Dead Player of the Day
In which I pick a page from the encyclopedia at random and riff on what I find.
Bill Bevens-RHP-1944-1947 (1916-1991)
Robyn Hitchcock has a song called “Sinister But She was Happy.” Floyd Clifford Bevens’ song might have been “Snakebit But He Was Happy,” although I have no idea of knowing how happy he actually was. Bevens was Bobby Witt if Bobby Witt had thrown the most famous game ever but lost it. Everyone knows that the Yankees’ Bevens took a no-hitter (albeit with eight walks and a run allowed on a fielder’s choice) into the ninth inning of the fourth game of the 1947 Yankees-Dodgers World Series only to lose his 2-1 lead and the game when Brooklyn’s Cookie Lavagetto doubled with two outs, chasing home two runners—one on base as the result of an unintentional walk and a stolen base, the other there because, with two outs and first base open, Bevens’ manager, Bucky Harris, ordered (on a 3-1 count) a free pass to a barely-ambulatory Pete Reiser, a call that put the winning run on base. You probably also knew that the Lavagetto game was the last start of Bevens’ major-league career and his penultimate appearance, the final chapter coming in Game 7, when he pitched 2.2 innings of scoreless relief. But did you know that on April 30, 1946, Bevens also lost this game?
A hard thrower, Bevens had pitched extremely well for the Yankees in 1946, his 2.23 ERA equating to a 155 ERA+. (5.5 WARP). His 249.2 innings clearly affected him, as his walk rate jumped from 2.8 per nine to 4.2 in 1947, although it was only after Game 4 that Bevens said his arm was hurt. After his arm ruined him for the majors, Bevens kept pitching in the minors through 1953. In a 1951 profile of him for Collier’s magazine, Tom Meany wrote:
The extent of his subsequent slide downhill is beast measured, perhaps, by something that happened in Salem. When Bill returned to his home town in the fall of 1947, a World Series celebrity, he was given a six-hundred-dollar-a-month job by a beer company as a good-will ambassador. His duties were not exactly arduous, since they entailed merely standing around and letting potential customers gape at him.
When Bevens came back with his dead arm after the 1948 season, the same firm hired him—at half the price—for the backbreaking job of loading beer on trucks.
Unanswerable Question
Could the Blue Jays, who will finish last in the AL East, win the NL Central? That seems unlikely given the depth of the Cardinals' starting rotation. However, second place seems very reasonable.
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B) Why is there Chip or Dale standing behind it?
Yeah, If Vernon Wells & Shaun Marcum have nice comebacks, Brandon Morrow recovers and learns to pitch, the rest of the pitching staff doesn't vanquish without Arnsberg coaching them (and it is already starting to disapear - I had high hopes for Rzepczynski), they drop Encarnacion to the minors and keep Ruiz in the line-up, and everyone else meets expectations - including a solid all-around performance from Travis Snider, Toronto could possibly win any of the other A.L. divisions except the one they are in.