1949 St. Louis Cardinals

I saw a bunch of Facebook postings saying that today was opening day for the St. Louis Cardinals. That got me digging in the back of my sock drawer for a souvenir bat and pennant Dad gave me when we went to a ball game.

I didn’t even notice that he had put my name on it in his distinctive handwriting until the scan was compete. It was just luck that the name side was down.

1949 Cardinals souvenir program

This program was stuck inside the scrapbook my folks made of my early years. It’s possible that the bat dates back to this game, but I don’t know that for sure.

Cardinal Program Chicago lineup

Not being an avid baseball fan, particularly when I was two years old, I don’t recognize the Chicago players. Click on the image to make it larger. I scanned it at a little higher resolution than usual so you can read all the type.

St. Louis Cardinals lineup

HERE are names I grew up hearing. I shot a picture of Red Schoendiest at the Spring Training Opener this year. How could any kid in SE Missouri NOT know Stan the Man?

You have to snack at a ball game

It doesn’t say how much these snacks cost in 1949, but two hot dogs and two bottles of water set me back 20 bucks at the spring training opener.

Birthday bat, ball and cap

I’m guessing this is my sixth or 7th birthday. I’m holding a bat, softball and wearing a St. Louis Cardinals cap in front of my grandparents’ home in Advance. It’s obvious from my body language that these are alien tools.

Actually, I spent many hours playing pitch and catch with Dad in the backyard or just throwing the ball up in the air to play catch with myself. I never got good enough to be picked first, but, at least, I wasn’t always picked last when it was time to grab the end of the bat to chose up teams.

Dad impressed upon me that you always hold the bat with the label up to keep from cracking it. Unfortunately, one of my classmates either didn’t know or didn’t remember that when he grabbed my bat and stepped to the plate. I’ll never forget the sound of my birthday bat breaking. I was devastated.

Son Adam was the baseball player

Son Adam was the ballplayer of the family. When he was about 12, he was a catcher who could nail a runner at second from his knees. Everybody learned not to steal on him. The only problem was that he couldn’t hit. He could only bunt. But, boy, could he ever bunt. The other teams KNEW he was going to bunt, but he’d always lay one down in the hole.

He hates for me to tell this story, but what good are kids if you can’t embarrass them?

The pitchers must have left their arms at home one night, because they quickly gave up walk after walk and hit after hit. Coach cycled through every player on the team until he came to Adam. Now, you’d think that a catcher who can hit second dead on should be able to put a pitch across the plate, right?

“The NEXT one would have been a strike”

Wrong. Not only could he not hit the plate, he couldn’t hit the backstop. Finally, with his mother and me sinking lower and lower in the stands – “Gee, I wonder who that kid is who’s pitching?” – the coach finally walked out to the mound and demanded the ball.

Adam walked off the field, kicking dirt all the way to the dugout.

“What’s the matter, kid?” I asked. “You were stinking the place up. Why are you mad about being yanked?”

“The NEXT one would have been a strike,” he said.

And, that’s why he’s become a good businessman. When he doesn’t get the deal or something goes wrong, he always thinks, “The NEXT one is going to be a strike.”

 

Trophy Cases and Ghosts

When I ran across this shot of Lonnie Blackwood, right, and someone that Wife Lila thinks is John Young, I thought back to an interview I did with Terry Kitchen in 2009.

Rescued photos from dumpster

When the new Central High School was built, someone consigned some of the framed photos shown at the top of this picture to the dumpster. Fortunately, Coach Kitchen rescued them.

Gary Schemel, No. 22, was the first Central High School student to be killed in Vietnam.

Terry Kitchen’s Ghostly encounter

When it came time to move the trophies from the old school to the new one, the Coach had an encounter with what he describes as maybe the spirit of one of those old trophies that “didn’t want to leave this place.

Follow this link to watch a video of Coach Kitchen describing the event as only he (and maybe Jerry Clowers) could.

I wonder if one of the trophies these guys were holding were the ones that wanted to stay behind as a record of the team’s Glory Days.

Cardinal Spring Training Opening Game

Brother-in-Law Don Riley wanted to catch the Cardinal – Marlins Spring Training opening game at Roger Dean Stadium in Jupiter, FL., today. I think the last baseball game I attended was the year the Marlins won their first World Series. After all the players were sold off, I lost interest in the team.

Mostly a geezer crowd

We had great seats – three rows back behind home plate. There was a smattering of kids and younger folks, but it was mostly a geezer crowd.

Closer to Schoendiest than Pujols

Most of the crowd, in fact, was closer in age to Hall of Famer Red Schoendiest than Albert Pujols, who was warming up in the first picture.. Everybody cheered when the announcer said the temperature in St. Louis was 36 degrees and the temperature in Jupiter (the town not the planet) was in the low 80s.

Serious Cardinal fans

These two St. Louis fans were serious. They probably did a better job scoring the game than the official scorekeeper. They kept up a running commentary the whole time there were there.

Seventh Inning Stretch

The fans offered up a rousing rendition of Take Me Out to the Ballgame during the seventh inning stretch. The woman who sang the Star Spangled Banner had a pleasant voice, but Don and I thought she had a word wrong and left out a line of the song. It was close enough, though, that she got applauded when she was done. She did a better job that I could have done.

Cardinal red dominated

Red was the color of the day, but there were a few vocal Marlins fans in the crowd.

A great day in the sun

The Cards were behind from the very first inning in their 6-3 loss to the Marlins, but it was still a great day at the ball park. The temperatures were a bit warm, but there was a gentle breeze that kept things from getting uncomfortable.

La Russa and the kids

One of the things I liked best was watching Coach Tony La Russa sign baseballs for a bunch of kids between innings.

Minor League Baseball Teams

I was getting ready to scan some other frames on this roll, but spotted this one and decided to publish it on the off-chance that somebody will recognize themselves or a buddy.

All I know is that the boys are wearing T-shirts that say they are on Minor League teams, including the Bisons, Royals, Orioles, Chiefs and Marlins. I wonder if it’s an All-Star grouping? It looks like the ballfield at Capaha Park down from the Rose Garden and Cherry Hill.

The negative sleeve was dated 1966.

(Click on the photo to make it larger.)