Where Nobody Knows Your Name: Life In the Minor Leagues of Baseball

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Where Nobody Knows Your Name: Life In the Minor Leagues of Baseball Page 11

by John Feinstein


  “It isn’t that hard when you’ve been doing it as long as I have,” Rosenfield said, sitting in his cluttered office one afternoon with several legal pads spread in front of him on which he had been piecing together the 2013 schedule. “I actually kind of fell into doing it after my first year here.

  “They handed us the schedules at the [Carolina] league meetings. We were moving into the league for the ’64 season. I looked at the schedule and noticed that Winston-Salem, which was where the league offices happened to be, had thirty-two weekend home dates. We had seven. I was sitting in the back of the room, and Bill Jessup, who was the president of the league, was going on about the schedule, and I must have been shaking my head noticeably, because all of a sudden he stopped and said, ‘Hey, new boy, you think you can do it better?’

  “I looked at him and said, ‘A monkey could do it better.’

  “He kind of glared at me for a second, pointed his finger at me, and said, ‘You’ve got two weeks.’ I went to work, presented him the schedule in two weeks, and the teams voted unanimously in favor of my version. After that, I did it every year. In fact, when we moved to the International League, I kept doing the Carolina League schedule in addition to ours for several years.”

  Rosenfield isn’t a name-dropper; it’s not his way. But he’s known so many people for so many years there are few names that come up without his having some sort of story to tell about them. He’s a natural-born storyteller, not surprising since his mother, Therese Lyon, was an accomplished actress.

  She appeared on Broadway in a play written by Groucho Marx called Time for Elizabeth. She was also in The Music Man and, in 1947, had a role in Charlie Chaplin’s Monsieur Verdoux.

  “Charlie Chaplin and Groucho Marx, now that’s name-dropping,” Rosenfield said with a laugh on a hot summer afternoon. “She didn’t even start acting until she was forty-nine. My dad was a co-founder of Piggly Wiggly, and she decided it would be fun to try acting. I was her youngest kid, eighth one.”

  As Rosenfield talked, Joe Gregory walked in. There was a problem. Like all minor-league teams, the Tides are always looking for promotions that might bring a few more fans to the ballpark. The team draws reasonably well—in 2012 it would average sixty-four hundred fans per home game—but every little bit helps.

  That night’s promotion was the Cowboy Monkey Rodeo Show.

  Seriously.

  The show involved a guy in a cowboy outfit along with four border collies who were ridden by four capuchin monkeys. The collies and the monkeys, starting from just behind second base, chased four cattle across the outfield grass into a pen on the other side of the center-field fence.

  Repeat: seriously.

  The problem had nothing to do with the act itself. It was pretty harmless stuff, and the animals all clearly knew what was expected of them. The problem was the heat: it was late June in Norfolk, and the temperature was approaching a hundred degrees with the humidity dripping off everyone.

  The show toured the country, apparently doing well enough that it continued to receive invitations to minor-league ballparks. This minor-league ballpark was a little bit different, though: it was located less than a mile from the international headquarters of PETA—People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

  The folks from PETA were not happy with the notion of the animals being used to entertain fans in the brutal heat. They had organized a protest for outside the ballpark prior to the game, not exactly the way the Tides wanted their fans welcomed on a night when staying indoors had to be very tempting even if you already had tickets for the game.

  Gregory reported that he had just consulted with the police about where the protesters would be allowed to picket and that it was pretty clear to him that the police wanted to give the protesters a wide swath. The last thing anyone wanted was to see arrests. There was one piece of good news: it would be very hot for the protesters too. They might not last that long.

  There was one other not-so-minor issue: three hours before game time there weren’t enough Tides in the building to field a team.

  The Tides had played the previous night in Columbus and had been scheduled to fly home at 6:30 that morning—plenty of time, at least in theory—for a 7:15 game against the Syracuse Chiefs.

  The trouble began when their flight was canceled due to “mechanical difficulties.” Concurrent with this, the East Coast had been hit by a severe storm on Friday night, one that was causing huge travel delays all over the place. With many flights already grounded, finding a way to get thirty-one people—twenty-five players, a manager, three coaches, a broadcaster, and a trainer—back to Norfolk wasn’t easy.

  After a great deal of scrambling, the Tides had been rebooked on six different flights—three that went to Norfolk and three that went to Richmond. The airport in Richmond was eighty-seven miles from Harbor Park, no more than a ninety-minute trip under normal circumstances … but on a summer Saturday with people in the storm-ravaged Washington, D.C., area fleeing to the beach from houses without power, the trip would take considerably longer than that.

  Players came stumbling into the clubhouse throughout the afternoon. Manager Ron Johnson stood in the hallway between his office and the players’ lockers and shook his head. “I hope we can field a team tonight,” he said—joking, but not joking. The last group wasn’t due at the stadium—if nothing else went wrong—until 6:30.

  “It’s Triple-A,” Johnson said. “This stuff happens down here. I always say to everyone, myself included, ‘If you don’t like it, do a better job.’ ”

  Johnson’s job had been made a bit more difficult not long after his plane—one of the ones that landed in Norfolk—arrived. En route to the ballpark he received a text from Baltimore: Two Orioles pitchers, Dana Eveland—who had started the game—and Tommy Hunter—who had relieved him—had been knocked around by the Cleveland Indians that afternoon. Each had given up five runs: Eveland in three and two-thirds innings; Hunter, even worse, in one and two-thirds innings.

  “Need González up here ASAP,” Johnson’s text said.

  Miguel González was supposed to be Norfolk’s starting pitcher that night. He arrived in the clubhouse a few minutes after Johnson and was about to get dressed to begin preparing for the game. Johnson stopped him. There was no time to congratulate him or wish him luck.

  “Go back to the airport,” Johnson told him. “They want you up in Baltimore.”

  González was twenty-eight and had bounced around the minor leagues for most of seven years before signing with the Orioles in the spring. The plan was for him to pitch in Double-A, but he had quickly impressed the team enough to get promoted to Norfolk in late April and Baltimore in June. That call-up had come because the bullpen needed some extra help. When González arrived, Orioles general manager Dan Duquette had been pleasantly surprised by his variety of pitches and his poise.

  The Orioles were already desperate for starting pitching. Virtually their entire rotation had struggled since opening day. After consulting with manager Buck Showalter, Duquette decided to send González back to Norfolk to “stretch his arm out”—get him in the starting rotation down there to build his arm strength so he could potentially come back up to start in Baltimore when needed.

  Now, less than a month later, González was needed—this time as a starter. He would start in Eveland’s spot in five days—but he had to get to Baltimore right away because the team was flying to the West Coast the next afternoon after a day game against the Indians, and management wanted González on the flight so he could begin to get ready for his debut as a starter.

  While González raced to the airport, Johnson went and found the relief pitcher Óscar Villarreal to tell him he would be starting the game that night. “I told him if he can get us into the fourth inning, I’ll be thrilled,” Johnson said. “After that, it’s all hands on deck.”

  Johnson had no issues with the notion that his starting pitcher had been snatched from him a couple of hours before game time. Even though he had sp
ent the previous two seasons as the first-base coach in Boston, the minor leagues had been his home in one form or another for more than thirty years. There wasn’t much that was going to happen that would be new to him.

  “When Buck [Showalter] calls and says, ‘RJ, you got a minute?’ I know what’s coming,” he said, laughing. “He needs something or someone up there, and he wants to know who the best guy is at that moment. My job is to make sure I get the right guy there. If I’m not doing that, what good am I to him and to the club?”

  When Rosenfield walked down the hall that afternoon to see how Johnson was doing and to check on the whereabouts of the baseball team, Johnson laughed as Rosenfield sat down across from him.

  “This could be a long one, boss,” he said. “We might need more than one position player to pitch before we’re done.”

  Rosenfield and Gregory had talked to the Syracuse people about delaying the start of the game and they had agreed. It was now an eight o’clock start—which helped Johnson, although it didn’t mean he had a starting pitcher.

  “This is why you’re better off traveling by bus,” Rosenfield said.

  “I agree,” Johnson said. “I’d much rather ride a bus for eight or nine hours, especially a comfortable one, than get up at four o’clock in the morning for a flight that may or may not take off on time—or may not take off at all.”

  “I’m making the schedule for next year right now,” Rosenfield said. “You want bus trips to and from the Midwest and the North too?”

  “Absolutely,” Johnson said. “The more bus trips the better. Flying commercial, especially on days like this, is no fun. At least on the bus we know almost exactly when we’re going to arrive.”

  Travel is one of the biggest differences between life in the minors and life in the majors. Major-league teams travel on charter airplanes, and players pass their luggage to a clubhouse attendant after the last game in a city and don’t see it again until they walk into their hotel room. Almost everywhere that hotel is a Four Seasons or a Ritz-Carlton. In Triple-A, everyone carries his own luggage, and most of the hotels don’t have bellmen. Or room service.

  “It isn’t as if there’s anything wrong with the way you live in Triple-A,” Dontrelle Willis said, sitting at the opposite end of the hallway from Johnson’s office. He had been one of the lucky Tides who had been on a flight that connected in Atlanta and had landed in Norfolk by mid-afternoon. “It’s just the way you live in the major leagues isn’t real. Real people don’t live like that. But major leaguers do.”

  Willis had not only been a major leaguer; he had been a star. He had been the National League Rookie of the Year in 2003, when he won fourteen games for a Florida Marlins team that had gone on to win the World Series. Two years later, still only twenty-three years old, Willis won twenty-two games and finished second to Chris Carpenter in the National League Cy Young Award voting.

  He was a genuine phenom: a gangly lefty with a delivery that made it tough to follow the baseball as it came out of his hand. He was also a remarkably good hitter for a pitcher, so good that he didn’t always hit ninth in the order.

  “I think I was good, but I probably wasn’t as good as it seemed in ’05,” he said. “I got a lot of run support that year [his ERA was 2.63, so his success wasn’t just about run support], and we had a good team. I look back on those years in Florida and realize how lucky I was to be there and to get the chances I got.”

  If Willis was bitter about the twisted road his career had traveled since the twenty-two-win season, it didn’t show as he sat in the middle of the Norfolk clubhouse. He talked easily, almost happily about the struggles he had faced in the five seasons since being taken from the Marlins.

  Even though he had pitched reasonably well in 2006 and 2007, his numbers—both in wins and in ERA—hadn’t come close to 2005. Prior to the 2008 season he was traded, along with Miguel Cabrera, to the Detroit Tigers in a blockbuster trade that was also a Marlins salary dump. The Marlins got back six low-priced prospects in exchange for Cabrera and Willis (Willis had signed for $6.45 million prior to the season). Even though Willis had pitched to a 10-15 record in 2007, the Tigers believed his best years were still ahead of him. He was still only twenty-five, and he had already won sixty-eight games in the majors. They signed him to a three-year deal worth $29 million.

  And got almost nothing out of it. Willis pitched for the Tigers for just under two and a half years. During that time he won two games, meaning he cost the Tigers $14.5 million per win. He struggled with injuries, with wildness, and with an anxiety disorder that landed him on the disabled list twice. Willis went from being a star to a mystery almost overnight.

  The Tigers finally gave up on him in June 2010, trading him to the Arizona Diamondbacks. He lasted six weeks in Arizona before being released. He signed with the Giants, and then, at the end of that season, his Tigers contract over, he signed with the Cincinnati Reds. He began the 2011 season in Louisville and pitched well enough to get called back to the majors in July.

  “I can honestly tell you I’ve had some great moments in baseball,” he said. “I’ve been part of a World Series champion; I won twenty [twenty-two] games in a season; I’ve been paid a lot of money. I’m not sure anything ever meant more to me than being told I was going to Cincinnati.

  “I’ve thought about it, and the reason it meant so much was simple: it was hard. For a long, long time baseball was easy for me. I was in the majors at twenty-one. I was Rookie of the Year.” He smiled. “Heck, I could even hit.

  “Then it got hard—very hard. I couldn’t get the ball over the plate. I couldn’t get people out anymore. I couldn’t stay healthy, and I couldn’t stay in the big leagues. I had to work to get back to the point where someone thought I could pitch in the majors again. When everyone in that clubhouse came around to congratulate me, I cried. It meant that much to me.

  “When I got to Cincinnati, Joey Votto was the first guy to come over to my locker. He said, ‘How great does it feel to come all the way back?’ I kind of laughed, and he said, ‘No, I’m serious. Tell me how you did it. I can’t imagine how tough that must have been.’ ”

  Willis didn’t pitch especially well with the Reds the second half of 2011. He was 1-6 with an ERA of 5.00, but he was good enough that he kept getting the ball, starting thirteen games. That was why the Phillies, in their constant search for pitching depth, had signed him prior to the 2012 season. When he didn’t make the team out of spring training, Willis faced the same dilemma that Scott Podsednik faced: go back to the minors and try to work your way back again or go home. His daughters were five, three, and one. Home beckoned. The Phillies released him, and he took off the uniform for—he thought—the last time.

  “I enjoyed being home,” he said. “But I’m like everybody else. The itch doesn’t just go away. I’ve played sports for as long as I can remember and always been pretty good. As great as it sounds to say, ‘I’m going home to spend time with my family,’ it isn’t that simple.”

  Which is why, when the Orioles called and asked if he’d like to go to Norfolk, Willis said yes. He knew Baltimore needed starting pitching and thought he might have a chance to get back to the majors fairly quickly.

  Only it hadn’t worked out. To begin with, the Orioles had thought they were signing a reliever; Willis thought he was going to start. Willis pitched in relief once, got hurt, went home again for a while, then came back to Norfolk after a renegotiation of his role. He finally got a start. It didn’t go well—two and two-thirds innings, four earned runs. By late June, no one seemed certain what his status was. Johnson had told him he would be on call that night in the bullpen.

  “Which is fine with me,” he said. “I need to get innings right now one way or the other.”

  He pushed back from the table where he was sitting. He was holding a baseball in his hands, just as he had done most of his life.

  “I still love coming to the yard every day,” he said. “I love the camaraderie of the clubhouse, and I
understand it won’t be long now before I’m one of those guys sitting around telling war stories. I can say I’ve been to the pinnacle, and that feels good. But when the day comes that I don’t believe I can make it back and pitch in the big leagues, I’ll go home. I know it won’t be easy, but that’s what I’ll do.”

  That night, after long-tossing in the outfield before the game, Willis was designated the first man up in the Tides bullpen. He never got into the game.

  “I’d like to say I think he’s got a chance to pitch well again,” Rosenfield said as he watched him warm up. “But I just don’t think it’s there anymore. I can’t tell you why it isn’t there, but it just isn’t.”

  Two days later, Willis decided Rosenfield was right. He retired. Itch or no itch, it was time to go home. Again.

  10

  Nate McLouth

  COMEBACK KID

  The Tides won on Cowboy Monkey Rodeo Night.

  Even with all their travel troubles and their lack of a starting pitcher, they came back from an early 3–1 deficit to beat Syracuse, 5–3. Five pitchers split up eight and two-thirds innings. The last out of the ninth inning wasn’t needed because a huge thunderstorm swept into Norfolk, and even though the umpires tried briefly to keep the teams on the field long enough to get the last out, it wasn’t going to happen. They waited thirty minutes to see if the rain would let up before calling it a night.

  Nate McLouth was the Tides’ hitting star for the evening with three hits and two RBIs. That raised his batting average to .205. As unimpressive as that sounded, it was a long way from where he had been a month earlier.

  Literally, McLouth had been in Knoxville, Tennessee. Professionally, he had been out of a job, another example of a fallen star trying to find himself again in Triple-A.

  “I believed the phone would ring,” he said. “But until it did, I couldn’t be certain.”

  For a long time, McLouth had been on the always-going-up escalator. Growing up in Muskegon, Michigan, he began drawing notice from colleges and professional teams by the time he was a high school sophomore. He could hit, he could run—he stole 179 bases in 180 attempts in high school—and he was an absolute whiz as an outfielder. He was good enough to remind people of the line that Ralph Kiner, the longtime New York Mets TV broadcaster, had used to describe the way Garry Maddox, who won eight Gold Gloves, played center field for the Philadelphia Phillies. “Two-thirds of the earth is covered by water,” Kiner said. “The other third is covered by Garry Maddox.”

 

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