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Mattingly can Thank Pudge for 2005 "Memories"
Dozens of patrons filed through a line at the Tri-State Hot Stove League's
Night of Memories to pay for items they'd purchased in auctions. One face
was morerecognizable than most: Don Mattingly.
Near the end of Friday night's event at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center,
he bent over a table and signed one last autograph - this one on a check
for $1,550. Donnie Baseball was high bidder for a set of 11 All-Star Game
baseballs signed by Ivan "Pudge" Rodriguez, one to commemorate each of
the veteran catcher's 11 all-star berths.
"I've just always admired Pudge," explained Mattingly, the legendary
New York Yankee from Evansville. "He's a great player."
Mattingly's check - not to mention his appearance as one of the
event's celebrity guests - helped the Tri-State Hot Stove League raise
more than $94,000 for youth sports leagues.
"After expenses, we should be right at $80,000 net," said Hot Stove
League president Larry Broerman. "That'll put us over $500,000 for the
six years we've had the Night of Memories."
Mattingly has attended all six, and he's bought something in the auction
each time. His previous purchases include basketballs signed by John Wooden,
Mike Krzyzewski, Larry Bird, Jason Kidd and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and NFL
jerseys worn by Evansville natives Sean Bennett and Kevin Hardy.
"I don't know if I'd say I'm a collector," Mattingly said. "But I like
and admire certain guys and also appreciate it when they come (to the Night
of Memories) and give their time (like Bennett and Hardy did). Plus, the
money goes to a good cause."
Mattingly said some of his favorite mementos are hockey-related. "I
collect hockey jerseys - especially goalies' jerseys."
Mattingly said he met Dominik Hasek at a fund-raiser in Rochester,
N.Y., and purchased a jersey, a stick and a puck that had been signed by
the goaltender.
There wasn't much hockey memorabilia put up for bid Friday, but several
items did well. Mattingly's winning bid for the Rodriguez balls was the
fourth-highest, behind the $3,800 for two tickets to next year's Super
Bowl, $3,200 for a 10-person Busch Stadium suite for a Cubs-Cardinals game
next summer and $1,800 for a Mickey Mantle-signed replica Yankees jersey.
Several items sold for what organizers considered bargain prices -
such as a signed pair of Alan Jackson concert-worn jeans, which brought
$350, and a Miami Dolphins mini-helmet autographed by Bob Griese and Don
Shula, which went for $100.
"All in all, it was another good night," said Broerman.
He said the tentative date for the 2006 Night of Memories is Friday,
Jan. 29.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Memories offers chance to rub elbows with John
By DAVE JOHNSON
Executive sports editor
February 3, 2005
He's the man who made the elbow famous ... or was it the other way around?
Thirty years have passed since Tommy John underwent the revolutionary
surgery that salvaged, and probably extended, his major-league pitching
career.
Dr. Frank Jobe, the Dodgers' team physician, performed the operation
on the then-31-year-old hurler in September 1974. He snipped a tendon from
John's right arm and used it to replace the torn ligament on his left (pitching)
elbow by weaving it through holes drilled in the bones above and below
the elbow.
The procedure - officially known as Tommy John surgery - proved to
be a breakthrough in sports medicine. It has been performed on hundreds
of ballplayers - not just major- and minor-leaguers, but also high school
and college athletes - with a reported success rate of 80 percent to 85
percent.
However, when John became the first to have the surgery, a torn elbow
ligament usually meant the end of the pitcher's career. "When it happened
to me, I thought, 'Well, I'm the unlucky guy from Terre Haute whose elbow
just went out, ' " recalled John, who will appear at Friday's Night of
Memories fund-raiser, sponsored by the Tri-Stove Hot Stove League.
But he said he never felt he was "washed up" - or even thought about
quitting.
"To tell you the truth, I didn't know how good I was going to be after
the surgery," said John, who had won 124 games in 11 big-league seasons.
"But I knew I was gonna pitch again because I was willing to take however
long it took - one year, three years, four years - to get ready."
During his recuperation, he even telephoned Hoyt Wilhelm, the Hall
of Fame pitcher who had been his teammate with the Dodgers and Chicago
White Sox, to see if Wilhelm would teach him how to throw a knuckleball.
"I figured if I couldn't pitch like the old Tommy John, I was going to
come back and be a skinny Wilbur Wood," John said, referring to the White
Sox's portly knuckleballer, a perennial 20-game winner. Full recovery from
Tommy John surgery usually takes about two years: a year of rehabilitation
and another year of easing back into pitching.
John pitched in the instructional league in September 1975, one year
and one day after the surgery, and was back in the majors for good the
next spring. He pitched for 14 more seasons and threw 2,543 more innings.
And he won 164 games - or 40 more than he'd won before. Before he got hurt,
John never won more than 16 games in a season, Afterward, he won 20 or
more three times. When he retired in 1989, at 46, he had a 288-231 record
and a 3.34 earned run average.
USA Today reports about one of every 10 pitchers on big-league rosters
have undergone Tommy John surgery, about 20 percent of those who have had
it done. Another 20 percent to 25 percent are minor leaguers; the majority
are high school and college players.
That latter figure concerns John. He says some of the younger players
probably don't need it; they may just need rest. Coaches and parents must
share part of the blame, too. "So many kids are one-sport players. Their
parents see them as the next Roger Clemens; they see the big dollars down
the road. So they hire coaches, and trainers. A kid plays on his high-school
team in the spring; then on another team in the summer; then he plays fall
ball. Winter is for weight-lifting, and in the spring it starts all over
again."
John, 61, remembers when kids played two or three different sports
a year. "They'd play baseball or football, but they'd also do basketball
or tennis or cross country. Now they're eliminating the fun sports that
give their bodies a chance to heal."
John "never dreamed" so many pitchers would be helped by the surgery
that bears his name - a name Jobe copyrighted.
He feels good about that - "even though I never got a penny (from endorsements),"
he said with a laugh.
"But I sure wish I had."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contact Dave Johnson at 464-7522 or johnsond@evansville.net
We Owe Benes for the White Rat
When the Tri-State Hot Stove League asked Whitey Herzog to come
to next week's Night of Memories, the White Rat said he was all for it.
There was only one hitch.
The former Cardinals manager, who lives in St. Louis, explained that
he wanted to make it an over-and-back, one-day trip "and my wife doesn't
like me to drive at night." So it looked like no Whitey - at least, for
this year. But then Andy Benes came to the rescue. The former pitcher lives
in St. Louis, too, and he'd already accepted an invitation to attend the
Feb. 4 fund-raiser.
"I'll just bring Whitey with me," Benes said. So Herzog will be here
after all, and he figures to be one of the stars of the show.
Herzog, 73, spent four decades in professional baseball as a player,
scout, coach, manager and front-office executive. He wasn't a great player
- he batted just .257 in his eight seasons as a big-league outfielder -
but he was a great manager. Herzog led the Kansas City Royals to three
American League playoff appearances in the 1970s, then won three National
League pennants and one World Series with the Cardinals in the '80s.
His teams were fun to watch and fun to cover. And the White Rat himself
- well, he was a sportswriter's dream.
In his office after games, Herzog would invite reporters he liked to
have a beer with him - which we never did, of course - and then he'd fill
our notebooks with strategy lessons, anecdotes and memorable quotes.
For example, whenever someone would ask Herzog what it took to be a
successful manager, he'd always answer: "A sense of humor ... and a good
bullpen."
Late in his managerial career, he mentioned that baseball "has been
good to me ... since I quit trying to play it."
And he said he had only four rules for his players: "Be on time;
bust your butt; play smart, and have some laughs while you're at it."
Benes and Herzog's careers overlapped, but just barely. Benes' first
full big-league season, 1990, was Herzog's final year with the Cardinals.
The big right-hander broke in with the San Diego Padres in 1989, just
a year after they made him the first pick in the draft, out of the University
of Evansville. Benes, who grew up as a Cardinals fan and spent five seasons
with St. Louis, said he regretted that he never got to play for Herzog.
"I really enjoyed watching him. His teams played hard; they always
played nine innings," said Benes, who retired two years ago with 155 big-league
victories.
Benes said Herzog reminded him of "Trader Jack" McKeon, his first manager
with the Padres.
"They were both old-school. It was 'Put on your uniform and go get
'em.' "
Benes said he's gotten to know Herzog well in recent years because
they're both involved in several of the same fund-raisers and community
projects.
"Whitey's so much fun to be around," he said. "He's got so many stories
... he remembers everything."
But Herzog won't be Benes' only passenger next Friday. The ex-pitcher
from UE and Central High School also will bring along Fredbird, the Cardinals'
mascot.
"Fredbird doesn't talk," said Benes, "so we'll put him in the backseat."
Then, for three hours over and three hours back, it'll be one baseball
story after another.
"Whitey's gonna have a captive audience, that's for sure," said Benes.
And wouldn't you like to be in that car?
"Night may lack glamour, but its stars shine bright"
By
DAVE JOHNSON
Executive Sports Editor 464-7522
johnsond@evansville.net
January 4, 2005
Don Mattingly tries to attend as many fund-raisers as possible during the off-season.
One of the biggest is a dinner for the Joe Torre Safe-At-Home Foundation. The New York Yankees manager brings in some heavy hitters to help raise money for victims of domestic violence. The November dinner in New York featured Yankee superstars Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada; Mattingly, the Yanks' hitting coach and former all-star first baseman, and baseball Hall of Famers Willie Mays and Bob Gibson.
Entertainers Regis Philbin, Billy Crystal, Spike Lee, Michael Bolton and Jane Pauley were there, too. James Taylor provided the music.
"It's a pretty big deal," said Mattingly. "Joe tries to raise between $4 million and $5 million, and (corporate) tables cost about $50,000."
Mattingly has another fund-raiser coming up: the Tri-State Hot Stove League's sixth annual Night of Memories, set for Friday, Feb. 4, at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center. It won't be as glitzy or as glamorous as the Torre affair and it won't raise as much money. But in Mattingly's eyes, at least, it's just as important. For one thing, it's in his hometown. For another, the proceeds go to youngsters who are involved in local and area sports programs.
"We're more low-key (than Torre's event)," said Mattingly, who serves on the Hot Stove League's board of directors. "But I really enjoy ours because it's a really good cause; we're doing it for the kids."
The Hot Stove League has raised more than $400,000 in its five previous Nights and, as Mattingly noted on Monday, "we've had some pretty big names ourselves."
The biggest name last year was St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Scott Rolen. In 2003, with some gentle coaxing from Mattingly, former Yankees great Yogi Berra showed up.
Although the 2005 Night of Memories is a month away, Hot Stove League officials still hope to land someone who can match Rolen's and Berra's drawing power.
"Hopefully, we'll come up with a surprise or two," said Paul Gries, the Hot Stove League's vice president. "Ozzie Smith is a possibility, and so are Don Zimmer, Whitey Herzog and Raymond Berry."
But even without them, Gries and president Larry Broerman believe the Hot Stovers can reach their goal of $100,000. "We've still got a great lineup," said Broerman.
Headlining it are Mattingly, Tommy John and local area major leaguers Brad Wilkerson, Jamey Carroll and Clint Barmes.
Andy Benes, the former St. Louis Cardinals pitcher from Evansville, will be back for the first time in four years, too. He's bringing along Fredbird, the popular Cardinals mascot.
Area minor-league ballplayers will fill out the guest list.
"We think Fredbird will be a big draw, especially for the kids," Gries said. "They'll be able to get his autograph and have their picture taken with him."
The main program starts at 6:30 p.m. and is adults-only. Admission is
$20. Children may attend the two-hour autograph session which begins at
4. Autograph fees will be announced later.What: Sixth annual Night of Memories,
sponsored by the Tri-State Hot Stove League, to raise money for area youth
sports groups. When: Friday, Feb. 4, at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center. An
autograph session is scheduled for 4 p.m. to 6, followed by the adults-only
program at 6:30. Celebrity guests: Former major leaguers Don Mattingly,
Tommy John, Harry Spilman and Andy Benes; current big leaguers Jamey Carroll,
Brad Wilkerson and Clint Barmes; St. Louis Cardinals mascot Fredbird; Cardinals
announcer Wayne Hagin; minor leaguers Wes Carroll, Ryan Hutchinson, Taylor
Mattingly, Ryan Miller, Steve Obenchain, Heath Phillips, Andy Rohleder,
Ryan Spilman and Adam Swain. Auction items: About 150 items will be up
for bid, including memorabilia signed by Larry Bird, Kobe Bryant, Nolan
Ryan, Don Shula, Bob Griese and Dale Jarret, plus game-used equipment.
Tickets: $20 admission to the program. Autograph fees will be announced
later. Information: Log on to www.hotstoveleague.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.
Last chance for answers in '04
The Answer Man stops in for his final visit of 2004. As always, he's happy to take your question or comment ...
Question (phone message): I grew up in Rockport, and when I was a teen-ager back in the late 1970s, my father used to take me to Evansville to watch the Triplets' games. I had a huge crush on Mark "The Bird" Fidrych, so I was interested in a story you wrote that said Fidrych might be coming back for the Night of Memories. When will you know for sure?
Answer: Sorry to be the one to break the bad news to you, ma'am, but "The Bird" won't be able to make it this time. When I called him yesterday at his home in Massachusetts, where he runs an asphalt company, he explained that he has a prior commitment. The 2005 Night of Memories, the Tri-State Hot Stove League fund-raiser, is scheduled for Friday, Feb. 4, and that night Fidrych will be busy finishing up a week-long charity event in Michigan.
"Every year, a bunch of us (former Detroit Tigers, Lions and Pistons) travel across the state by dogsled and make appearances at banquets and chili suppers and stuff to raise money for Special Olympics," said Fidrych, the former American League Rookie of the Year whose career was cut short by injuries. "We raise about a quarter of a million dollars each year, and this will be my 12th year.
"But I'd love to come back to Evansville. Maybe next year."
Hot Stove League officials also found out this week that Bob Griese, the Hall of fame quarterback from Evansville, can't make the 2005 Night either.
"Bob called and pointed out that that's Super Bowl weekend," said Paul Gries, the Hot Stove League's vice-president, "and he has to be in Jacksonville (Fla.) that week. He said he's really frustrated that he can't make it, because he likes to come back home to see his brother (Bill) and all his friends.
"This was an oversight on our part," Gries said. "Next year, we won't schedule the Night of Memories on Super Bowl weekend. I guarantee you that."
Comment (phone call): Hey, Dave, I just found out there's a new toy on the market, just in time for Christmas. It's an Indiana University basketball doll. You wind it up and it doesn't do anything.
Response: Gee, I wish you'd told me about it a week or so ago, before
I finished my shopping. I spent my last $20 on a Barry Bonds doll. You
rub some special cream on it and it doubles in size overnight.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You can contact Dave Johnson at (812) 464-7522 or johnsond@2vansville.net
Chances are 'good' Griese will be here for Memories
By Dave Johnson
December 5, 2004
The lineup is beginning to take shape for the 2005 Night of Memories.
Fans can expect to see some of their old favorites at the Tri-State
Hot Stove Leagues annual fundraiser for area youth sports groups.
Club vice president Paul Gries, who is in charge of inviting the honored
guests, said he has received commitments from current major-league baseball
players
Brad Wilkerson, Jamey Carroll and Clint Barmes, as well as retired
hometown heroes Don Mattingly and Andy Benes.
Gries said Benes plans to bring along Fredbird, the St. Louis Cardinals'
mascot.
Others who have accepted invitations to the 2005 Night, which is scheduled
for Friday, Feb. 4 at the Vanderburgh County 4-H Center, are minor-league
coach Harry Spilman and area minor leaguers Ryan Miller, Steve Obenchain,
Wes Carroll, Heath Phillips and Andy Rohleder.
Cardinals broadcaster Wayne Hagin also plans to attend, Gries said,
and there is a "good" chance Bob Griese will be back after a two-year absence.
The Hot Stove League has managed to bring in some big names to head
its guest list the past several years. Last year, it was Scott Rolen; two
years ago, it was Yogi Berra.
Gries said the club struck out in trying to lure Joe Torre or Ozzie Smith to the 2005 event. However, he said Hot Stove members have been in contact with several other popular ex-players, including Don Zimmer, Tommy John, Mark "The Bird" Fidrych and NFL Hall of Famer Raymond Berry.
The Hot Stove League distributes proceeds from the Night of Memories to deserving youth-sports groups in the area. Last year, it donated $94,000 to more than 100 organizations; $29,000 was generated from a two-hour autograph session that featured Rolen, Mattingly, Harmon Killebrew and George Foster. Admission tickets to the 2005 adults-only event cost $20 and are available from Hot Stove members, at Evansville high school athletic offices or online at www.hotstoveleague.org. Autograph ticket prices will be announced when the celebrity-guest list is finalized, Gries said.
Trivia time: Newburgh's Jamey Carroll scored the final run in the history of the Montreal Expos, who have become the Washington Nationals, and Owensboro's Brad Wilkerson hit their last home run.
The Expos' final batter was outfielder Endy Chavez, who grounded out
to second base in the Expos' final-game 8-1 loss to the Mets in New York.
Presumably, ESPN's Chris Berman will start calling him Endy "Game"Chavez
whenever he appears on Sportscenter.
"2005 Night of Memories' may be filled with stars"
By Dave Johnson
October 14, 2004
OK,
so I've been away for awhile. You probably think I've been in hiding somewhere,
mourning the Dodgers' too-short playoff run.
Nope, I've been in California, bulking up at BALCO. Anyway, you know
the drill: The Answer Man will take your question or comment ...
Question (phone call):
Have they set a date for the Night of Memories, and do they know what
celebrities will be there?
Answer:
The 2005 Night of Memories, the Tri-State Hot Stove League's annual
youth-sports fund-raiser, is scheduled for Friday, Feb. 4, at the Vanderburgh
4-H Center. However, the celebrity-guest lineup is in the very early
planning stage, according to club Vice President Paul Gries. Gries
said Andy Benes has indicated he'll attend the event, "and he said he may
bring along Fredbird," the St. Louis Cardinals' mascot. Gries expects
Don Mattingly to be there, too, and Bob Griese "probably" will be back.
Gries said Hot Stove members have been in contact with several other possible
guests, including Ozzie Smith, Joe Torre, Don Zimmer, NFL Hall of Famer
Raymond Berry and Cardinals broadcaster Wayne Hagin.
"But nothing's definite yet," he said. "It's still early."
Question (e-mail): With the Montreal Expos moving to Washington, D.C.,
we've been constantly reminded by the media that it's been 33 years since
the Washington Senators played their last game at RFK Stadium and left
D.C. for Texas. However, hardly anyone has mentioned the unusual circumstances
of that final Senators game. As a serviceman stationed in D.C., I was there
that night. The New York Yankees, down by a couple of runs, were batting
in the top of the ninth when a huge number of fans suddenly stormed the
field. They plundered everything that wasn't securely fastened down - outfield
signs, pieces of turf, the bases, etc.
It took only about a minute for the umpires to call the game and award
the Yankees the victory by forfeit.
Washington's big Frank Howard, a longtime fan favorite, hit a tape-measure
home run in that game. The next day in the newspaper, the Yankees pitcher
admitted he had intentionally "grooved" one to Howard "just to see how
far he could hit it." The Yankees' Bobby Murcer also hit a homer.
My question is this: Did Howard and Murcer lose their homers because
of the forfeit, or did they still count?
Answer: Everything counted that night, including Howard's 26th homer
and Murcer's 25th.
Well, almost everything, anyway. Under baseball's forfeit rule, the
Senators' 7-5 lead with one out to go went into the record books as a 9-0
Yankees win.
And although every hit, run and error went into the official boxscore,
no one was credited with being the winning or losing pitcher.
By the way, the Senators drew 14,460 fans that night. The Expos, for
their final game in Montreal two weeks ago, drew 31,395.
"Having a ball"
"Kids' eyes light up when they meet baseball heroes"
By STEVE FORD
Courier & Press staff writer
464-7511 or sford@evansville.net
February 7, 2004
Memories made by great athletes aren't limited to athletic fields. Sometimes,
some of baseball's best leave kids wide-eyed and speechless by just sitting,
smiling and writing their name. Such was the case Friday at the charitable
autograph signing prelude to the Night of Memories at the Vanderburgh 4-H
Center.
Assembled to do their pricey work - $20 to $60 per autograph, depending
on the item and the signer - were Evansville legend Don Mattingly; former
Jasper (Ind.) High School great and current St. Louis Cardinal Scott Rolen;
Owensboro, Ky., native and current Montreal Expo Brad Wilkerson; former
Cincinnati Red George Foster; and Hall of Famer Harmon Killebrew.
Even at those prices, the pace was brisk, the lines long and the assembled
fans appreciative.
Proceeds from the event benefit area youth sports through the Tri-State
Hot Stove League.
"It's really special," said 12-year-old Garrett Braun of Newburgh while
admiring Rolen's signature on a baseball card. "It's a lot different than
getting it off the Internet. You get to see Scott Rolen sign your card."
Garrett had come with friends Eric and Joe Schach and their father,
Rick. All were fine with spending $20 to get in and $30 for Rolen's autograph.
"He's my favorite player," Eric Schach, 12, said of Rolen. "We go to
a lot of games."
Said 8-year-old Joe: "It's really fun because I've never seen any baseball
player so close. I just said 'Thanks' and left."
Rolen said he doesn't sign a lot of autographs because he doesn't like
the commercialization of the cottage industry and was never into them himself.
"I never got (an autograph)," he said. "We used to go to a lot of games,
but (Rolen and his brother, Todd) weren't allowed to get them. But I don't
mind doing something like this, because this is for all the right reasons.
And if I can make a kid's day by signing, great. That's why you do it."
Rolen made some days.
Andrew Wagler came from Washington, Ind., with his family, including
older brother, Jarrod, who played against Rolen in high school.
"It's really neat my brother played against him and then I get to see
him so close," said Andrew Wagler. "We go to games in St. Louis every year,
but (Rolen's) autograph is hard to get. Everybody wants it. I have another
baseball, but to see him sign yours in person is even better."
Reed Farmer, 8, of Haubstadt, Ind., expressed similar feelings.
"I was real excited when my mom told me I could come," he said. "My
dad got me a case for my ball and everything. Scott Rolen's my favorite
player."
Isaac Johnston, 6, was rendered nearly speechless after his turn with
Rolen. He just clutched his newly signed ball and nodded politely when
asked about the experience before finally saying, "It was neat."
Wilkerson understands both sides and is happy to be able to help.
"The thing I like best is when you see a kid's eyes light up when you
sign something," he said. "It's become kind of a business, but it's worth
it to come to something like this because I can give something back to
the area that gave me so much.
"It's funny. I used to go to games in Cincinnati and St. Louis, but
I don't think I ever got any baseball player's autograph. But I can remember
going to a blue and white (University of Kentucky) scrimmage at the Sportscenter
in Owensboro.
"I got Jamal Mashburn's autograph and I thought that was pretty neat.
So I try to sign all I can because I remember the way that felt."
The autograph session is a huge part of the Night of Memories' overall
success, according to event chairman Paul Gries. "Last year the autographs
brought in $26,500 and this year we should be right in that ballpark again,"
he said. "People really seem to appreciate it."
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
By DAVE JOHNSON, Executive sports editor
February 8, 2004
Sights and sounds from the 2004 Night of Memories ...
THE CUBS and Dodgers appear to have the inside track on signing Greg
Maddux, but Scott Rolen would like to see the Cardinals make a pitch for
the free-agent hurler.
"I'd love for us to sign him. I think he'd be a great addition to our
ballclub," said Rolen, who was in Evansville on Friday for the Tri-State
Hot Stove League's annual fund-raiser. Rolen said Maddux, Randy Johnson
and Kevin Brown are pitchers who have given him the biggest challenge since
he broke into the majors seven years ago.
"It's just fun facing Maddux," the Jasper native said. "He's so good,
so on top of his game. He's the ultimate competitor."
Rolen apparently isn't the only Cardinal who'd like to see Maddux try
to notch his 300th win in a St. Louis uniform. Jim Edmonds and Jason Isringhausen
reportedly have volunteered to rework their contracts if the Cardinals
sign Maddux.
Some clubs may be turned off by Maddux's age - he'll be 38 in April-
but the guy still knows how to get batters out. He went 16-11 with a 3.96
earned run average for the Braves last year and is one of only four pitchers
who have averaged at least 17 wins a year during the first four seasons
of this decade. The others: Johnson, Tim Hudson and Andy Pettitte.
HOT STOVE LEAGUE officials might want to bring George Foster
back next year just to do a comedy routine.
The former Reds slugger was a hit with everyone he met, surprising
those who remember he was somewhat of an introvert during his playing days.
During a roundtable discussion with Rolen, Don Mattingly, Harmon Killebrew
and other guest celebrities, Foster said, "People always ask me how I liked
being part of the Big Red Machine. I tell 'em, 'Whattya mean, part of it?
I WAS the Big Red Machine.' "
Foster helped the Reds win two World Series, including a four-game
sweep of the Yankees in 1976.
"We had to apologize to the wives for that," he said. "They were upset
because they didn't have time to go shopping."
KILLEBREW signed autographs and smilingly posed for pictures
despite getting just three hours' sleep. The 68-year-old Hall of Famer
was supposed to arrive in Evansville at 2:45 p.m. Thursday. However, his
flight from Arizona was fogged in at the Atlanta airport for 16 hours and
he didn't get in until 10:45 a.m. on Friday.
Killebrew blasted 573 home runs during his 22 big-league seasons. He
said his favorite park to hit in was Boston's Fenway Park.
"If George Foster had played in Fenway (with its short left-field fence),
he'd have hit 800 home runs," Killebrew said.
Asked to name players from his era who should be in the Hall of Fame,
Killebrew mentioned three of his former Twins teammates: Tony Oliva, Jim
Kaat and Bert Blyleven.
PROCEEDS from the Night of Memories totaled about $112,000, Hot
Stove vice-president Paul Gries said.
After paying expenses, the club should have a little over $100,000
to distribute to area youth-sports groups, he added. That will push the
four-year total past the $420,000 mark.
A two-hour autograph session that was held just prior to the fifth-annual
Night raised $29,900, Gries said. That topped last year's session, which
featured Yogi Berra, by $3,400.
Autographs cost between $20 and $60, depending upon what item you wanted
signed and who signed it, plus a $20 admission fee.
Gries said Rolen signed the most autographs: 450, or about one every
16 seconds.
Organizers already are thinking about who they may try to bring in to
help headline next year's Night.
Said Gries: "Maybe (Hall of Fame pitcher) Juan Marichal"
______________________________________________________________________________________________
PRESS RELEASE:
Children can attend the Autograph session from 4 pm - 5:30 pm in the
Banqet Hall located behind the 4-H Center's main office. Children
must be accompanied by an adult and have a $20.00 admission ticket. Items
will be for sale at the door for the celebrities to sign. Doors to
the "21 and over" "Night of Memories"
will open at 6 pm with the program starting at 6:45 pm. Auction
items will include items signed by Mickey Mantle, Sammy Sosa, Nolan Ryan,
Stan Musial, Bob Griese, Clyde the Glide, Cal Ripken and many, many more.
Autographs
only available from 4 pm - 5:30 pm in Banquet Hall.
Autograph Cost: Scott
Rolen & Harmom Killebrew - $30.00 each item
Don Mattingly, George Foster, Brad Wilkerson - $20.00 each item
Premium items double. Limit of 5 items per celebrity.
| WHAT: | Fifth annual Tri-State Hot Stove League Night of Memories. |
| WHEN: | Friday, Feb. 6 |
| WHERE: | Vanderburgh 4-H Center Auditorium, beginning at 6:45 p.m. Doors
open at 6.
Autograph session from 4 to 5:30 at the Banquet Hall. |
| WHO: | Scott Rolen, Harmon Killebrew, Don Mattingly, George Foster and
Brad Wilkerson will be at the autograph session.
Other guests include Harry Spilman, Jamey Carroll, Boots Day, Wes Carroll, Ryan Miller, Steve Obenchain, Heath Phillips and Ryan Hutchison. |
| WHY: | Proceeds will be donated to youth-sports organizations in the area.
The four previous Nights raised over $300,000. |
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Courier & Press
By Dave Johnson
Febuary 6, 2004
Putting together a $100,000 fund-raiser isn't easy, Larry Broerman said,
but it's getting easier.
"The mystery has been solved" By Dave Johnson Feb 3, 2004 The signature on the baseball I discussed in Sunday's column apparently is that of veteran catcher Sandy Alomar Jr. A reader identified the autograph from a picture that accompanied the column. "I spent some time with him and his brother (Roberto) back in spring
training of 1989, when both were with the San Diego Padres," the reader
wrote in an e-mail. He said over the years, he has obtained many autographs
from the brothers and from their father, Sandy Alomar Sr., who was a major-league
infielder in the 1960s and '70s.
The Alomar baseball is among about 150 items that will be auctioned during the Tri-State Hot Stove League's annual Night of Memories fund-raiser Friday night at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center. Club member Yvonne Pund donated it and a baseball signed by Hall of Famer Bob Feller after purchasing them at an estate sale for $5 apiece. Feller's signature was easy to recognize, but Pund couldn't find anyone able to identify who had signed the other ball. However, Alomar Jr. makes sense. The five-time all-star played for Cleveland in the 1990s, when Feller was a spring-training coach for the Indians. The baseballs likely were signed at the Indians' spring-training camp in Arizona. 'Mystery ball' one of many items going up for bid Courier
& Press
Several dozen autographed baseballs are
among the items that will be up for bid on Friday at the
By Dave Johnson February 1, 2004 Tri-State Hot Stove League's Night of Memories. Club member Yvonne Pund, a former secretary for the University of Evansville base-ball program, donated two balls that she bought at an estate sale. "I could tell one was autographed by (Hall of Fame pitcher) Bob Feller," she said. "But I couldn't recognize the signature on the other one." But the price was right - $5 apiece - so she bought both. "I figured, at five bucks a ball, how could I go wrong? You can't even buy an unsigned baseball for $5," Pund said. Pund took the balls to a recent Hot Stove League meeting and showed the "mystery" ball to several members, hoping someone could identify it. One person thought the signature might be Rollie Fingers. Another thought the last name was DeFelice. But upon closer inspection, neither seemed right. Pund decided to donate the mystery ball, anyway. "Hopefully, somebody out there will recognize it," she said. Maybe a reader can help. If you can identify the signature in the accompanying photo, let me know and I'll pass it along. As Pund said, "It sure would be nice to know." Nobody who gets Harmon Killebrew's autograph Friday will have any trouble reading it. He must never got anything less than an "A" in penmanship. "That's because of Miss Kent, my teacher in fifth grade," Killebrew explained. "She demanded good handwriting." Killebrew will be signing dozens of autographs at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center. He and four other guest celebrities - Scott Rolen, Don Mattingly, George Foster and Brad Wilkerson - will appear at an autograph session just before the Night of Memories fundraiser. I told Killebrew I've known people - especially athletes - who practiced writing their names as they were growing up, just in case they became famous. "I wasn't like that," said the 68-year-old Hall of Famer. "But I did work at it over the years. I've always tried to give people a good signature; I think they appreciate it. Some of these players today ... when they sign, you can't even read it." Since being inducted into the Hall of Fame 20 years ago, Killebrew has been a popular guest on the card-show circuit and at charity events. Asked to estimate how many autographs he signed over the years, he laughed and said, "Seven million." But he can count on one hand the number of people he has asked for an autograph. "Ted Williams, Mickey (Mantle, (Joe) DiMaggio ... just guys I admire," he said. But probably not the guy on the mystery ball. If Killebrew has an opinion on the latest Pete Rose controversy, he's keeping it secret. Asked if Rose belongs in the Hall of Fame, now that he's admitted he gambled on baseball, Killebrew replied, "He's not eligible, is he?" No, but he would be if his lifetime ban were lifted. Then Killebrew, who sits on the Veterans Committee with every other living Hall of Famer, would have to help determine Rose's fate. I asked Killebrew, "If that happens, will you vote for him?" "Well, that hasn't happened yet," he said with a chuckle. "So I don't have to anwer you." The strong-armed Killebrew, nicknamed "Killer," didn't just hit home runs (573 in his major-league career). He hit them long and he hit them hard. Many were tape-measure jobs. Ossie Bluege, who scouted and signed Killebrew for the Washington Senators in 1953, said he "hit line drives that put the opposition in jeopardy. And I don't me infielders; I mean outfielders." Paul Richards, the former manager, once said of him: "These Memories don't come cheap" By Dave Johnson January 29, 2004 The Tri-State Hot Stove League's Night of Memories has become one of
the area's most popular sports events. So with this year's event at the
Vanderburgh 4-H Center about a week away, it's no surprise that interest
is mounting - as is the number of Night-related calls and e-mails we've
been receiving.
Q: How much will autographs cost? A: That depends upon whose autograph you want. Several of the celebrity
guests will sign for free during the
Q: May I get as many items signed as I want? A: No, there will be a five-item limit. "If you have more than that, you'll have to get back in line," said Hot Stove vice president Paul Gries. "We want to give as many people a chance to get autographs as possible." They also want to deter dealers and speculators who can't seem to wait to list their autographed items on eBay the next day. Q: Is there a separate admission fee for the autograph session? A: Everyone who attends the autograph session must have a $20 ticket,
Hot Stove president Larry Broerman said. However, anyone who plans to attend
the adults-only Night of Memories afterward will have his hand stamped
and will not need to purchase another $20 ticket for admission to the program.
Q: Aren't those prices awfully steep? A.: You aren't alone in feeling that way. However, organizers say you'd
pay more at similar events around the country. For example, at the recent
Cardinal Care Winter Warm-Up in St. Louis, it cost $85 to have something
signed by Rolen.
Q.: Will I have to bring my own item to get signed, or will they have stuff there? A.: A limited number of photos, baseballs and bobbleheads will be for sale at the door. Q.: How many items will there be in the memorabilia auction? A.: Between 150 and 200, Gries said. Among them: Photographs, bats and balls signed by more than a dozen Hall of Famers, including Stan Musial, Joe DiMaggio, Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, Bob Griese and Rick Barry; a Cardinals jersey autographed by Rolen, and two tickets to the 2005 Super Bowl. Q.: Where can I buy a ticket? A.: Individual autograph tickets will be sold at the door. Night of Memories tickets are available at local high school and college athletic departments or by calling (812) 464-1943 or 477-4418. Q.: One more thing about the autograph session: How early should I get there if I want to be assured of getting something signed? A.: The earlier, the better. Last year, when Yogi Berra was the headliner, people began getting in line before noon. Courier & Press
January 13, 2004 by Dave Johnson Don Mattingly walked through the door at DiLegge's Restaurant,
spotted Harry Spilman and rushed over
KIDS WILL HAVE A PLACE AT "Night of Memories" By Dave Johnson
Hot Stove officials believe they've come up with a solution to the problem.
The 2004 Night of Memories, scheduled for Friday, Feb. 6 at the Vanderburgh
4-H Center, will feature a separate time and location for autographs.
The tentative lineup features Scott Rolen, Don Mattingly, Bob Griese and Harmon Killebrew. Others who are expected to attend include Andy Benes, Brad Wilkerson, Jim Leyland, Harry Spilman, Gene Lamont, Johnny Lattner, Jamey Carroll and Clint Barmes, plus several area minor leaguers. Live and silent auctions of 150 to 200 memorabilia items are another highlight of the Night of Memories. Last year, about $35,000 of the $132,000 raised came from the auctions. All of the proceeds were distributed to 106 area youth groups. For advance tickets or information, call Mike Goedde at (812) 464-1943 or Jerry Purdie at 477-4418. |
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