the bottom of the same inning. The Jays took the lead in the 9th with a 2 run homer by Ernie Whitt... only to blow it in the bottom of the 9th when Rod Carew hit a 2 out game tying single. The game went into the 14th when, with 1 out and 2 on, the Angels looked ready to win the game with Fred Lynn at the plate. Blue Jays manager Bobby Cox brought in Stan Clarke to face Lynn. It was Clarke's second appearance in the big leagues... but he pulled it off, getting Lynn to hit into an inning ending double play.

The Blue Jays would score 3 the next inning and make a winner out of Clarke. He would win only 2 more games in his career... but none more exciting than his first.

STAN PERZANOWSKI

A right handed reliever and spot starter, he had a solid 1975 season with the Texas Rangers, posting a 3.00 over 60 innings. But career went downhill after he was traded to the Cleveland organization.

Stan is the cousin of former Dodgers pitching coach Ron Perranoski… clearly their uncles went to different lines at Ellis Island.





STAN THOMAS

Some players stick with one team their whole career and can be truly associated with a single franchise.

Then there are guys like Stan Thomas, who in four seasons played for four different teams. He wasn't bad. In fact he pitched well out of the pen for both Texas and Cleveland... but kept getting passed from team to team.

His last game in the bigs was the last day of the 1977 season when he somehow wound up on the Yankees. He was mopping up the final 4 innings as clearly Billy Martin was saving his arms for the playoffs. He pitched poorly, letting up 4 runs. But Elrod Hendricks led an 8th inning rally that gave the Yankees the lead and Thomas the win. How many of us can claim we won our last game in the bigs as a member of an eventual World Series winner?



THE BENCH


TOP PINCH HITTER
STAN JEFFERSON

Jefferson looked destined to become a New York sports hero. Instead he became a REAL New York hero.

He was a native New Yorker who was drafted in the first round by the Mets in 1983.

He shot up through the Mets system and played 14 games for the 1986 World Champs... but then was packaged off to San Diego with another supposed future Mets hero, Shawn Abner, in the Kevin McReynolds deal.

He stole 34 bases in his first year with the Padres and looked like a potential star. But after a bad 1988 he was dealt back to New York... this time with the Yankees. His career never got back on track and he was out of baseball after 1991.

He joined the NYPD and as an on duty officer worked at Ground Zero in the wake of the September 11 attacks. He's worth a salute 1,000 times what his stats will tell us.


RESERVE INFIELDER
STAN SPERRY

A great high school star from Evansville, Wisconsin, Sperry tore up the Wisconsin minor leagues before making it to the big leagues with the 1936 Philadelphia Phillies. He last played in the bigs with the 1938 Philadelphia Athletics where he played well with a .273 average over 60 games.

A wonderful account of Evansville baseball, including Sperry's heroics, can be read here.

RESERVE INFIELDER
STAN ROYER

Royer was a first round pick by the A's in 1988 but was expendable because... well... there was no room for him on the team. He was dealt to St. Louis in the Willie McGee trade but never caught on with the big club.

However he found new life after his baseball career as a financial adviser to players.

I wonder what he thinks of all the sub par millionaires in the bigs these days. I hope he is giving them good advise.

RESERVE OUTFIELDER
STAN PALYS

A strong right handed hitter, Palys played part of four seasons with the Phillies and Reds. He had some pop in his bat too. His power was on display on July 18, 1955.

With Cincinnati playing in Brooklyn, Palys had his best game. He hit a 2 run homer in the third, breaking a scoreless tie. And in the 9th inning, with the Redlegs clinging to a 1 run lead, he homered again giving Cincinnati some breathing room.

The Dodgers would win it all that year, but that day belonged to Palys.


RESERVE OUTFIELDER
STAN WENTZEL

One of many players to only appear in the bigs during World War II when most of the stars were fighting tyranny, Wentzel appeared in a handful of games for the 1945 Boston Braves.

He made his debut on September 23rd in the Polo Grounds as Boston played the Giants. He tripled home two runs and scored a run himself in the Braves 5 run seventh inning. He never got another extra base hit again and by the time the troops came home, his big league career was done.


RESERVE CATCHER
STAN ANDREWS

Before and after his service to our country, Andrews played 70 games over big league seasons. Never a star, he managed to get a few big hits from time to time.

He homered and drove in 2 runs for the Phillies on August 21, 1945.

Yet another player who you can't help wonder what his career would have been like if he didn't spend his mid 20s in the war.

25TH MAN
STAN YERKES

A turn of the century pitcher who mainly played for the Cardinals, Yerkes had one year where he showed his worth... kind of. He led the league in losses with 21 in 1902. But you can't LOSE 21 games without being good enough to be sent out to the mound day in and day out.

He also won 12 games and had a 3.66 ERA over 272 2/3 innings. Besides, that Cardinals team was lousy in 1902. You can't blame Yerkes. So welcome to the team, Stan!


So there you have it... a team with some Hall of Famers and journeymen.
Players whose careers were cut short because of World War II and others who would never have seen the big leagues WITHOUT World War II.

And a financial adviser and September 11th hero thrown in as well.

Feel proud to be a Stan!

On this roster, you ARE the man!




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CHICAGO CUBS - ALL TIME HOME GROWN TEAM vs. ALL TIME ACQUIRED TEAM
















Home Grown versus Acquired is almost done, but with five more to go and only a few weeks left before the start of the season, I can't fall apart at the end.

Speaking of falling apart at the end, let me present THE CHICAGO CUBS!

OK, that might sound cruel, but is it?

I mean that house across the street from Wrigley Field that posts the number of years since the last World Series title, Pennant and Division Title has to add another space.

The Cubbies are entering their second century of waiting for a World Series title. And they haven't even played in a World Series since 1945.

I can't tell what is more amazing about that:

The fact that they haven't made it back to the World Series despite the astonishing talent that has played in Wrigley Field...

Or the fact that the fans keep coming back in droves.

It can't ALL be the beer and the ballpark.

Unless you are a White Sox fan or a lazy sports reporter who think that Cub fans are enjoying this, part of you HAS to want to see the Cubs win it all.

Maybe this is the year! Maybe it is a 100 year fluke.


Hey Hey! In honor of Ernie Banks, let's not write one list... LET'S LIST TWO!

ALL TIME HOME GROWN CUBS TEAM



STARTING CATCHER
GABBY HARTNETT

Harnett was probably the NL's best catcher before Johnny Bench arrived in the 1960s.

The NL MVP of 1934 (and runner up in 1937) had his best season in 1930 when he hit .339, a career high 37 homers and an OPS of 1.034.

The future Hall of Famer got the nickname "Gabby" because he was so quiet. Kind of like calling a fat person "Tiny."

But in this picture, he's talking to Cubs fan Al Capone. I guess when Capone wants to talk to you, you get a little chatty.



STARTING FIRST BASEMAN
MARK GRACE

I know of few Cubs that the fans love as much as Mark Grace. He wasn't the best Cub of all time. Heck, on his own team, he was always overshadowed by Ryne Sandberg and Andre Dawson or later Sammy Sosa.

He never hit 20 homers... never drove in 100 runs... never finished in the top 10 of the MVP.

But he was a steady and reliable left handed bat and Gold Glove first baseman. He hit for a high average and was always on base. And he came up big in big games. He matched Will Clark almost hit for hit in the 1989 NLCS batting .647 with an OPS of 1.800 and 8 RBI in the 5 game series.

You could throw other firstbasemen at me... but as I said in the Diamondbacks post, I knew Cub fans who were rooting for Arizona in the 2001 World Series because they wanted to see Mark Grace get a ring. That's love folks.


STARTING SECOND BASEMAN
BILLY HERMAN

Meagan, Melissa, Meredith and Margaret Daniels currently live in Indianapolis. And they have an interesting lineage.

On one hand their father is Mitchell Daniels, the Governor of Indiana.

On the other hand, their Maternal Great Grandfather is Billy Herman, a Hall of Famer and a 10 time NL All Star (8 with the Cubs) who played on three pennant winners with the Cubs.

Which would you brag about more? Your pop in the State House or your great grandfather doing all he could to win the 1935 World Series, batting .333 with an OPS of .958, a homer and 6 RBI.

I know what I'D brag about! It wouldn't be dear ole dad.


STARTING SHORTSTOP
ERNIE BANKS

Ernie Banks' prescience is felt all over Wrigley Field and the Chicago Cubs in ways that I don't even think people realize.

He was the first black player on the Cubs... so he was a pioneer.

He played more games in a Cubs uniform than any player in history... so he spanned decades and generations.

He was the Cubs All Time Home Run King before Sammy Sosa arrived. So in many people's eyes he still is!

He was a two time MVP and a Hall of Famer... so he was an All Time Great.

But even more than that (and that's quite enough!) he personified the Cubs... easy to root for... playing hard... never winning it all but playing with a sunny optimism for the next day!

He dubbed Wrigley Field "the friendly confines" which is all but its official name now.

And I think it was his sentiment of "Let's Play Two" that helped give Wrigley Field the aura to play only day games until 1988.

No player on any Major League Baseball team is more of a personification of their franchise than Banks. Mr. Cub indeed.


STARTING THIRD BASEMAN
RON SANTO

OK, let me get the player stuff out of the way with Santo.

Santo was a great player and a borderline Hall of Famer. I would have no objections if he was in.

He was a Gold Glove third baseman with 30 home run power and always among the league leaders of on base percentage in the middle of the greatest pitchers era since the Dead Ball Era.

Now let's talk about him as an announcer. I think he is great. He is great for the same reason Phil Rizzuto was great for the Yankees, and Bob Uecker and Jerry Remy are great for the Brewers and Red Sox respectively.

He SOUNDS like a fan and yet he has the player credibility.

Now granted, Santo doesn't have those other guy's broadcasting chops... but isn't the world a better place when you can turn on your XM Radio, listen to a Cubs game, and have a guy who sounds drunker than the guys in the left field bleachers cheering the team on?


STARTING LEFT FIELDER
BILLY WILLIAMS

Billy Williams didn't just have bad luck in terms of post season play... he had CUBS luck.

He was yet ANOTHER star of the amazing 1969 team that had a 9 game lead on August 16th, were in first place as late as September 9th and lost 18 of their last 26 games.

You couldn't blame Williams who had another All Star caliber season, hitting .293 with 21 HRs and 95 RBI.

He followed it up with a great 1970, hitting 42 homers, driving in 129, batting .322 with an OPS of .977. He had his first of two MVP runner ups. (He led the league in hitting and OPS in 1972 while finishing third in Homers and second in RBIs.)

Out of borderline mercy, the Cubs dealt him to the three time Defending World Champion Oakland A's for the 1975 season. He saw his only post season play in the ALCS that year... but it was also the year the A's World Series runs came to a crashing end. He never did play in a World Series.

Cub luck.


STARTING CENTER FIELDER
ANDY PAFKO

The five time All Star drove in 110 runs with only 12 homers in 1945, the last pennant winner for the Cubs.

And he went 3-4 in Game 1 of the 1945 World Series, helping knock future Hall of Famer Hal Newhouser out of the game and putting the Cubs in control... or so it seemed.

When All Star Stan Hack retired, he moved from Center to Third Base for a season to fill the void and made the All Star team.

How many All Stars today would just go to the infield for one year?
No doubt the agents would allow it.



STARTING RIGHT FIELDER
FRANK SCHULTE

Never heard of Frank Schulte? Well let tell you something. There have only been four players to hit 20 doubles, 20 triples, 20 homers and steal 20 bases in the same season.

One of those players was named Willie Mays. You've heard of HIM right?

Two others are named Jimmy Rollins and Curtis Granderson. Ring a bell?

Who was the first one?
Frank Schulte. He did it in his MVP winning season of 1911. He also started every game in both World Series that the Cubs have won.

Now you know who he is.


TOP PINCH HITTER OFF OF THE BENCH
FRANK CHANCE

Oh I know I am going to get some flack for not starting Chance and starting Grace.

The "Peerless Leader" is a Hall of Famer who was not only a career .296 hitter and prolific base stealer, but also batted .421 with an OPS of .921 in the 1908 World Series. He got three hits and drove in a run in the last World Series clincher in Cubs history.

Plus he was the MANAGER of the only two World Series winners in Cubs history.

Oh yeah, he was also in that poem.


THE STARTING ROTATION


GREG MADDUX

I have seen more dynamic pitchers than Greg Maddux.

Roger Clemens in his prime and Randy Johnson in his prime were all more electric while pitching.

The individual seasons of Dwight Gooden in 1985, Orel Hershiser in 1988 and Pedro Martinez in 1999 were more dazzling than any of Maddux's seasons.

He wasn't the big game performer like Dave Stewart, Jack Morris, Curt Schilling or John Smoltz.

But he might be the best pitcher whose career I have seen from beginning to end. All he did was win, eat innings and keep in ERA low in an outrageous steroid and small ballpark era.

He won 18 games as a Cub in 1988 and 16 as a Cub in 2004 and took home his first Cy Young as a Cub in 1992.

Not the sexiest ace... but the single most reliable I can remember.


Big Daddy gives all of us with a big gut hope that we could go on that hill and win 20 games, like Reuschel did with the 1977 Cubs.

Al at Bleed Cubbie Blue did a wonderful write up on Reuschel that I can't top. But I did notice that he still harbored resentment that Reuschel was left off of the 1984 playoff roster.

Look I know he was a fan favorite, and I also know he came back and became an All Star with the Pirates in 1987 and the Giants in 1989 so he still had something in the tank.

But I have a hard time believing that when the Cubs were winning with Rick Sutcliffe on the mound in Game 5 that Cub fans were thinking "Man, I wish Big Daddy was available!"

Call me crazy.

From Big Daddy to Big Ed.

He pitched a complete game victory to give the Cubs a 2-0 lead in the 1907 World Series and then won 24 games for the 1908 World Champions.

And in that tight pennant race with the Giants, Reulbach had a pitching day for the ages on September 26.

With the Cubs clinging to a 1/2 game lead over the Giants and the Pirates, they sent Reulbach to the mound against Brooklyn.

He pitched a complete game shutout, 5-0. But it was only the first game of the double header.

Guess who started the second game? That would be Reulbach. Guess what he did?
He threw his SECOND complete game shutout of the day... 3-0. The Cubs would win the pennant by a single game and win their last World Series.

In 2008, two shutouts for the entire season was the highest total in the American League. For Reulbach, that's just in a day's work!

BIG BILL LEE

Big Daddy... Big Ed... Now Big Bill! It's the Big section!

No, not the Spaceman... although putting Lee on this list means I can plug Spaceman, the movie I am in, again.

Actually Big Bill won more games than the Spaceman. He was a two time 20 game winner and finished second in the MVP vote for the 1938 NL Champion Cubs.

And with the 1935 World Series on the line, he pitched three innings for the save in Game 5.

He was a great pitcher. Spaceman was more fun.


CARLOS ZAMBRANO

BIG Z!!!
It's an All Big Rotation!

When the Cubs were putting together their wonderful pitching staff in 2003, Zambrano was almost an after thought on a staff with Prior and Wood.

Now he is not only the last one left, but he's the only one to emerge as a legit ace.

A big winner and an innings eater, he threw the single strangest no hitter I can imagine on September 14th of last year... Cubs against the Astros in Milwaukee. Where else would it be played?

Why Piniella took him out of Game 1 of the 2007 Division Series is a mystery, like the Loch Ness Monster, that may never be solved.

But I've already written about that.

I was going to put Mark Prior in the rotation... and had the Cubs won the 2003 pennant, he'd be here. But this is not a list of unfulfilled potential.


THE BULLPEN

BRUCE SUTTER

Sutter was one of the great relievers of all time and he made his mark as a Cub.

He saved 31 games for a .500 1977 team, thus leaving his first mark as a big time closer.

He became a regular All Star, culminating in his wonderful 1979 season when he struck out 110 posted a 2.22 ERA over 101 1/3 relief innings. He saved 37 for the sub .500 Cubs and won the Cy Young Award.

He later clinched a World Series and got a plaque in Cooperstown... and both times he was wearing a hated Cardinals hat.

If there was a Mount Rushmore for Relief Pitchers, then Rollie Fingers, Mariano Rivera, Rich Gossage, Dennis Eckersley and Bruce Sutter belong on it.

Then again that is five faces and Mount Rushmore has only four.

OK, maybe that is a bad analogy.
Elston was a classic late blooming player.

A product of the Cubs system, he was dealt to the Dodgers. Over his two years in the Dodgers system he pitched a grand total of 1 inning for Brooklyn before being sent back to the Cubs.

The Game of "I don't want him, you take him" ended when suddenly at age 30, he blossomed into an All Star for the 1959 Cubs team.

He saved 10+ games three straight seasons before the bullpen closer was a regular role and got the save in the 1959 All Star Game.

Not bad for a 30 year old nobody wanted.

I know some people will give me hell for not including Lee Smith on that Mount Rushmore that I mentioned with Bruce Sutter.

Well first of all, in my incredibly tough criteria for Closer Greatness, I say you need to be a closer for a World Series winner. That's not my ONLY criteria, but I am not flexible about that.

And the only post season highlight involving Lee Smith in a Cubs uniform was his letting up Steve Garvey's home run in Game 4 of the 1984 NLCS.

Now I don't say this to belittle Smith, who was a great pitcher. I included him on my Red Sox and Angels posts. He saved 30 games a year back when that meant something. In 1985 he struck out 112 in 97 2/3 innings.

No dishonor in saying you were not as good a closer as Fingers, Gossage, Rivera, Eckersley nor Sutter.


And to think this kid started off as an infielder!

Oh the highlights that Carlos Marmol can have if he can take over the closers role.
His strikeout totals are jaw dropping. (114 in 87 1/3 innings???)

Admit it Cubs fans... you've thought about the scenario and its been with Marmol on the mound.

Two outs... two strikes... here's the pitch from Marmol... STRIKE THREE! THE CUBS HAVE WON THE WORLD SERIES!!!

Could he be THE ONE?
(I never thought it would be Keith Foulke for us!)

Didn't the whole idea of Kerry Wood clinching a World Series title just make sense?

I mean he was supposed to be one of the two aces to lead the team to glory.

He was their blazing 20 strikeout in a game stud! He homered in Game 7 of the 2003 NLCS.

And after injuries ravaged his career, he reinvented himself into an All Star Closer.

Why did the Cubs dump him? To make room for Kevin Gregg? The reliever who basically torpedoed the Marlins season last year?

Doesn't make a lick of sense to me. Kerry Wood is a Cub through and through and he should come back.


THE BENCH

RESERVE INFIELDER
STAN HACK

Smiling Stan was an All Star regular in the 1930s. The Third baseman had little power (he never hit more than 8 in any of his 16 seasons) but was a great contact hitter and hit for a terrific average (.301 career.)

And in the 1945 World Series, he hit .367 with an OPS of .908 as the lead off man and was the hero of Game 6.

On the verge of elimination, Hack singled home the tying and go ahead runs with a fifth inning single.

The Tigers would tie the game and in extra innings tried to win the Series. But in the bottom of the 12th with 2 outs, Hack doubled to left, scoring Broadway Bill Schuster, to end the game and force a Game 7.

The Cubs would lose that Game 7 and haven't won a pennant since. Meaning that Smiling Stan Hack won the last World Series game victory in Cubs history.

RESERVE INFIELDER
JOHNNY EVERS

The middle part of Baseball's Sad Lexicon Evers (EE-vers) was a super skinny short infielder who compensated for his lack of size with a slap hitting style, stolen bases and poem worthy defense.

Almost every bio I've read of him describes him as "scrappy."

I guess that is a euphemism for "short angry guy."

I really wanted to include Shawon Dunston, whose arm was so terrific and probably had 20,000 times the ability of Evers. But I can't deny a Hall of Famer.

RESERVE OUTFIELDER
RAFAEL PALMEIRO

The Cubs had a first round pick named Rafael Palmeiro. He was a good left handed hitting outfielder and first baseman. He nearly won the batting title in 1988, his last year with the Cubs finishing second to Tony Gwynn.

He was a lean, line drive, doubles in the gap hitter. He hit 14 homers in 1987, but that clearly wasn't going to be his M.O.

The Cubs sent him packing to Texas in the deal that sent Mitch Williams to Chicago.

Let's just say he changed there... but he looked destined to be a great left handed hitter. If only that were enough.


RESERVE OUTFIELDER
PHIL CAVARETTA

The Cubs last won the pennant in 1945.
The National League MVP in 1945 was Phil Cavaretta.

He drove in 97 runs that year and had an OPS of .949 with only 6 homers. He won the batting title that year.

And in the World Series, Cavaretta hit .423 with an OPS of 1.115 and homered in the Game 1 rout of the Tigers.

They didn't win the World Series in 1945... but don't blame Phil!

(Yes I know he was primarily a first baseman, but he played 538 games in the outfield and I didn't want to leave Phil out!)


RESERVE CATCHER
GEOVANY SOTO

I've written a lot about Cubs of the past... but Soto, a Cub of the present and the future, belongs here.

From his homer in the 2007 Division Series, it seems like he has marked his territory in Cubs lore. Even Peter Gammons wrote about him as an MVP candidate in 2008.

The 2008 Rookie of the Year hits for power and calls a great game and is already an All Star.

Allow yourself to picture it Cubs fans... Soto jumping into Marmol's arms!




25TH MAN
JOE TINKER

What? I have Evers and Chance on here and I'm not supposed to include Tinker?

It's part of probably the only poem in the history of poetry that I actually liked!

Besides he hit the only home run in the 1908 World Series. How many other Cubs can claim to have homered in a World Series that the Cubs WON? None.

The infield is complete!



Now THAT is a complete team. You know it's deep when you have Tinker, Evers and Chance off of the Bench.

The depth, power and passion of the home grown team will be hard to match. Could there be any beloved Cubs left that the Cubs acquired?

Oh... there's a Hall of Famer or two.
Read on.


ALL TIME ACQUIRED CUBS TEAM


STARTING CATCHER
JODY DAVIS

Without a doubt one of the most popular Cubs during the 1980s, Davis was a Rule 5 heist from the Cardinals, who exposed him because of his ulcers.

His popularity has more to do with hard nosed play than any eye popping statistics.

But he WAS a Gold Glove catcher.
He DID smack 24 homers in 1983.

And he DID have a terrific NLCS in 1984... crushing 2 homers, driving in 6 runs, batting .389 with an OPS of 1.201.

Maybe his popularity isn't that hard to figure out after all!


STARTING FIRST BASEMAN
DERREK LEE

When Lee got the big two run double as a Marlin (in the wake of the underrated Alex Gonzalez error) in Game 6 of the 2003 NLCS, I am guessing he would NOT be considered beloved by Cubs fans.

But armed with his World Series ring, he joined the Cubs and became a an All Star, Gold Glove winning MVP candidate (finishing 3rd in 2005 when he won the batting title and had the NL's top OPS).

He continued his hot post season hitting with a .333 average in the 2007 Division Series and a .545 average and a 1.401 OPS in the 2008 Division Series.

Granted they didn't win those years, but unlike the Cubs, he can look back to 2003 with happiness.


STARTING SECOND BASEMAN
RYNE SANDBERG

The Cubs wanted the Phillies' Larry Bowa.
The Phillies wanted the Cubs' Ivan DeJesus.

It could have been a straight swap and it probably would have been the biggest "So What?" trade of the 1980s.

Two shortstops... neither bad. Neither great.

But the Cubs said "Hey! We think DeJesus is a little better than Bowa. Can you throw someone else in... just a farm hand so it could a 2 for 1 deal?"

The Phillies could have thrown in Jay Baller... Steve Jeltz... maybe Tony Ghelfi... and this would have been a forgotten trade.

But someone in the Phillies front office said "Eh... give them Ryne Sandberg."

And the Cubs got an MVP... they got a Hall of Famer... they got the face of the franchise for a decade.

What I am saying is I am sure someone lost their job in the Phillies front office.


STARTING SHORTSTOP
IVAN DeJESUS

I am including DeJesus on this list for four reasons.

1) He actually had a few good years in Chicago, including leading the NL in runs in 1978 and smacking 10 triples in 1979.

2) The Cubs have had a hard time acquiring other shortstops.

3) Nomar Garciaparra's year and a half in Chicago was injury plagued.

4) Cubs fans should be so thankful that the Phillies overvalued him and were able to get Ryne Sandberg out of the deal!


STARTING THIRD BASEMAN
ARAMIS RAMIREZ

The Cubs had a real revolving door of third baseman after Ron Santo retired. Some have been good. (Bill Madlock, Ron Cey, Vance Law) but no long term solution.

And then the Cubs found a trading partner with that gift that keeps giving... the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Always quick to blame economics and the lack of a salary cap for not fielding a .500 team since 1992, the Pirates would probably fare well if they could get something... oh I don't know... USEFUL when they deal away All Star caliber right handed power hitters.

More than veteran Jose Hernandez, Bobby Hill and someone named Matt Bruback.

Ramirez has been the rock at third base, winning the Hank Aaron Award in 2008 and crushing 4 homers in the 2003 post season.

I hope the Cubs sent Pittsburgh a thank you note.



STARTING LEFT FIELDER
GARY MATTHEWS, SR

Notice I put SENIOR on there.

Sarge was already an established major leaguer when he came to the Cubs prior to the 1984 season. He fit in perfectly in Wrigley, getting his only top ten finish in the MVP vote.

He has the best on base percentage in the league, was a solid run producer and a huge fan favorite in Wrigley.

In fact it was his saluting the Bleacher Creatures that earned him the nickname Sarge. He hit two homers in Game 1 of the 1984 NLCS... which things looked so promising.

His son's year and a half in Chicago... well that was before he discovered HGH, so let's just say he didn't get the same love from the Wrigley faithful.




STARTING CENTER FIELDER
HACK WILSON

The Giants had Hack Wilson. He actually was in their starting outfield for the 1924 World Series... but after a lousy 1925, John McGraw gave up on him.

The Cubs picked him up and found a slugger on the scrap heap.
In fact they found a slugger who hit more homers in one season than any National Leaguer with 56.

The first National Leaguers who have passed him were Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds. I will just say that as a fact. You interpret it anyway you want. (Ryan Howard also passed him in 2006.)

That same year that he hit 56 homers, he drove in 191.
Do you know who has hit more in one season? Juiced or not?

NOBODY!
That year he batted .356 with an OPS of 1.177.

The National League did not elect an MVP that year. I have a hunch that Hack Wilson would have won it.


STARTING RIGHT FIELDER
ANDRE DAWSON

Hey! Another great slugger that fell into the Cubs lap.

In the middle of collusion, Expos star Andre Dawson desperately wanted a new contract, but nobody would offer him one.

I mean who could POSSIBLY use a player who hits 20 homers, bats in the .280s, has speed and is a Gold Glove right fielder?

He gave the Cubs a deal that even the colluders couldn't refuse: A blank contract.

Dawson would sign it and they assign the number value in good faith... good faith with guys who were FOUND GUILTY of collusion.

The Cubs signed him for $650,000. Best $650,000 they ever spent.
He hit 49 homers, drove in 137, won the Gold Glove, the Silver Slugger and gave the 2 million fans who showed up to see a last place team something to cheer about.

He won the NL MVP and got a nice big fat raise.

While the colluders will NEVER get the grief they deserve, let's give Dawson the credit HE deserves. He just wanted to play!

He should be a Hall of Famer... NOW!


TOP PINCH HITTER OFF OF THE BENCH
BILL BUCKNER

OK, maybe this is the Red Sox fan in me talking... but let me have Billy Bucks here.

He was a terrific all around hitter in Chicago and won the 1980 batting title.

You think this is excessive praise? Well I think he's received excessive grief over the years so I am swinging the pendulum back.

Should I have included Leon Durham?
You mean the guy who let the ball go through his legs?


THE STARTING ROTATION

MORDECAI "THREE FINGER" BROWN

Yes he had only three fingers on his pitching hand. It's probably the coolest and most literal nickname in baseball history.

He mangled his hand in a farming accident and it forced him to learn how to grip the ball differently.

The result was an unholy breaking ball and 55 career shutouts, six straight 20 win seasons, 13 saves in 1911 and unlike most Cubs, he also had World Series glory.

His complete game shutout in Game 5 of the 1907 World Series clinched the first ever World Series title for the Cubs.

In the 1908 World Series, he won Game 1 out of the Bullpen and then threw a complete game shutout in Game 5.

Kids, don't get any ideas and start cutting your fingers off!

Oh did you think that Ryne Sandberg was the only Phillies minor leaguer dealt to the Cubs to wind up in the Hall of Fame?

Au contraire! Nearly 2 decades before the Ivan DeJesus deal, Fergie Jenkins, he of 8 career games and no starts with the Phillies found a new home in Chicago in a deal that sent veterans Larry Jackson and Bob Buhl to Philadelphia.

WHOOPS!

Jackson and Buhl were long out of baseball when Jenkins won the 1971 NL Cy Young Award. He had six straight 20 win seasons in a Cubs uniform. He was also good for 20 complete games a year and led the NL in strikeouts in 1969.

He returned to the Cubs at the end of his career. In his final year his teammate was Ryne Sandberg.... just a thought to make Phillies fans sick.

I am not a betting man, but I am sure that if you listed the odds for "Who would win the NL Cy Young Award for 1984" before the season began, there would be a few favorites.

Perhaps Fernando Valenzuela. Maybe Mario Soto. Maybe defending Cy Young winner John Denny.

I am guessing Rick Sutcliffe wouldn't be high on the list. He wouldn't have been high on the list in April or May either. He wasn't even in the National League. He was still pitching for Cleveland.

Then he came over to the Cubs in one of the most successful midseason deals in history.
The Cubs were in third place behind the Phillies and Mets when he arrived.

Then he started winning a few games. In fact he won 16... and only lost 1.
He won his last 14 decisions. He won Game 1 of the 1984 NLCS and homered as well! He had the lead in the 7th inning of a clinching Game 5... OK, he picked a bad time to lose his first game since June 29.

But it was a heck of a season. And whoever put a bet down on "Rick Sutcliffe" to win the NL Cy Young Award CLEANED UP!

The Cubs picked up an ace who became a 5 time All Star in a Chicago uniform for three nondescript players in 1939.

In 1940 he won 20 games, had an ERA of 2.50 and struck out 124, second in the league in all three categories.

He became a steady pitcher over the next few seasons culminating with his masterpiece, Game 3 of the 1945 World Series.

He let up a second inning single to the Tigers Rudy York... and that's it! He spun a 1 hit complete game shutout that gave the Cubs a 2-1 series lead.

Oh by the way, the team the Cubs stole him from?
The Phillies.

Note to the Phillies... STOP DEALING WITH THE CUBS!

Cubs fans... if there was a baseball genie you could ask a wish for, what would it be?

OK, besides a never emptying keg.

It would be to see the Cubs winning a World Series, am I right?

As a Red Sox fan, I used to visualize the moment of a Red Sox World Series clinching in my head before each season. And then in 2004 and later in 2007 I actually saw it... trust me, it was even more special because I visualized it.

So the Cubs have gone 100 seasons without doing it. The last person do have that highlight? The last person to throw a pitch and then celebrate a championship?

Orval Overall.
And yes, that is his real first name. Mr. and Mrs. Overall decided to name their child Orval.
Go figure.

On October 14, 1908 in front of 6,210 fans in Detroit, he got Boss Schmidt to ground out to catcher Johnny Kling who threw to Frank Chance to end Game 5 of the World Series.

And the Cubs won the World Series.

Until it happens again (and it will) Orval Overall is the last person to know what that feels like.


THE BULLPEN


RANDY MYERS

Myers was best known as either the Met who made Jesse Orosco expendable or the Nasty Boy who clinched the World Series for the 1990 Cincinnati Reds.

But he had his highest save total with the 1993 Cubs when he notched 53 saves, then a National League record.

OK, he wasn't a fan favorite with EVERY Cubs fan. Especially not the one who stormed the field to try and beat up Randy Myers after blowing a critical game in 1995.

Now I am not condoning that fan's action... but who hasn't been that mad when their bullpen closer blows a game?

The Vulture (he of the 14-1 record out of the pen for the 1966 L. A. Dodgers) continued his vulture like ways when he was traded to the Cubs during the 1968 season.

He won 12 games and saved 17 for the 1969 Cubs, throwing 112 innings in relief.

He gave the Cubs some steady relief (many outings for more than 1 inning) although he had some... um... rough outings down the stretch.


Charley Root has won more games than anyone in a Cubs uniform. He is the only Cubs pitcher with 200 wins (he finished with 201.)

With the likes of Three Finger Brown, Fergie Jenkins and Greg Maddux in Cubs history, I had a hard time believing that. But why would Baseball-Reference.com lie to me?

Root is best remembered for giving up Ruth's supposed called shot in Game 3 of the 1932 World Series. Whether Ruth called the shot is unclear. (Root claimed he didn't.) What is beyond debate is he got rocked that game. He let up back to back shots to Ruth and Gehrig.

So why is he in the bullpen?
I HAD to include Root, and he saved 40 games for the Cubs over 16 seasons, including 8 in 1938 which was second most in the NL.

So I am putting him in the pen. Just don't bring him in to face Ruth.




Look at that face. Look at that facial hair. Look at that gut.

If I could invent a closer the way those guys in Weird Science invented a woman, that closer would look and act like The Shooter.

I gave him lots of love in my Giants post, but he deserves love here.

As a closer, he did the job wonderfully his first year in Wrigley. He saved 51 games including 14 of his first 15. And down the stretch he got a save or a win in 14 straight appearances between August 27th and September 17th.

And in an irony that shows that the Giants can be as haunted as any franchise, Beck came in to the 9th inning of a one game playoff between the Cubs and his former San Francisco teammates for the 1998 Wild Card.

The Cubs took a 5-0 lead into the 9th but these are the Cubs and they seemed hellbent in coughing it up. The Giants scored two runs and had runners on first and third and only one out.

With the tying run at the plate, Beck came in and retired Jeff Kent and Joe Carter to clinch the Wild Card.

Oddly, manager Jim Riggleman did not bring in Beck to close out the 1-0 lead in Game 2 of the Division Series (and steal home field advantage from the heavily favored Braves.) The Braves rallied and won in extra innings. Imagine if they brought in the Shooter.

Beyond the stats, he loved the game and seemed to relish being a Cub. He lived his last years in a camper near a ballpark in Arizona, having beers with fans. The Shooter will be missed.


OK, let me say right off of the bat that I know I am going to get a tremendous amount of flack for this pick.

I know that Joe Borowski is actually not a very good closer.
I would argue he is an awful closer and possibly the biggest example of how the save can be an overrated statistic.

So what is he doing here?

A very simple reason... unlike Ryan Dempster, or Rick Aguilera, or Mitch Williams, or Antonio Alfonseca, or Hal Jeffcoat... or any other pitcher you are going to suggest... Joe Borowski did something that only Three Finger Brown and Orval Overall have done:

He closed out a post season series as a Chicago Cub.
The 2003 Division Series is the only post season series the Cubs have won in a century. And Borowski saved it. And admit it, it was fun seeing a Cubs team celebrate a post season series.

It might be a strange reason to include him... but wasn't that little bit of joy in 2003 worth a little pat on the back for Borowski?


THE BENCH

RESERVE INFIELDER
HARRY STEINFELDT

Steinfeldt was a terrific hitter for the Cubs during their four pennant winning seasons at the turn of the century. He led the NL in hits and RBI in 1906 and nearly won the batting title that year.

And in the 1907 World Series, he batted .471 with an OPS of 1.197, driving in a run in the clinching Game 5.

He's also the lone infielder who was not mentioned in the Tinker to Evers to Chance poem.

I guess Steinfeldt kind of threw off the rhyming scheme.


RESERVE INFIELDER
BILL MADLOCK

Bill Madlock is never going to make it to the Hall of Fame, but he was a terrific hitter over a prolonged period of time.

He always seemed to be among the batting leaders. He won two of his four batting titles with the Cubs and established himself as an All Star caliber player from his rookie year on.

He of course wasn't a model citizen in Chicago. He got his "Mad Dog" nickname for reasons other than his name starting with Mad.

But you can't argue with batting titles, All Star Game MVPs and decent speed and power to boot.


RESERVE OUTFIELDER
SAMMY SOSA

Has there ever been a faster fall from love than Sammy Sosa?

It's almost surreal to think about it. In 1998 he was possibly the most popular Cub since Ernie Banks.

He was everything fun about Wrigley Field. He was a super slugger with a cannon. He ran out to right field, playing it up to the right field fans.

And he got Mark McGwire to loosen up and have fun.

He was the most loved figure in baseball. He saved the game of baseball.

Then came the corked bat. And the strange injuries. And then leaving Wrigley Field when a game was going on. And then forgetting how to speak English in the steroid hearings.

10 years after saving the game and being the greatest slugger in Cubs history he is persona non grata in Wrigley Field. If you told me that in 1998, I would have thought you were from an insane asylum.

And then I would ask you how you achieved time travel.


RESERVE OUTFIELDER
DAVE KINGMAN

All Kong did was homer and strike out. He did both better than anyone in the game.

In 1979, he broke his stereotype of being a low average slugger by hitting .288. He led the league in homers (48), RBI (115) and slugging (.613.) and although he didn't know it, he led the league in OPS with .956.

But it was the year before, on my birthday, May 14, 1978, that he gave the world his biggest contribution.

Against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Kingman homered off of Doug Rau in the 6th inning to make the game 3-2 Cubs.

Then in the top of the 9th with 2 outs, he hit a game tying homer off of Mike Garman.

Then in the 15th, he hit another 2 out homer to give the Cubs a 10-7 lead that they would hold on to. He drove in 8 runs in all.

And while I am sure you have heard it already, it is worth listening to Tommy Lasorda's post game interview here.

You are welcome.


RESERVE CATCHER
RANDY HUNDLEY

Randy Hundley came over in a steal of a trade.

The Cubs got Bill Hands, who would 20 games in 1969 and Hundley who would become a Gold Glove All Star catcher.

Hundley was a durable every day catcher with pop over four straight seasons in Chicago.

And they got this terrific battery in exchange two veterans who flopped.

Guess which team they made the trade with?

Actually it was the Giants, but wouldn't it be awesome if it were the Phillies.



25TH MAN
KING KELLY

There are a lot of great Cubs I could honor here... but when else am I going to get a chance to tip my cap to King Kelly?

He was one of the first superstars in baseball... one of the first idols who revolutionized the game with the hook slide and the hit and run and wearing a glove and chest protector as a catcher.

And he had songs written about him, and was a media darling during the 1880s.

And then he died of pneumonia at age 36. He was the biggest star in all of baseball during the 19th century. By the age of Ty Cobb, he was a distant memory.

By Babe Ruth he was totally forgotten.
But the staff at Sully Baseball all agrees... he is worth one last "Slide Kelly Slide" here.


WHO WOULD WIN A HEAD TO HEAD SERIES?

Any team that has home run kings and batting titles on the Bench like the Acquired Team is going to be tough!

The Acquired Team has Ryno, Fergie and The Hawk!

But with Maddux leading the staff and Ernie Banks at its heart... who is going to pick against the Home Grown Squad?

VERDICT: THE HOME GROWN TEAM WINS... AND THEN THEY GO OUT AND HAVE BARBECUED BILLY GOAT AFTERWARDS!



One more down!

That's the Cubs

And the Indians
And the Tigers
And the White Sox.
And the Royals
And the Brewers
And the Reds
And the Dodgers
And the Blue Jays
And the Pirates
And the Diamondbacks
And the Mariners
And the Nationals
And the Angels
And The Padres
And The Twins
And The Orioles
And the A's
And the Astros
And the Giants
And the Rockies
And the Mets
And the Rangers
And the Marlins
And the Yankees
And the Red Sox

4 to go...

NEXT ALL TIME HOME GROWN VS. ACQUIRED TEAM:
THE PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES