
ERIN McCRACKEN / Courier & Press
Kent Anderson of
Indianapolis gets a jersey signed by former St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Bob
Gibson at the Night of Memories.
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2010 NIGHT
of MEMORIES
Too young to really
remember Bob Gibson as a St. Louis Cardinals pitcher in the 1960s and '70s, Andy Benes
relished meeting him and other Cardinals voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame
during spring training.
"The majority
of the baseball I watched as a kid was during the early to mid-1980s. But that
was one of the coolest things, to be in the clubhouse in spring training with
Hall of Famers like him and Lou (Brock) and Red (Schoendienst) and Stan
(Musial)," Benes said.
Along with Gibson
and a host of others, Benes was a guest at the 11th annual Night of Memories
youth sports fundraiser on Saturday at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center.
Late Cardinals
broadcaster Jack Buck, a Hall of Famer himself, once said that Gibson was the
fiercest competitor he had ever met, in any sport. With all the current rules
regarding brush-back pitches, however, intimidation techniques aren't as easy
to pull off, Benes said. Named to Major
League Baseball's All-Century Team, Gibson had one of the most intimidating
stares in history. He would scowl at an opposing hitter, daring him to dig in.
Although his competitive spirit came from within, he said coaches can instill
tenacity. "It's leading
by example," Gibson said, after signing dozens of autographs. "If a
coach is fiery and willing to go out and get it, a lot of kids can learn from
that." Gibson has mellowed
through the years, but his surly side can resurface on occasion. When asked
about Chris Carpenter being regarded by many as the best Cardinals right-hander
since Gibson, he said: "You should probably ask the people who said that.
Why don't you ask me what I think about Carpenter? I think he's a pretty damn
good pitcher. He's aggressive and has good stuff." While it is
well-known that Gibson played basketball as well as baseball at Creighton
University in his hometown of Omaha, Neb., it is not well-known that he wanted
to play basketball for Indiana University. "I did, but I
couldn't get a scholarship," Gibson said. "At the time they had a
quota of black players, which was one." In Mark Stang's
book, "Cardinals Collection," he notes that Gibson received a letter
from IU that stated: "Your request for an athletic scholarship has been
denied, because we have already filled our quota of Negroes." While he used to
attend several charity events, the 74-year-old Gibson said he now does
"about two or three a year." Clint Barmes, the
Colorado Rockies' second baseman from Vincennes Lincoln High School, was
another guest at the Night of Memories. He rode with Gibson from the Casino
Aztar hotel to the 4-H Center on Saturday afternoon. Like Los Angeles Dodgers
second-base candidate Jamey Carroll, Barmes enjoys coming to the Night of
Memories because it gives him a chance to be a fan. "I remember as
a minor-league guy, it gave me a chance to meet Don Mattingly," Barmes
said. "Now I'm one of the guys who is up onstage. Getting to meet guys
like Yogi Berra and Bob Gibson is a big honor." Allen Toole was
part of "Cape Electric," a group from Cape Girardeau, Mo., that
sponsored a table at the Night of Memories. "I was so
honored to meet him," Toole said. "He was one of my boyhood idols. To
get the chance to meet him in person and get an autograph was worth the trip
over." MOLLY BARTELS / Courier & Press Dodgers batting
instructor Don Mattingly, left, jokes with Jay Buente, right, a top pitching
prospect of the Florida Marlins, during a Night of Memories news conference at
the Casino Aztar Executive Center on Wednesday. The annual fundraiser to
benefit youth sports is scheduled for Feb. 6. When: Feb. 6. Where: Vanderburgh 4-H Center Who: Don Mattingly, Bob Gibson, Al Hrabosky, Andy Benes, Jamey Carroll,
Clint Barmes and a group of minor leaguers including Jay Buente and Preston
Mattingly Tickets: Cost $20 and are available at all four Evansville Papa Murphy's
locations, Dilegge's Restaurant and from baseball coaches at the Evansville
high schools and the universities of Evansville and Southern Indiana
or Online: www.hotstoveleague.org "I'm happy for
him," Mattingly said on Wednesday, at a news conference for the Night of
Memories coming up on Feb. 6. "He gets his life back. It seems like he's
been in hiding — I don't know if he has or not, but I haven't seen him anywhere
or heard anything about him — and that's no way to live. So I'm happy that he's
back in the game." For fans of a
player like Mattingly, who has maintained his career was done without illicit
pharmaceutical aid and who has never been implicated as an active participant
in the steroid era, that might come as a surprise. The pair's playing careers
overlapped for 10 seasons (from 1985-1995), Donnie Baseball earning four
All-Star selections during that period with the Yankees and McGwire, then an
Athletic, six nods. Linked by playing
the same position in the same league, some anger over the admission might seem
natural. But that's not the case, he contends. "No resentment
at all," Mattingly said. "What a guy does is their thing. You don't
want to condone anything like that, but I'm happy he has his life back. "I'm not
worried about the baseball part of it. I was what I was, and it wasn't really
any comparison to Mark or any other first baseman, I just wanted to be the best
first baseman I could be. I was what I was." And Mattingly
continues to be an integral part of the Tri-State Hot Stove League's annual
Night of Memories, now in its 11th year. This year's event will feature former
St. Louis great Bob Gibson, as well as former Cardinal pitchers Al Hrabosky and
Andy Benes, who pitched at the University of Evansville. But arguably no
baseball player from Evansville has meant more or been better than Mattingly,
now hitting coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers. When it comes to
his own memories, he doesn't have many involving steroids in the game. "Not hardly
any," he said. "I retired in '95, and you started to see the players getting
bigger and that Oakland club was one of the biggest ... so you heard a few
rumblings with different guys, but not much really hardly at all. "I was really surprised when I got back in the
game, talking to different people, how rampant it was." 2010
NIGHT of MEMORIES By Gordon Engelhardt
Stars
shine during 2009 Night of Memories By Gordon Engelhardt
Growing up playing sports in Evansville gave Bob
Griese the keys to greatness. Carroll
has become a featured attraction By Gordon Engelhardt
(Contact) Formerly a University of Evansville baseball player who helped Friends of
Bosse Field, Jamey Carroll has made the transformation to honored guest at the
10th annual Night of Memories fundraiser for youth sports. Night
to give back By Gordon Engelhardt Eric Campbell and Nevin Ashley are proud to follow the local tradition of
giving back to the community in the form of the Tri-State Hot Stove League's
Night of Memories fundraiser for youth sports. "I grew up watching
baseball," said Ashley, a North Knox High School graduate who played
catcher last season for Vero Beach, the Tampa Bay Rays' Class A affiliate in
the Florida State League. "Don Mattingly is everybody's hero." Night
of Memories to get a visit from 'Lefty' By Gordon Engelhardt Although Don Mattingly's memories of facing Steve Carlton are a little hazy,
he's acutely aware of Carlton's position of prominence in major league baseball
history. Mattingly, current Los Angeles Dodgers hitting coach and former New
York Yankees first baseman, said he only faced Carlton "once or
twice" near the end of Carlton's career with either the Minnesota Twins or
Cleveland Indians. Habitat
Scores Another Hit By Gordon Engelhardt "Night
will leave Memories" Fans hailing from Minnesota to California formed a line that snaked well
outside the 4-H Center entrance, waiting to get a glimpse of their heroes and
an autograph. "This is spectacular," said Robinson, who had never before
attended a groundbreaking ceremony. "It's nice to see guys like Andy Benes
and Don Mattingly give back to their hometown. I try to get back (to his
hometown) of Little Rock (Ark.) three or four times a year and do
something." Preston Mattingly, who noted that his father was instrumental in getting the
Night of Memories off the ground years ago, said it was "awesome" to
meet so many high-caliber athletes. "Brooks Robinson was the best third baseman to ever play the
game," said Preston, who played last season for the Great Lakes Loons, the
Los Angeles Dodgers' Class A Midwest League affiliate. "And to be around
Andy Benes and Jamey Carroll, who nearly hit a home run in the (2007) World
Series, that's great." Carroll, a Castle High School graduate and former University of Evansville
standout, will be playing his first season for the Cleveland Indians. He was
proud to give back to the community. "This is a great thing to be a part of, to help the victims who had to
go through what they had gone through," Carroll said. "Hopefully I
can continue to help in whatever way I can." Brian Griese was to be among the featured guests, but was unable to make the
trip because the basement of his home in Chicago sustained water and black mold
damage, said Paul Gries, Vice President of the Tri-State Hot Stove League. A special display case that holds 21 autographed baseballs from 20 of the 23
members of the 500-home run club, plus Gary Sheffield, was the top auctioned
item at the Night of Memories. It sold for $8,600. Sheffield, who has 480 career homers, hopes to join the elite club this
season. Two tickets to next year's Super Bowl in Tampa,
Fla., donated as always by Bob Griese, was the No. 2 item, selling for $8,000. Mattinglys,
Brian Griese set for fundraiser By Gordon Engelhardt Preston Mattingly will join his father, Don Mattingly, at the annual Night
of Memories fundraiser at the 4H Center on Feb. 9. By Gordon Engelhardt Hall of Fame third baseman Brooks Robinson, nicknamed "The Human Vacuum
Cleaner" for his defensive prowess, will highlight the Night of Memories
Feb 9 at the Vanderbutgh 4-H Center. Paul Gries, who is in charge of
inviting honored guests, had been trying to land Robinson for 3 years. In
the recent past Robinson always had a conflict because the Baltimore Orioles
fantasy camp was held around the same time as the Night of Memories. "This year they changed the date(of the
Orioles' fantasy camp) and he was able to make the Night of Memories,"
Gries said. "It's a big deal for us, with him, Don and Preston(Mattingly),
Jamey Carroll, Heath Phillips and Andy Benes." In his 23-year career
with the Orioles from 1955 to 1977, Robinson won 16 Gold Gloves and was an
18-time All-Star. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1983. Hot
Stove League Steps Up By Gordon Engelhardt Habitat for Humanity and the Tri-State Hot
Stove League have teamed up to make the annual Night of Memories both a day and
night to remember. So far, the following guests have committed to attend the Night of Memories:
Andy Benes, Don and Preston Mattingly, Jamey Carroll, Harry Spilman, Heath
Phillips, Brad Wilkerson, Eric Campbell, Jay Buente, Boots Day and Cathy
(Sloan) Wood (Jerry Sloan's daughter). Dec
26 Update - Brooks Robinson Coming Sally Gries, director of community relations for Habitat, is hoping some of
the athletes will donate their time to visit patients Feb. 9 at HealthSouth
Deaconess Rehabilitation Hospital. "We're hoping six to eight guys will be
able to visit with HealthSouth," she said. "With the character
of the people in Southern Indiana, I think they will do that," added Paul
Gries, her second cousin. "The first person to step up to the plate was
Jamey Carroll." Bobby Allison Understands Danger of Racing Bobby Allison's auto racing career came to an end in a near-fatal crash at
Pocono Motor Speedway in 1988. Not that he'd ever given any thought to being killed while driving a
racecar. - Bob Feller, another 2007 Night headliner, was asked to compare pitchers
today with those of his day. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DAVE JOHNSON, Executive Sports Editor Don Mattingly was at the Night of Memories Saturday. As usual,
"Babee" Pickett was there, too. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ If you check out the stats from Bob Feller's baseball career, you can't help
but notice the gap. As a former high school coach and minor-league infielder, Paul Gries knows
his baseball. But he admits he'd forgotten how good Bob Feller was until
he looked up the pitcher's stats on the Internet. "That refreshed my
memory," Gries said. The Tri-State Hot Stove League's eighth annual Night of Memories is a little
more than a month away. Newburgh Police Chief Brett Sprinkle nabbed a speeder the other day. General admission tickets cost $20 and are
available by calling (812) 401-0715. Corporate tables are available at 425-2600.
Autograph fees will beset when thecelebrity-guest list is confirmed, Gries
said. Hornung's
Mom Held Off a Bear of a UK Recruiting Blitz Paul Hornung was one of the greatest players in Notre Dame football history.
He was an all-America quarterback who won the Heisman Trophy in 1956. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contact Dave Johnson at (812)
464-7522 or johnsond@evansville.net Stars,
Superstars Light up the 'Night' By JIMMY NESBITT The few who make it to superstar status live in an even greater whirlwind
that can cross genres such as music and movies. It's hard enough to book a date
with one professional athlete. So imagine trying to get 18 together for an
autograph show in Evansville on a frigid February day. "It drives me crazy
until I know they're here," said Paul Gries, the man charged with the
task. Gries, vice president of the Tri-State Hot Stove Baseball League, started
netting commitments for this year's Night of Memories autograph show about 10
months ago. On Friday afternoon, everything came together. Well, almost
everything. Two of the 18 guests canceled. Minor league baseball player Heath Phillips had a family emergency. His wife
got sick, so he flew back to Florida to be with her, Gries said. Brian Griese,
who started six games at quarterback for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers last year
until he went down with an injury, got stranded in a snowstorm at an airport in
Memphis. "They closed the airport down," Gries said. "Brian not
being here might cost us $5,000. He's that big." But the cast was still star-studded. Evansville's own Don Mattingly was
there as usual, this time without the signature mustache. The elder Griese,
Bob, a Hall of Fame quarterback and college football announcer, made it too.
Paul Hornung drew a slew of Notre Dame fans hungry for a signature from a
Heisman Trophy winner. Organizers expected to raise more than $100,000, the
bulk of which will be funneled into local charities and athletics. Most of the
athletes volunteer for the show. Only a few have ever requested a paycheck.
Gries wouldn't say who or how much. In an age where big names can demand, and
most often receive, thousands of dollars for a single appearance, Gries worries
that money might be a bigger factor at future shows. The Hot Stove League and
its corporate sponsors pay most of the athletes' expenses, such as lodging,
airfare and dining. Many of the established ones such as Bob Griese pay their
own way. "We try to take care of them as much as we can," Gries said.
Griese and Mattingly, who have been with the show since it started, help
recruit athletes who don't have local ties. Three years ago, Mattingly brought
fellow retired Yankee Yogi Berra. Berra alone raised thousands of dollars and
was one of the most popular guests ever, Gries said. Gries convinced Griese to
bring his son, but Mother Nature interrupted. Gries has his eyes on Brooks
Robinson for next year's show. He's been working the former Baltimore Orioles
third baseman for several years, but Robinson has always had a schedule
conflict. Gries said he might move the autograph show back a month to
accommodate him. St. Louis Cardinals' third baseman Scott Rolen is such a busy
man that Gries schedules him only once every three years. "These guys got
a life too, and they can't just come every time," he said. "They've
got other commitments too." Basketball players are the toughest to get because the show takes place
during the middle of their season. Gries is still waiting for current Utah Jazz
head coach Jerry Sloan to retire. He hopes Sloan, who played at the University
of Evansville, will become a regular when his coaching days are over.
"When Jerry Sloan retires, he's going to settle," Gries said.
"And we're going to have him here." © 2005 The Evansville Courier Co. By DAVE JOHNSON As usual, there will be big names at the Night of Memories. Names like Don
Mattingly, Bob Griese, Paul Hornung, Johnny Lattner and Bobby Plump. For more information, go to www.hotstoveleague.org. © 2005 The Evansville Courier Co. BOB & BRIAN GRIESE TO ATTEND "NIGHT OF
MEMORIES" It couldn't have been easy, following in his Hall of Fame father's
footsteps. Heisman Trophy winners team up for one 'Night' It's not every day you get a chance to meet a Heisman Trophy winner. One
day next month, you'll get a chance to meet two. Lattner and Hornung head a Night of Memories celebrity-guest list that
will feature at least a half-dozen former and current major-league baseball
players and other former big-name athletes. Don Mattingly, Jamey Carroll, Clint
Barmes, Brad Wilkerson, Harry Spilman, Boots Day and Bob Sykes have agreed to
attend, and the club has extended invitations to Bob Griese, Mark "The
Bird" Fidrych, Andy Benes and Bobby Plump. "We're waiting to to hear back from those four and one or two others.
We should know more in a week or so," said Hot Stove vice-president Paul
Gries. With or without them, the club has put together another strong lineup.
"It's a pretty big deal to have two Heisman Trophy winners - especially
from a school like Notre Dame, which is back in the limelight again,"
Gries said. "We'll probably have Johnny and Paul sit side-by-side (during
the autograph session) because there's gonna be a bunch of people who'll want
to get both of their signatures." The autograph session has proven to be a hit with fans and a big moneymaker
for the club, which has raised over $500,000 from six previous Nights. Gries
said Lattner, Hornung, Mattingly, Barmes, Wilkerson and Carroll will appear at
the autograph session. Fees will be $30 per item for Hornung and Mattingly and
$20 each for the others. Much of the rest of the proceeds traditionally come
from the memorabilia auctions and raffle. Gries said about 100 items will be
put up for bid this year, including two tickets to the 2007 Super Bowl in
Miami. Griese helps the Hot Stove League obtain the tickets each year, and each
year they draw some of the highest bids of the night - usually somewhere in the
$3,500 to $4,500 range. Other high-ticket items figure to be a set of nine baseballs individually
signed by multiple Gold Glove winners and a limited-edition "Legacy of
Gold" print that salutes Notre Dame's all-time greatest football players
and coaches. Both were acquired by club member Gary Ankrom. The Gold Glove set includes balls signed by Mattingly, who won nine awards
at first base; second baseman Roberto Alomar (10); third baseman Brooks
Robinson (16); shortstop Luis Aparicio (9); catcher Ivan Rodriguez (11); pitcher
Jim Kaat (16), and outfielders Al Kaline (10), Andre Dawson (8) and Dave
Winfield (7). Ankrom noted the Notre Dame print has been autographed by Angelo Bertelli,
the 1943 Heisman Trophy winner who died six years ago. He said that by Feb. 10 it'll
be signed by three others: Hornung, Lattner and Johnny Lujack, who won the 1947
Heisman. "I called Lujack on Monday - his 81st birthday - and he said he'd be
happy to sign it. All we have to do is send it to him in California,"
Ankrom said. "So it'll be in the mail tomorrow." Lattner said he'll bring along an auction item, too - a full-size replica of
his Heisman Trophy (the original was destroyed years ago in a fire). But it
won't be for sale - just for rent. "Five or six years ago, I started taking the trophy with me to a couple
of charity events a year; I even had a case specially-made to carry it
in," Lattner said. "We'd auction it off and the high bidder would get
to borrow it for a couple of weeks." Lattner estimated the trophy has helped him raise about $30,000 for various
charities. Mattingly
can thank Pudge for 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
more recognizable than most: Don Mattingly. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
He's the man who made the elbow famous ... or was it the other way around? 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. "Night
may lack glamour, but its stars shine bright" 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. Chances
are 'good' Griese will be here for Memories By Dave Johnson 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. 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. 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 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. "Having
a ball" By STEVE FORD 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. Even at those prices, the pace was brisk, the lines long and the assembled
fans appreciative. By DAVE JOHNSON, Executive sports editor Sights and sounds from the 2004 Night of
Memories ... HOT STOVE LEAGUE officials might want to bring George Foster back
next year just to do a comedy routine. 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. PROCEEDS from the Night of Memories totaled about $112,000, Hot Stove
vice-president Paul Gries said. Organizers already are thinking about who they may try to bring in to help
headline next year's Night. 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. WHO: Scott Rolen, Harmon Killebrew, Don Mattingly, George
Foster and Brad Wilkerson will be at the autograph session. WHY: Proceeds will be donated to youth-sports organizations
in the area.

Hall of Famer Coming
Special guest is Bob Gibson
November 2, 2009

Some years, Tri-State Hot Stove League Vice President Paul Gries pulls his
hair out trying to land a high-profile athlete as a special guest for the Night
of Memories fundraiser for youth sports. Not this year. Gries already has
landed St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Gibson, former Cardinals relief pitcher and current
Cardinals television broadcaster Al
Hrabosky and Evansville native and former Cardinals pitcher Andy Benes for the 11th annual Night of
Memories, which will take place Feb. 6 at
the Vanderburgh 4-H Center.
“We’re way ahead of the game this year,” Gries said. Gibson, Hrabosky
and Benes will join Jamey Carroll,
a Castle High School graduate and Cleveland Indians second baseman; Clint Barmes, a Vincennes Lincoln graduate and
Colorado Rockies second baseman; plus Los Angeles Dodgers hitting coach Don Mattingly and Dodgers minor league
outfielder Preston Mattingly,
among others.
“We’re really excited because of Bob Gibson,” Gries said. “It’s kind of like
Yogi Berra coming to Evansville, being the Hall of Famer that he is. You look
at his resume and it’s kind of unbelievable some of the things that he has done
in his career.”
Gibson, who was elected to the Hall in 1981, lifted the Cardinals to World
Series titles in 1964 and ’67.
He was an eight-time All-Star, a two-time Cy Young winner and a member of
Major League Baseball’s All-Century Team.
“The other thing is the local fan base for the St. Louis Cardinals is huge,”
Gries said. “I think there are going to be a lot of people coming out and
wanting his autograph. I think it’s going to be a big night for us. I think
we’re going to be able to raise a lot of money for the community.”
Two years ago, the Hot Stove League donated $50,000 to put up a Habitat for
Humanity home, which it also helped build.
This year, Don Mattingly and Carroll helped the Hot Stove League receive a
$75,000 grant through the Major League Baseball fund to refurbish the Boys and
Girls Club baseball field.
The Hot Stove League, which has already put $12,500 toward the field, must
raise a total of $75,000 to match the Major League Baseball fund by Jan. 1.
“There are several other places that will donate some money,” Gries said.
“I’m pretty sure we will be able to get the $75,000 within the next month and
we will be able to make that field look really nice within the next eight to 12
months.”
February 7, 2009
Courier & Press 
"I don't know what I would've done if it was not for sports," said
Griese, who returned for the 10th annual Tri-State Hot Stove League Night of
Memories fundraiser for youth sports on Saturday at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center.
"I lost my father at age 10. Playing team sports was a way to identify
with a father figure. I like to help and give back to the community and this is
one of the ways I can do that."
A Rex Mundi High School graduate and All-American at Purdue University,
Griese was named to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1984 and the Pro
Football Hall of Fame in 1990. Playing quarterback, Griese guided the Miami
Dolphins to two Super Bowl championships.
On hand in West Lafayette, Ind., for Purdue's loss to Oregon in September as
a television commentator, Griese was as puzzled as anybody by Boilermakers
quarterback Curtis Painter's struggles his senior season.
"He was coming back as a fifth-year senior and had done so well,"
Griese said of Painter, a former Vincennes Lincoln High School standout who set
a host of Purdue passing records. "He was a third-year starter and it was
Joe Tiller's last year and they had a lot of players back."
In other words, the table was set for a superlative senior season which
turned into a 4-8 nightmare.
"He didn't take advantage (of the positives)," Griese said.
"I don't know what happened. I haven't talked to anybody (at
Purdue)."
Griese's son, Brian, started the first three games of the season at
quarterback for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but then was sidelined for several
games with an elbow injury.
"He still has a year or two years left on his contract, but they've
changed coaches and changed general managers," Griese said. "I don't
know if he will be with them next year. It's too early to tell."
Along with Griese, special guest Steve Carlton gave the Night of Memories a
Hall of Fame flavor. While Griese was a College and Pro Football Hall of Famer,
Carlton was named to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1994. Carlton, who joined
local heroes such as Griese, Don Mattingly and Jamey Carroll, was considered a
special guest on Saturday.
"It's been a fun day, non-stop," said Carlton, the
second-winningest left-handed pitcher in major league history. "It's a
nice turnout."
Watching Griese excel at the collegiate and professional level in football
made Mattingly believe he was another local athlete who could succeed on a
national stage. "It's nice to be a part of something like this," said
Mattingly, a former New York Yankees standout and current Los Angeles Dodgers
hitting coach.
Teaming with other luminaries such as Griese, Carlton and Carroll,
Mattingly's fondest recollection of the Night of Memories was when Yogi Berra
was the special guest several years ago.
"That was really a great thing," Mattingly said. "He is such
a famous name."
Louise Owen, considered Evansville's first lady of tennis, was honored as
the Night of Memories' first Hot Stove League Local Legend on Saturday. Along
with her son, Mike, and John Greif, Louise was one of three local products
named to the Indiana Tennis Hall of Fame on Friday in a banquet in
Indianapolis.
"She's had quite a life in sports," Mike said of his mother, who
also coached the Reitz High School girls' basketball team to the 1981 state
title.
Especially considering the stature of other local greats such as Griese and
Mattingly, Louise was honored to be named the first Local Legend.
"There are so many great athletes who have come out of the
Tri-State," said Owen, 79. "I feel very humbled by it, with all the
people here, like Bob Griese."
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Along with special guest Steve Carlton, plus Don Mattingly, Bob Griese and
many others, Carroll will appear tonight at the Night of Memories at the
Vanderburgh 4-H Center. The autograph session will begin at 4 p.m. with the
regular program starting at 6:30. Louise Owen, considered Evansville's first
lady of tennis, will be honored as the first Hot Stove League Legend shortly
after the regular program begins.
"Obviously, it's a special situation and I'm glad to be a part of
it," said Carroll, a veteran infielder who will begin his second season
with the Cleveland Indians. "It's definitely a blessing."
Carroll, a Castle High School graduate, is in the unique position of being
considered a player in demand and a fan at the same time.
"I'm glad to come back," he said. "It's an opportunity to
meet Steve Carlton. And in the past I got to meet people like Yogi Berra,
Harmon Killebrew and Brooks Robinson. I think as a kid you grow up, at least
speaking for our family, as baseball fans and you understand the history of the
game."
In his eighth year in the majors, Carroll said he's become even more
appreciative of his predecessors.
"It's fun to meet and hang around with these guys," he said.
"They set a path for the guys playing today who are continuing the
foundation. To meet guys who were successful, it's definitely fun to be a part
of. I look forward to coming every year."
Carroll, who hit .277 with one home run and 36 runs batted in for the
Indians in 113 games last year, thinks he has made it back to four of the last
five Night of Memories.
His younger brother, Wes, is beginning his first season as UE's head coach.
He said he and Wes talk baseball on the phone nearly every day.
"I'm anxious to see what happens this season," Jamey said.
"He's the leader of a group and he takes a lot of pride in what he's
doing."
Jamey, who came up from his offseason home in Rockledge, Fla., planned to
work out with the Aces this weekend. "I wanted to talk to them and put the
names and faces together," he said.
Wes was an assistant under former coach Dave Seifert, who guided the Aces to
a 14-42 record last season. Currently an unsigned free agent, former UE catcher
Sal Fasano joined Jamey last season with the Indians, They missed being Aces
teammates by one year. In his 11th year in the majors, Fasano batted .261 for
Cleveland in 15 games in 2008.
"We spent a lot of time together on the bench," Carroll said.
"I know he will be missed. He's a guy who grinds it out and continues to
play the game. We were teammates for three-fourths of the season. He was by far
one of the favorite teammates I ever had."
Minor-leaguers happy to help out
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Campbell, a Gibson Southern graduate, played third base for Myrtle Beach, the
Atlanta Braves' Class A affiliate in the Carolina League. "It's amazing
how (Don and Preston Mattingly) give back to the community," Campbell
said.
Don is a former New York Yankees star and current Los Angeles Dodgers hitting
coach. Preston Mattingly spent last season as an infielder for the Great Lakes
Loons, the Dodgers' Class A affiliate in the Midwest League. He is expected to
switch to outfield this season.
Campbell, Ashley and the Mattinglys are among the celebrities expected for the
Night of Memories on Feb. 7 at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center. So, too, are Steve
Carlton, a Baseball Hall of Famer, and Bob Griese, a Pro Football Hall of
Famer, Cleveland Indians infielder Jamey Carroll, Texas Rangers' roving hitting
instructor Harry Spilman,
Last season was a trying one for Campbell, who was sent home to Owensville,
Ind., by the Braves near the end of spring training. He was later treated for
clinical depression.
"I felt a lot better," said Campbell, who returned to Myrtle Beach by
the end of May. He hit .255 with 19 home runs and 67 runs batted in in 88
games. "It's tough. I put my family through a lot. It was pretty tough
then. I'm glad everything is a lot better now."
The Braves sent Campbell to play fall ball in Mexico, but his season was cut
short after three weeks because of a sprained ankle.
"I'm not 100 percent yet, but I'll be ready for spring training,"
said Campbell, a 2005 rookie Appalachian League co-Player of the Year along
with former teammate Max Ramirez. He hopes to be sent to Mississippi of the
Class AA Southern League after spring training.
While Campbell was selected in the second round of the 2004 draft by the
Braves, Ashley was chosen in the sixth round of the 2006 draft by Tampa Bay. After
two solid seasons in the minors, Ashley hit.235 with four homers and 26 RBIs
for Vero Beach in 2008. Like Campbell, Ashley is a former Appalachian League
Player of the Year.
"Last year was the first year I struggled," said Ashley, who played
three years for Indiana State before turning pro. "I had two really good
years before that. I was an all-star candidate. I faced adversity for the first
time and handled it pretty well. I struggled last year. Hopefully I can build
on that this year."
Hall of Famer Carlton set for fundraiser
Friday, January 9, 2009
"I don't think I did anything against him," said Mattingly, whose
contacts helped lure Carlton, a 1994 Baseball Hall of Famer, to the 10th annual
Night of Memories fundraiser for youth sports on Feb. 7 at the Vanderburgh 4-H
Center. "But I've heard all the Carlton stories." One of the
most astounding stats of Carlton's illustrious career is he won 27 of the
last-place 1972 Philadelphia Phillies' 59 games.
"I heard all these stories from (current Dodgers third base coach and
former Phillies shortstop Larry) Bowa," Mattingly said. "They used to
walk through the locker room and said, 'This is win day,' the day he
pitched." Another story is that Carlton would twist his fist to the
bottom of a five-gallon bucket of rice as part of his grueling training
regimen.
While Carlton's wicked slider was legendary, Mattingly was more impressed with
his overall excellence.
"All you have to do is look at the numbers," Mattingly said.
Carlton, affectionately known by Phillies fans as "Lefty," posted a
329-244 record with a 3.22 earned-run average in 24 seasons. He began his
career with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1965, but was later traded because of a
salary dispute to the Phillies for right-hander Rick Wise in what was
considered one of the worst trades in baseball history. Carlton won four Cy
Young awards and was a 10-time all-star before retiring in 1988.
When players would talk about facing Carlton, fear would creep into their
voices, Mattingly said. "He was like Nolan (Ryan) and J.R. Richard, the
way you would hear people talk," he said. "He was filthy."
Carlton recorded the second-most strikeouts among all left-handed pitchers
(4,136), fourth overall, and the second-most lifetime wins by a lefty, 11th
overall.
Other notables expected to appear at the Night of Memories are Cleveland
Indians infielder Jamey Carroll, Pro Football Hall of Famer Bob Griese, Texas
Rangers roving hitting instructor Harry Spilman and Dodgers prospect Preston
Mattingly, among others, Tri-State Hot Stove League Vice President Paul Gries
announced at Thursday's news conference. Eric Campbell, a third baseman from
Gibson Southern High School who is in the Atlanta Braves organization, and
Nevin Ashley, a catcher from North Knox who is in the Tampa Bay Rays
organization, joined Mattingly at the news conference.
"Ten years ago we began the Tri-State Hot Stove League and Don has been
part of it every year," Gries said. "The only other athlete who has
been part of it every year was Harry Spilman. Without his appearances, we
wouldn't be able to do what we do."
Hot Stove League puts Eastbrook family into
new home
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Cousins Brenda Whitehouse and Brenda
Larvo were presented the keys to their new Habitat for Humanity home by former
professional baseball player and current coach Don Mattingly and his son,
Preston, during a dedication ceremony Saturday morning. Don Mattingly is a
former standout player at Evansville's Memorial High School and a New York
Yankees first baseman and hitting coach. He is currently hitting coach for the
Los Angeles Dodgers. Preston Mattingly is a prospect in the Dodgers'
organization. Whitehouse and Larvo lost their home in Evansville's Eastbrook Mobile
Home Park when a killer tornado struck there Nov. 6, 2005. They hope to move
into their new house in the New Haven subdivision — where many former Eastbrook
residents have relocated — around Christmas. Saturday's event marked the 347th
house completed by Habitat for Humanity of Evansville. The Tri-State Hot Stove
League, which provides Evansville sports professionals and enthusiasts an
opportunity to give back to the community, sponsored this house. "This is
wonderful," Whitehouse said. "There are not enough words to say (to
express my gratitude)." It is the fourth house built by Habitat for
Humanity as part of the Good Sports Build, developed by the Hot Stove League to
aid tornado victims.
Former University of Evansville and Chicago Bulls standout and current Utah
Jazz coach Jerry Sloan sponsored the first house, built in July 2007. Former
Rex Mundi High School, Purdue University and Miami Dolphins standout Bob Griese
and his son, Brian, sponsored a house dedicated in September. Brian Griese is a
backup quarterback for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Former Harrison High School and Indiana University standout and longtime NBA
player Calbert Cheaney dedicated a house in October. Hot Stove League Vice
President Paul Gries said Don Mattingly was instrumental in the Hot Stove
League being able to put up $50,000 to build the Whitehouse and Larvo home.
"Without him, we wouldn't be able to raise that much money," Gries
said. Mattingly deflected the praise, saying Gries does most of the work behind
the scenes.
"I'm grateful for the opportunity to be able to give back in this way, but
it's Paulie and his group that deserves all the credit for this,"
Mattingly said. Gries noted that local high school coaches helped build the
house.
Whitehouse is a cancer survivor, and Larvo has had heart complications. June
Scott, Larvo's mother, also had been living with them, but she was unable to
attend Saturday's ceremony because she is in a nursing home recovering from a
broken hip.
"We were living in Eastbrook Mobile Home Park, and obviously, the tornado
came through," Whitehouse said. "Our (mobile home) was damaged
severely. It was dangerous because the structure was weak." They have been
living at Eastminster Presbyterian Mission Home the past nine months, hoping a
Habitat for Humanity home would become available.
Fans get to meet heroes
By Gordon Engelhardt
Sunday, February 10, 2008
VINCENT PUGLIESE / Courier & Press
Ren Hux, who lives in Evansville but is a native of Maryland, greets Baltimore
Oriole great Brooks Robinson before getting memorabilia signed during the Night
of Memories autograph session — a fundraiser for youth sports — at the
Vanderburgh 4-H Center on Saturday.
He got a chance to meet Brooks Robinson, a first-ballot Baseball Hall of Famer
who headlined Saturday's Night of Memories fundraiser for youth sports in the
Vanderburgh 4-H Center.
"He's a legend. (I'm) spellbound," said Hux, who moved to Evansville
about 21/2 years ago. "I was a little kid when he played. My father took
me to a bunch of games. I grew up close to Memorial Stadium."
Hux said meeting the third baseman nicknamed "The Human Vacuum
Cleaner" was a dream come true.
"I was reading the paper and saw that he was coming," he said.
"I never thought I'd get the chance to meet Brooks Robinson in Southern
Indiana.
"This is probably one of the most exciting times (of my life). I grew up
playing baseball in Baltimore. He is one of the icons in Baltimore, along with
Cal Ripken. They are two of my favorite players."
Mike Dixey chatted with former New York Yankee standout Don Mattingly before
the start of the Night of Memories. Dixey, who flew in from Minnesota just to
meet Mattingly, had pictures, a jersey and a batting glove for Mattingly to
sign. "I've waited 24 years for this," Dixey said nervously while
waiting for Mattingly to arrive.
Before the autograph session, Robinson and other featured guests appeared at
the Good Sports Build groundbreaking ceremony at the New Haven Subdivision. The
Good Sports Build is a program dedicated to helping Habitat for Humanity build
homes for families who were victims of the 2005 tornado. Don Mattingly and Andy
Benes served as honorary co-chairmen.
Evansville Courier & Press
Thursday, January 10, 2008
Of course, Preston Mattingly received his share of hitting tips from his famous
father before Don left each season to join the New York Yankees, first as a player,
then a member of the New York Yankees' coaching staff.
But Preston acknowledged that it might be a little awkward when it occurs in an
official capacity during the Los Angeles Dodgers' spring training camp in Vero
Beach, Fla.
"We've talked about it a little bit," said Preston, who played for
the Great Lakes Loons, the Dodgers' Class A Midwest League affiliate last
season. "Obviously, he was a little disappointed (when he was not named
the new Yankees manager). But he moved on right away. The Dodgers are a great
organization. (New Dodgers manager) Joe Torre is one of his best buddies."
"Donnie Baseball" was widely considered Torre's heir apparent as
Yankees manager, but was bypassed in favor of Joe Girardi last October.
Mattingly, who had been Torre's bench coach, followed Torre to Los Angeles.
Preston said the Dodgers' coaching staff observes both major and minor leaguers
during spring training. He said the major and minor league facilities in
Dodgertown are only separated by a bridge.
"I never really played for my dad," Preston said. "It will be a
little awkward that he is a coach now. But it won't make that much of a
difference."
Both Mattinglys will be in Evansville for the ninth annual Night of Memories
fundraiser for youth sports on Feb. 9 at the Vanderburgh County 4-H Center.
Tri-State Hot Stove League vice president Paul Gries announced on Wednesday
that Chicago Bears quarterback Brian Griese will be part of the festivities.
Other prominent athletic figures scheduled to appear include baseball Hall
of Famer Brooks Robinson, Andy Benes, Jamey Carroll, Heath Phillips, Eric
Campbell, Harry Spilman, Jay Buente, Boots Day, Don Buse and Bobby Plump. The
autograph session, which is open to everyone, will begin at 4 p.m. The main
program and auction, which is limited to people aged 21 and older, will start
at 6. Other guests may be announced later.
Preston, who did not turn 20 until September, was one of the youngest players
in the Class A Midwest League last season.
After thriving in his first season of professional baseball, Preston
experienced his share of growing pains last year. He hit. 210 with three homers
and 40 runs batted in in 107 games. Switching from shortstop to second base a
third of the way through the season, he committed a total of 30 errors.
"I made a few errors at short because I was a little bit nervous,"
Preston said. "At second base, it slows the game down a little bit. You
have more time to make the throw."
He will not know where he will be assigned this year until the end of spring
training.
Tickets for the Night of Memories can be obtained at local high school athletic
offices or at the 4-H Center on Feb. 9. Cost is $20 for admission. Memorabilia
is available at the autograph session for signing.
BROOKS
ROBINSON
HEADLINES
"2008 NIGHT of MEMORIES"
Evansville Courier & Press
January 4, 2008

Habitat homes to benefit
Evansville Courier & Press
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
There is a groundbreaking ceremony scheduled for noon on Feb. 9 at the New
Haven Subdivision for the Good Sports Build in addition to the Night of
Memories that evening at the Vanderburgh County 4-H Center.
The Good Sports Build is a program dedicated to involving athletes with
Southwestern Indiana ties in helping Habitat for Humanity build houses for
families who lost their homes in the November 2005 tornado. The Night of
Memories is a fundraiser for youth sports programs in Evansville.
Utah Jazz coach and former University of Evansville standout Jerry Sloan was in
town last July to announce that his family foundation, the Bobbye and Jerry
Sloan Hand-in-Hand Foundation, was contributing $50,000 to sponsor construction
of a house in the subdivision next year. Located off South Green River Road at
Fickas Road, New Haven homes are being built for families affected by the Nov.
6, 2005, tornado that claimed 25 lives in Evansville and Warrick County and
destroyed more than 800 homes.
Habitat for Humanity and the Tri-State Hot Stove League has made a concerted
effort to follow up the Sloan's generosity. The Hot Stove League's directors
voted on Oct. 30 to appropriate $50,000 to help sponsor a Habitat house.
Recently, Bob and Brian Griese came to the forefront.
"Bob and Brian have verbally agreed to sponsor one house together,"
said Hot Stove League Vice President Paul Gries.
Carroll's game-winning sacrifice fly in the bottom of the 13th inning lifted
the Colorado Rockies to victory over the San Diego Padres in the National
League Wild Card tiebreaker. The Rockies eventually advanced to the World
Series for the first time in franchise history.
Tickets for the Night of Memories are available at the Habitat office, 1401 N.
Fares Avenue or by calling (812) 423-5623. They can also be purchased from all
of the Southern Indiana Athletic Conference baseball coaches and athletic
departments and the UE and University of Southern Indiana baseball coaches.
DAVE JOHNSON, Executive Sports Editor
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Allison's legs were crushed and his skull was smashed. He was unconscious for
three weeks and spent several months in the hospital.
When he got out, the man who won 84 Winston Cup races decided 23 years was
enough.
"No, never," Allison said during his appearance at the Tri-State Hot
Stove League's annual Night of Memories fund-raiser last weekend. "I
always thought that every accident that I was ever in was going to be my last -
that it wouldn't happen again.
"I guess I wasn't smart enough to realize how dangerous it was," he
said with a slight smile. Then he got serious again and added: "But I did
lose two sons."
In 1992, Clifford Allison died in a crash at Michigan Speedway. Eleven months
later, Davey Allison was killed in a crash while trying to land his helicopter
at Talladega Superspeedway. "There's nothing worse," Bobby Allison
said, "than losing a child."
- Jeff Gordon is Allison's favorite driver. "I like him. The guy is
really, really good," said Allison. "His biggest failing is that he's
too easy on his people. He doesn't take enough of the credit and gets too much
of the blame. He needs more support."
- Don Mattingly remembers the only time he circled the track in a racecar.
Mattingly wasn't driving, though. He was in the back seat of a pace car at
Michigan Speedway, before the Michigan 500. Gordon Johncock was driving.
"I can see Johncock in the rear-view mirror and he's smiling,"
Mattingly recalled.
When Mattingly glanced out the rear window, he found out why. "Dale
Earnhardt's about 3/8th of an inch behind us."
"Here we are, going 90 miles an hour, and Earnhardt's less than an inch
from our bumper. I'm thinking, 'Man, this is crazy.' "
- Mattingly, the New York Yankees bench coach, on whether he's looking forward
to succeeding Joe Torre as the Yankees' manager someday: "The quicker you
get to the top of the ladder, the closer you are to getting tossed off the
ladder."
"Today's pitchers don't work hard enough," said the 88-year-old Hall
of Famer, who grew up on a farm in Iowa. "I got in shape by picking corn,
milking cows and cleaning out the barn. Today, they play video games and get on
the computer."
Asked how he'd pitch to Barry Bonds, Feller said: "The same way I pitched
to Ted Williams. I'd throw fastballs in on his hands. Then I'd throw him big,
overhand curveballs."
Williams batted .344 during his Hall of Fame career, but he hit just .241
against Feller.
"I had more trouble with (Joe) DiMaggio," Feller said. "He hit
about .300 against me."
In 18 big-league seasons, Feller won 266 games and struck out over 2,500
batters. He noted his fastball was once clocked at 107.9 mph. "I throw as
hard as I ever did," he said. "But the ball won't go as fast." 2007
Night of Memories
Sunday, February 11, 2007
Photos by Bob Gwaltney
The Evansville woman may be Donnie Baseball's biggest fan. She showed up at the
Vanderburgh 4H Center at 6:38 a.m., nearly 9½ hours before an autograph session
featuring Mattingly and other celebrity signers got under way.
This was the eighth straight year that Mattingly - and Pickett - have been at
the Night, the Tri-State Hot Stove League's annual youth-sports fundraiser.
"I'm always first in line," said Pickett, 58. "I guess I'm just
crazy - a Donnie freak."
Pickett started following Mattingly in 1984, the year the Evansville native and
former New York Yankees first baseman won the American League batting title.
After that season, she met him for the first time at Mattinglys' 23, the
restaurant he operated on Evansville's East Side.
"He signed a baseball and let me have my picture taken with him,"
Pickett recalled. "I was wearing my Yankees jacket. It fit back
then."
On Saturday, she got her hero's autograph for the 69th time, on a Mattinglys'
23 menu. She also had Mattingly's son Preston, who is an infielder in the Los
Angeles Dodgers farm system, sign a couple of baseball cards.
"Someday, all of my stuff will go to my nieces and nephews," said
Pickett, who has never married. "They can add Preston to the collection,
too. I'm already giving them a head start."
Pickett keeps all of her Mattingly memorabilia in one room of her Southeast
Side home. "It's the Donnie Room - a shrine."
It contains Mattingly pictures, bats, posters, prints ... even grocery sacks
from a local supermarket that put Mattingly's picture on them.
Her favorite item? Probably a Mattingly-signed bowling ball.
"It looks just like a baseball, with seams and everything," Pickett
said. "Bill Vukovich (who owns River City Recreation) engraved it for me.
It's one of a kind; he said he'll never do another one like it."
Pickett had Mattingly autograph the ball at a previous Night of Memories.
"Then I carried that 16-pound sucker up the hill" to the Auditorium,
where the main program is held. "I was hurting."
But probably not so much as when she pierced her own ear so she could hang a
"23" ear ring (Mattingly's jersey number) from it.
"That really hurt."
Or when she had her arm and leg tattooed.
"The one on my arm has 'NY, 23' and Donnie's signature," she said.
"The one on my leg has a baseball and '.307' (Mattingly's lifetime batting
average).
"And they're all on the left side - left ear, left arm, left leg - because's
Donnie's left-handed."
Pickett will turn 59 on April 20, the same day Mattingly turns 46. "I
didn't realize we had the same birthday until I bought his first baseball card
and saw it on the back."
She said she used to have her birthday parties at Mattingly's restaurant, which
closed in 1996.
"Every year I'd give everybody my Donnie Quiz, which was a bunch of trivia
questions about him. Anybody who missed over half the questions had to stand up
and sing the national anthem. Sometimes it got pretty loud in there."
Pickett and Mattingly don't just share the same birthday.
"My middle initial is A; his middle initial is A. My dad and mom's names
are Bill and Mary; his dad and mom's names are Bill and Mary. ... It's
freaky."
Pickett said she isn't sure Mattingly knows her name, "but I think he
remembers me when he sees me. He's always really nice."
She's gotten to know Preston Mattingly a little better.
"He dates my niece. I told him, 'Preston, when you and Jesse get married,
it won't be like I'm stalking you guys any more. We'll be family.' " Feller
was 'Rapid' to serve his country
DAVE JOHNSON, Executive Sports Editor
Wednesday, February 7, 2007
Feller broke into the major leagues in 1936 and retired in 1956. In 18 seasons,
all with the Cleveland Indians, the hard-throwing righthander won 266 games and
struck out more than 2,500 batters.
But you have to wonder how many more wins and how many more strikeouts Feller
would have had if it hadn't been for the gap - the nearly four full seasons he
missed while serving his country in World War II.
Feller entered the Navy on Dec. 9, 1941, two days after the Japanese bombed
Pearl Harbor. He was the first major leaguer to enlist in the armed services.
Feller had just turned 23, and he was coming off a season in which he went
25-13 with 250 strikeouts and finished third in the American League's Most
Valuable Player voting. When he heard about the attack, he was driving to
Chicago from his farm in Iowa to meet with Indians general manager Cy Slapnicka
and negotiate his 1942 contract.
Feller drove on to Chicago and told Slapnicka he planned to enlist immediately.
Actually, he didn't have to volunteer because he had a draft deferment; his
father was dying of cancer and Feller was the sole support of his family, which
included his mother and a younger sister.
"But I didn't give it a second thought," said Feller, who will be in
Evansville for the annual Night of Memories fundraiser on Saturday. "I
knew (the United States) was in bad trouble."
After basic training, Feller was assigned to the USS Alabama. He was put in
charge of an anti-aircraft gun crew and was on board the battleship for 34
months - at first in European waters and then in the Pacific, "dodging
subs and U-boats." He earned five campaign ribbons and eight battle stars.
Whenever he could find time, Feller kept his pitching arm in shape by playing
catch aboard ship or on islands in the Pacific. So he wasn't overly rusty when
he rejoined the Indians after being discharged in late August of 1945.
There were five weeks left in the season, enough for Feller to make nine starts
and go 5-3 with seven complete games. He was 27 then, and he'd already compiled
a record of 112-57 and led the majors in strikeouts for four straight years.
In his first two seasons back from the war, Feller went 26-15 and 20-11. Over
the next four, he was 72-48.
By now, though, Feller was 33 and past his prime. The eight-time all-star
pitched five more seasons but won just 36 more games before retiring at the end
of the 1956 season. Nevertheless, his 266-162 record, 3.25 earned run average
and 2,581 strikeouts got him elected to the Hall of Fame in 1962, the first
year he was eligible.
At the time he retired, Feller ranked 14th all-time in victories and third in
strikeouts. In the 50 years since, he's slipped to 35th and 24th.
But if it hadn't been for that four-year gap ...
"People have projected that I probably would have had 100 more wins and
1,000 to 1,500 more strikeouts," said Feller, who averaged 24 wins and 262
strikeouts in the five years before and after the war.
That easily would have vaulted him into the all-time Top 10 in both
departments. Not that that matters to him.
"No, not at all," he said. "You do what you have to do."
- Nicknamed "Rapid Robert," Feller threw a 95- to 100-mph fastball
and could hit 102 to 105 "on a good day." But that alone didn't make
him great.
"If your fastball isn't moving, it doesn't matter how hard you
throw," he said. "But I had a good curveball, too."
Feller was still in high school when the Indians signed him. And he was 3½
months shy of his 18th birthday when he struck out 15 St. Louis Browns in his
big-league debut in July of 1936. Later that season, he fanned 17 Philadelphia
A's to tie the single-game record. The next year he broke it by striking out 18
Detroit Tigers.
Feller, who threw three no-hitters and 12 one-hitters, still attends spring
training and makes personal appearances for the Indians. However, he quit
throwing batting practice about 10 years ago.
"I've slowed down a little bit," said Feller, who's 88. "If I
(threw BP) today, I couldn't comb my hair for a week."
- In a telephone interview, Feller touched on several other subjects,
including:
- The war in Iraq: "It's been mismanaged; it was not well-planned. We
don't have the leaders we had 60 years ago. We should have gone in with 450,000
troops, tanks and good supply lines. We should have had Marshal Law and curfew.
That's what we did in Japan and it worked, didn't it?"
- Leading candidates for election to the Hall of Fame when the veterans'
committee announces the results of its balloting on Feb. 27: "I think Gil
Hodges might make it, and I like Cecil Travis, Riggs Stephenson and Lefty
O'Doul."
- Baseball's Steroids Era: "Anybody who takes steroids is stupid. Those
guys are gonna die in their early 50s, if not before. They're lousing up their
bodies and their brains and their reproductive organs and everything else. ...
"I hope those guys never make the Hall of Fame. But then, anybody with any
brains is not gonna vote for anybody who's on steroids."
'Rapid
Robert' joins lineup for Feb. 10 Night of Memories
By DAVE JOHNSON
Courier & Press executive sports editor 464-7522
johnsond@courierpress.com
Thursday, January 25, 2007
"Two hundred and sixty-six wins ... three no-hitters ... a ton of
strikeouts ... boy, this guy was big."
And he's coming to Evansville. Gries, who is in charge of lining up celebrity
guests and memorabilia for the Tri-State Hot Stove League, said Wednesday that
Feller has agreed to attend the club's 2007 Night of Memories. The annual
youth-sports fundraiser is scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 10, at the Vanderburgh
4H Center.
"We're just real excited that Bob Feller has agreed to be one of our
honored guests," said Gries, the Hot Stove League's vice-president.
"He's 87 years old and apparently still going strong. We feel fortunate to
get him and to give people in the Tri-State a chance to see him and get his
autograph."
Feller joins NASCAR legend Bobby Allison and Evansville's Don Mattingly, the
New York Yankees bench coach, in headlining this year's Night. They're
among more than a dozen celebrities who already have accepted invitations, and
Gries said he's hoping to bring in at least one more big-name guest - possibly Oscar
Robertson, the basketball Hall of Famer.
It's been over 50 years since Feller threw his final big-league pitch, but he
remains one of the greatest in baseball history. He was elected to the Hall of
Fame in 1962, his first year on the ballot. Nicknamed "Rapid
Robert" because of his 100-mph fastball, Feller compiled a record of 266
wins and 162 losses in 18 big-league seasons, all with the Cleveland Indians,
between 1936 and 1956. In 1969, when Major League Baseball selected its
all-time team as part of its 100th anniversary celebration, he was named the
game's "greatest living righthander." Feller threw three
one-hitters and 12 one-hitters and is the only pitcher to throw a no-hitter on
opening day (in 1940, against the Chicago White Sox). He led the American
league in victories seven times and in strikeouts six times.
"And if it hadn't been for the war, he surely would have won more than 300
games," said Gries, a reference to the fact that Feller was in his prime
when he missed three seasons, 1943-45, while serving in the Navy during World
War II.
Gries said the club "has a good chance" of also getting Robertson for
the 2007 Night. "He's supposed to let us know for sure in the next few
days."
Most confirmed guests are current or former athletes from the Tri-State. The
list includes Colorado Rockies shortstop Clint Barmes, former major leaguers
Harry Spilman, Bob Sykes, Boots Day and Bo Hart; minor leaguers Heath Phillips,
Preston Mattingly, Eric Campbell, Neil Sellers, Bryan Rueger and Jay Buente;
former Reitz football standout Don Hansen, who spent 12 seasons in the NFL; and
Bobby Plump, the former Milan High School basketball player whose last-second,
game-winning basket in the 1954 Indiana state finals inspired the movie
"Hoosiers."
The Night of Memories will include an autograph session and live and silent
auctions of sports and nonsports memorabilia. Doors will open at 5 p.m., with
the adults-only main program starting at 6:30. The autograph session is from 4
to 5:30 and is open to anyone with a paid admission ticket. Gries said fees
have not been finalized, but probably will range from $15 to $30" per
signature.
Admission is $20. Tickets are on sale at local high school athletic offices
during school hours or by calling (812) 401-0715. Eight-seat corporate tables
also are available. Call 425-2600.
"If my memory is correct, Bob Feller once pitched in an exhibition game at
Bosse Field against the New York Giants and Wille Mays and Monte Irvin. I
believe it ocurred in the '50's as the two team broke from spring training in
Arizona. Not sure Bob would remember that, but my father--also from Iowa(I
believe Feller hailed from Van Meter, Iowa, just west of Des Moines)--got me
into the clubhouse of the Indians after the game where I had the opportunity to
meet some of the Indians players, and thus became a lifelong Indians fan. It
might be good for Paul Gries to ask Feller about that". .....Tom Akin
With Mattingly on hand, Memories is never a
tough sell
By Dave Johnson
Courier & Press executive sports editor 464-7522
e-mail: johnsond@courierpress.com
Tuesday, January 9, 2007
"Eight years ... it doesn't seem possible," said club president Larry
Broerman.
But that's what it is, and Don Mattingly has been there every step of the way.
The Evansville native and New York Yankees coach will again help headline this
year's Night. The youth-sports fundraiser is Saturday, Feb. 10, at the
Vanderburgh 4H Center.
The event has attracted Hall of Famers and other big-name sports figures over
the years, including Yogi Berra, Scott Rolen, Bob Griese, Paul Hornung, Whitey
Herzog and Harmon Killebrew. NASCAR legend Bobby Allison will be there this
year.
However, club officials say nobody's appearance is more important than
Mattingly's.
"Donnie has been with us every year, and it's very important for him to be
on board," said Hot Stove League vice-president Paul Gries. "He's so
respected around the country, all you have to do is mention his name and
peoples' eyes light up."
One of Gries' duties each year is to send letters of invitation to potential
celebrity guests.
"All I have to say is, 'Don Mattingly's gonna be here,' " said Gries,
"and they listen."
In addition to Allison and Mattingly, the 2007 Night of Memories will feature
big-leaguers from the area, such as Colorado Rockies infielder Clint Barmes,
who's from Vincennes; old-timers such as Harry Spilman of St. Phillips, Ind.,
and Bob Sykes of Carmi, Ill., and former NFL linebacker Don Hansen of
Evansville, and area minor leaguers like Heath Phillips of Evansville, Eric
Campbell of Owensville and Preston Mattingly, Don's son.
Sykes must have thought he was seeing double when he was introduced to Preston
Mattingly before a Night of Memories press conference on Monday.
"Boy, this makes me feel old," Sykes said. "Preston wasn't even
born when Donnie and I were teammates (with the Yankees in 1982)." He
smiled and added: "Man, he looks just like his dad looked the first time I
saw him in spring training."
Preston Mattingly, who was the Los Angeles Dodgers' first pick in last year's
June draft, said he's looking forward to attending his first Night. "I've
always heard Dad talk about it. It sounds like a fun experience."
Other guests include ex-major leaguers Boots Day and Bo Hart and Bobby Plump,
the former Milan High School basketball player whose game-winning basket in the
1954 state finals inspired the movie "Hoosiers."
Gries said there's a chance the celebrity-guest list will grow in the next four
or five days. "We're waiting to hear back from Bob Griese, Oscar Robertson
and Jay Cutler."
Doors will open at 5 p.m., with the adults-only main program starting at 6:30.
An autograph session is set for 4 to 5:30 and is open to anyone with a paid
admission ticket.
Admission is $20. Tickets are available at local high school athletic offices
during school hours or by calling (812) 401-0715. Autograph fees will be
finalized"in a couple of weeks," Gries said.
About 20 memorabilia items, most of them autographed, will be up for bid during
the live and silent auctions. They include: a bat signed by 23 baseball Hall of
Famers; a game-issued Rolen jersey signed by last year's world champion St.
Louis Cardinals; autographed jerseys of Berra, Don Mattingly, Drew Brees, Mark
Prior and Jamey Carroll, and tickets to Cardinals games and to the 2008 Super
Bowl in Tempe, Ariz.
n Bobby
Allison will help Tri-State youth sports
By Dave Johnson
Sunday, December 10, 2006
Actually, the guy wasn't really speeding - although he has plenty of times in
the past.
No, Sprinkle brought in legendary NASCAR driver Bobby Allison because he was
wanted by the Tri-State Hot Stove Baseball League.
With the chief's help, Allison has agreed to headline the club's annual Night
of Memories fund-raiser on Saturday, Feb. 10, at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center.
Sprinkle and his father, Hot Stove member Gary Sprinkle, landed Allison with
the help of Ken Harr, assistant director of security for the Bristol Motor
Speedway.
Brett Sprinkle said he and Harr, a lieutenant with the Sullivan County (Tenn.)
Sheriff's Dept., became good friends several years ago while they were
attending the FBI Academy in Washington, D.C.
"I told Ken how much I'd love to see a race in Bristol and he's invited me
and Dad down every year," said Sprinkle. "Then we started talking
about how great it would be if we could get one of the drivers to come to
Evansville for the Night of Memories.
"Ken mentioned that he has a neighbor who's good friends with Bobby
Allison. He said every time Allison is in Bristol, he stays at the neighbor's
house."
The neighbor asked Allison if he'd be willing to attend the Night of Memories.
Allison, who has stayed active in racing by doing autograph sessions and
appearances since retiring as a driver in 1988, said he'd try to fit it into
his schedule.
"We thought we had him for the Night of Memories last year. But the date
conflicted with a wedding he had to attend in New York," Brett Springer
said. "So we got ahold of him earlier this year and he said he could make
it."
Hot Stove vice-president Paul Gries said the club is "thrilled" to be
able to bring in Allison, who was chosen as one of the 50 greatest drivers when
NASCAR celebrated its 50th anniversary in 1998.
Previous Nights of Memories have featured mostly baseball, football and
basketball stars. "So Bobby Allison will hopefully bring in some new
people, people who may not have attended our event in the past," Gries
said.
"We've been trying to get somebody from NASCAR for several years. Now that
we've got Bobby, we may be able to develop a network where we can get a
different driver every year or every couple of years."
Though he hasn't raced competitively since 1988, when he was critically
injuried in an accident at Pocono Raceway, Allison remains one of the biggest
names in NASCAR. His 84 Winston Cup victories rank third all-time, behind
Richard Petty's 200 and David Pearson's 105, and he's a member of the
International Motorsports Hall of Fame.
Allison, who turned 69 last week, was a leading driver on the NASCAR circuit
from 1966 through 1988. He won a career-best 10 races in 1971 and again in 1972
and earned over $7.7 million.
The 1983 Winston Cup series champion won the Daytona 500 three times and also
was a three-time runner-up. He won NASCAR's Most Popular Driver Award six
times.
Allison and other guests will attend the Night of Memories' autograph session
from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Doors open at 5, with the program, which is open to adults
only, set for 6:30. During the program, several hundred memorabilia items will
be put up for bid in live and silent auctions.
The Hot Stove League has raised more than $600,000 from its seven previous
Nights. Paul Hornung teamed with Evansville natives Don Mattingly and Bob
Griese, who have been with the event from the start, to headline last year's
fund-raiser, which pulled in over $100,000.
The club distributes proceeds to 100 youth-sports organizations in the
Tri-State.
- Contact Dave Johnson at 464-7522 or johnsond@courierpress.com
By Dave Johnson
Executive Sports Editor
February 13, 2006
However, as a youngster growing up in Louisville, he never really dreamed about
playing for the Fighting Irish.
"I wanted to play for Kentucky," Hornung said.
During Hornung's senior year at Flaget High School, when he quarterbacked the
Braves to the mythical state championship, Kentucky coach Paul "Bear"
Bryant paid Hornung a visit. So did Babe Parilli, the Wildcats' all-America
quarterback.
"Parilli was my idol," Hornung said. "Ralph Beard (who had led
UK to two NCAA basketball championships in the late 1940s) came to my home,
too."
Bryant wanted Hornung in the worst way. He even offered a deal to Hornung and
his Flaget teammate, halfback Sherrill Sipes: If you guys come to Kentucky,
I'll give the 11 other seniors on your team a scholarship, too.
Unfortunately for UK fans, Bryant's all-out recruiting blitz didn't really
stand a chance.
"My mother was a very strict Catholic. She wanted me to go to Notre Dame.
She was always doing the rosary thing," Hornung recalled with a smile.
So when Sipes decided to go to Notre Dame, Hornung went along with him.
"Sipes and I became the first two high-school teammates to ever start in
the same Notre Dame backfield," Hornung said during the Tri-State Hot
Stove League's Night of Memories fundraiser Friday. "I've always been very
proud of that."
He's also proud to have won a Heisman Trophy - not only because he was the
first to win the award while playing on a losing team (the Irish were 2-8 in
1956), but also because of the individual competition he faced that year.
"I've always thought that was the greatest class in Heisman Trophy
history," Hornung said.
Tennessee running back Johnny Majors was runner-up in the balloting. Rounding
out the top five were Oklahoma halfback Tommy McDonald, Oklahoma center and
linebacker Jerry Tubbs and Syracuse halfback Jim Brown, who Hornung calls
"the best football player who ever lived."
The top 10 vote-getters also included Stanford quarterback John Brodie, Michigan
end Ron Kramer and Ohio State guard Jim Parker, "the best offensive
lineman of all-time," in Hornung's opinion.
"Everybody in the top 10 is in the College Football Hall of Fame,"
said Hornung, who went on to have a great NFL career with the Green Bay
Packers. "And seven are in the Pro Football Hall of Fame."
Hornung is in both. So is Evansville native Bob Griese, the former Purdue and
Miami Dolphins quarterback. Griese also attended the Night of Memories, and he
chided Hornung during a question-and-answer segment.
"Obviously, Paul," said Griese with a sly smile, "you went to
Notre Dame because you couldn't get into Purdue."
As the audience roared, Hornung shot back: "I graduated cum laude, Griese.
... By the way, did you graduate?"
Griese did, after leading the Boilermakers to a record of 25-7-1 from 1964 to
'66.
"I love you now, Bob," said Hornung, "but I didn't like you when
you played at Purdue."
In 1963, while he was with the Packers, Hornung got into trouble for betting on
NFL games. So did six Detroit Lions players, including all-pro tackle Alex
Karras. Hornung and Karras were suspended for a year by NFL commissioner Pete
Rozelle.
Another sports legend, hockey's Wayne Gretzky, is currently embroiled in a
gambling scandal.
"If he gets away with this," said Hornung, "I wish I'd have
known him back in my day."
A freak injury cost Clint Barmes a shot at winning last year's National League
Rookie of the Year Award. The Colorado Rockies' shortstop missed three months
after he slipped and broke his collarbone while carrying a slab of deer meat -
a gift from Rockies teammate Todd Helton - up the steps to his apartment.
When he went to his seat Friday night, Barmes found it occupied by a mounted
deer head.
Said Evansville's Don Mattingly, the New York Yankees hitting coach: "One
word, Clint: elevator. Hey, you're in the big leagues. Get an apartment with an
elevator."
Mattingly wasn't the first to poke fun at the Vincennes product.
"I guess I'll always be the deer meat guy," said Barmes. "Every
city I go into, all I hear is, 'Hey, Barmes, where's the deer meat?' "
The Hot Stovers raised $111,000 at their seventh-annual fundraiser.
President Larry Broerman said after expenses are met, the club will have
$85,000 to $90,000 to distribute to area youth-sports groups.
Treasurer Steve Millay said the live and silent memorabilia auctions
generated $46,000 and $18,700 came from the autograph session.
Two tickets to next year's Super Bowl in Miami sold for $7,200. It was the
highest price for an auction item in the history of the event.
The winning bidder was a woman wearing a Dolphins necklace. She declined to
give her name, but said she's a big fan of Griese, who supplies the club with a
pair of Super Bowl tickets each year. This was the sixth time she'd been the
high bidder.
"It's just something I enjoy doing," she explained.
She said she attends the Night of Memories every year but seldom bids on other
items. "When you pay that much for tickets, you don't have money for
anything else."
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Courier & Press staff writer
February 11, 2006 Professional athletes' lives are full
of commitments. Assuming a spouse and children aren't in the picture, the list
usually goes something like
this: team,
training, media and guest appearances. And that's the abbreviated version.
Take
Home Big Names from Memories
Executive Sports Editor
February 8, 2006
But there will be some other names, too - names that you could even take home
with you. Names like Lance Amstrong, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Brooks Robinson
and Rick Pitino. Mattingly, Griese, Hornung, Lattner and Plump are on the list
of celebrities that will appear at the 2006 Night, the annual
Tri-State Hot Stove League fund-raiser that's scheduled for Friday at the
Vanderburgh 4-H Center. Plus, Hot Stove League vice-president Paul Gries said
more than 150 memorabilia items will be auctioned during the evening program,
many of them autographed by Armstrong, Bird, Pitino and other sports legends.
Among them: - A racing shirt signed by Armstrong, the seven-time Tour de France
champion;
- A large picture autographed by Johnson and Bird;
-A limited-edition print of Notre Dame football stars that's signed by Hornung,
Lattner and fellow Heisman Trophy winners Angelo Bertelli and Johnny Lujack;
- A set of Gold Glove baseballs autographed by nine of the game's all-time best
fielders, includingRobinson and Jim Kaat, who each won 16 of the awards,
Mattingly, who won nine, plus "Pudge" Rodriguez, Luis Aparicio, Joe
Morgan, Andre Dawson, Al Kaline and Dave Winfield. A similar Gold Glove set
sold for $4,500 at the 2004 event. "We're hoping this one goes for about
the same price," he said, "and the Notre Dame print should go high,
too."
Gries explained that Hot Stove member Gary Ankrom obtained the framed Notre
Dame print several years ago. It had been autographed byBerteli, the 1943
Heisman Trophy winner who died in 1999. A couple of weeks ago, Ankrom mailed
the print to Lujack, the 1947 Heisman winner, and the 81-year-old former QB
added his signature. "We'll have Hornung and Lattner sign it Friday,"
said Gries. "Tell people if they're a Notre Dame fan, they'd better plan
to be there and bid. They may not get an opportunity like this
again." Gries said the club has raised about $500,000 from its six
previous Nights of Memories.
"We've made about $320,000 in the past three years alone," he said,
"and about $35,000 a year comes from the auction." Other items
that will be up for bid this year include two tickets to next year's Super Bowl
and autographed jerseys of Colorado Rockies shortstop Clint Barmes of
Vincennes, Ind., and Washington Nationals infielder Jamey Carroll, the former
Castle and University of Evansville player.
By DAVE JOHNSON,
Executive Sports Editor
January 10, 2006
Griese most proud of son's work off the field
But Brian Griese has done a lot on the football field to make Bob Griese proud.
Bob quarterbacked Purdue to a Rose Bowl victory in 1967. Brian did the same
with Michigan three decades later, leading the Wolverines to an unbeaten season
and a share of the national championship. Bob spent 14 seasons in the NFL and
played on three Super Bowl teams with the Miami Dolphins.
In 1998, Brian reached the Super Bowl with the Denver Broncos. Two years later,
when he compiled a franchise-record 102.9 passer rating for the Broncos, Brian
joined his dad, an Evansville native, as the only father-son combination to win
NFL passing titles. Not bad for the Griese kid, who has played eight NFL
seasons. Still, it's probably what he's accomplished off the field that has
made his dad the proudest.
Each year, Brian holds a golf tournament in Michigan to raise money for a
children's hospital. He also has been involved in fund-raising efforts for the
Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation and for PUSH for the Cure, which
benefits spinal cord and brain injury research.
But the main focus of his attention is the Judith Ann Griese Foundation, which
he founded in Denver four years ago. It's a memorial to his mother, who died of
breast cancer when Brian was 12.
He also opened Judi's House - a place where grieving children and their
families can go to cope with the loss of a loved one.
"This is his big passion during the offseason," Bob Griese said.
"And it's a great thing. In four years, they've helped over 1,000 kids and
their families."
Brian Griese is hardly the first celebrity to lend his name to a good cause.
Unlike some, though, he gets directly involved in the day-to-day operation. It
literally consumes him. "Brian started this himself," his dad said.
"He put a lot of his own money into it. He even wrote the mission statement
... If he wasn't playing football, I think he'd be doing this
full-time." Brian and his wife have moved to Tampa, where he plays
quarterback for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but still makes frequent trips back
to Denver. Judi's House and the foundation "will be Brian's legacy,"
Bob said. "Fans in Denver will remember him much more for his
philanthropic efforts than for what he did as a football player."
All the charity work keeps him pretty busy - but not too busy to help with
yet another good cause. Bob said Monday that Brian will accompany him to
Evansville next month for the 2006 Night of Memories. The Feb. 10 event at the
Vanderburgh 4-H Center will be the Tri-State Hot Stove League's seventh-annual
fund-raiser for area youth-sports programs. "I've always invited him, but
this is the first time he's been able to do it," Bob said.
A couple of times, off-season surgeries have kept the younger Griese from
attending. Even now, he's recuperating from a season-ending knee injury that
sidelined him in mid-October, after he led the Buccaneers to a 5-1 start.
The elder Griese, a Rex Mundi High School graduate, has been a semi-regular
at previous Nights. Also, he annually supplies the club with a pair of Super
Bowl tickets that usually sells for $4,000 or more during the program's live
auction.
This year's Night of Memories will have more of a football flavor than in
previous years, what with Heisman Trophy winners Paul Hornung and Johnny
Lattner having accepted invitations, too. All four will appear at the
pre-program autograph session, along with baseball's Don Mattingly, Clint
Barmes, Jamey Carroll and Brad Wilkerson. Fees will be $30 per item for
Hornung, Mattingly and Bob Griese's signatures and $20 for the others,
vice-president Paul Gries said.
"We're really excited, and we're really glad Brian could make it,"
Gries said. "This gives us another great lineup."
The Hot Stove League has raised over $500,000 from the Night of Memories,
and all of the proceeds go to area youth-sports groups.
"That's why I come back," Bob Griese said.
And why his son keeps following in his footsteps.
COURIER & PRESS
By DAVE JOHNSON,
Executive Sports Editor
January 5, 2006
Johnny Lattner has agreed to join fellow Notre Dame football legend Paul
Hornung at the Tri-State Hot Stove League's 2006 Night of Memories.
The seventh annual fundraiser for area youth-sports programs is scheduled for
Friday, Feb. 10, at the Vanderburgh 4H Center.
Lattner received the Heisman as the nation's top college football player in
1953. Hornung won the award in 1956. "It's always nice to come back to
Evansville,"
said Lattner, who lives in Chicago but has relatives here. "And I always
enjoy getting together with Paul. When he was a freshman at Notre Dame, I was a
senior. (Coach Frank) Leahy had me be his 'big brother,' so I got to know him
pretty well. We don't get to see each other as often as we used to, so this'll
be nice."
By DAVE JOHNSON
Executive Sports Editor
464-7522 or johnsond@evansville.net
February 6, 2005
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
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
By DAVE JOHNSON
Executive Sports editor
January 27, 2005
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?
By DAVE JOHNSON
Executive Sports Editor 464-7522
johnsond@evansville.net
January 4, 2005
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
. By
Dave Johnson
December 18, 2004
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You can contact Dave Johnson at (812) 464-7522 or johnsond@2vansville.net
December 5, 2004
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.
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.
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."
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.
"Kids' eyes light up when they meet
baseball heroes"
Courier & Press staff writer
464-7511 or sford@evansville.net
February 7, 2004
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.
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."
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
February 8, 2004
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
Autograph session from 4 to 5:30 at the Banquet Hall.
Other guests include Harry Spilman, Jamey Carroll, Boots Day, Wes Carroll,
Ryan Miller,
Steve Obenchain, Heath Phillips and Ryan Hutchison.
The four previous Nights raised over $300,000.