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Chumps to Champs

Page 44

by Bill Pennington


  on 1994 players’ strike, 210, 215, 239

  on 1994 season, 190, 239

  on 1995 season aftermath, 275

  1996 World Series, 304

  on his father, 46, 60, 304, 311

  on Michael, 65

  role in Yankees organization, 54, 190, 308

  on Showalter, 275

  on Yankees renaissance, 308

  Steinbrenner, Hank, 19–20, 54, 103

  Steinbrenner, Henry, 45–46

  Steinbrenner, Jessica, 114, 144

  Steinbrenner, Joan, 31, 64

  Steinbrenner, Rita, 89

  Steinbrenner (Madden), 144

  Sterling, John, 298

  Stewart, Dave, 115

  Strange, Doug, 264–65

  Strat-O-Matic Baseball (board game), 67–68

  Strawberry, Darryl, 250, 298

  Sussman, David, 254, 264, 272–73, 275

  Sykes, Bob, 34

  T

  Tampa Bay Devil Rays, 254, 276

  Tampa Yankees, 70–71, 126, 194, 196–97

  Tartabull, Danny

  1992 season, 111

  1993 season, 135, 158, 172

  1994 season, 201–2, 205

  1995 season, 219

  expansion draft and, 138

  on Seinfeld, 159

  Taylor, Bettie, 93, 95, 177, 179

  Taylor, Brenden, 175–76

  Taylor, Brien

  1991 amateur player draft, 93–94

  1992 season, 124–25, 128

  1993 season, 148–49, 153

  1994 season, 153, 177

  1995 season, 177–78

  1996 season, 178

  1997 season, 178–79

  1998 season, 179

  1999 season, 179

  background, 93

  Baseball America rank, 95, 128

  drafted by Yankees, 94

  fight defending his brother, 175–77

  off-season instructional camp and, 153, 173–74

  personal character, 174

  pitching skills, 93–94, 153

  popularity, 124–25, 153

  post-baseball life, 179–80

  salary, 95

  shoulder injury, 175–79, 217

  signing with Yankees, 94–95

  Taylor, Wade, 89

  team owners. See owners

  Texas Rangers

  1973 amateur player draft, 94

  1992 season, 119

  1993 season, 170

  1994 season, 200, 205, 211

  1995 season, 245

  1996 season playoffs, 296, 297

  González’s career, 82

  Hawkins as pitching coach, 42

  interest in Bernie Williams, 82, 83

  Rader as manager, 102

  Stanley’s career, 113

  Thomas, Frank, 200

  Thome, Jim, 167–68, 296

  Today (TV show), 147

  Tolleson, Wayne, 78

  Tommy John surgery, 125

  Toronto Blue Jays

  1991 season, 96

  1991 trade talks, 88

  1992 season, 29, 119, 128

  1992 World Series, 29, 133, 142, 245

  1993 season, 160, 163, 167, 170, 171, 173

  1993 World Series, 173

  1994 season, 205

  1995 season, 213, 243, 255–56

  Cone trade, 243–45

  Key’s career, 142

  Torre, Joe

  1996 season, 286, 288–90, 293–94

  1996 World Series, 299, 303, 304

  background, 290

  Hall of Fame induction, 309

  managerial record, 281

  personal character, 290

  role in Yankees renaissance, 308–10

  as Yankees manager, 280–81, 283

  Trump, Donald, 12

  Tschida, Tim, 225

  Tuck, Gary, 192

  U

  umpires’ strike (1995), 219

  uniforms, 31, 121

  United States Olympic Committee, 53

  University of Maine, 32–33

  V

  Valentine, Bobby, 125

  Van Poppel, Todd, 95, 201

  Vedder, Eddie, 242

  Velarde, Randy, 168, 203, 223, 266, 267, 283

  Ventura, Robin, 40–41

  Vincent, Francis T., Jr., “Fay”

  background, 45

  career, 44

  relationship with Steinbrenner, 44, 46–47

  resignation from commissioner position, 133

  Steinbrenner’s banishment, 51–55, 57, 89, 114–15, 140–41

  Steinbrenner-Spira investigation, 16, 36–37, 47–55, 57

  Steinbrenner’s reinstatement, xii, 114–15, 130–31

  at Williams College, 44, 45

  Vincent, Francis T., Sr., “Fay,” 45

  W

  Waco, Texas, 148

  Walker, Jerry, 235–36

  Wallace, B. J., 118

  Wallace, Mike, 124

  Washington, Claudell, 29, 78

  Watson, Bob, 3, 4, 274, 283, 288

  Wells, David, 233–34, 291

  West Haven Yankees, 23

  Wetteland, John

  1995 season, 215–16, 219, 227, 240, 246, 251

  1995 season playoffs, 258, 261, 291

  1996 season, 290–93

  1996 season playoffs, 298

  1996 World Series, 300–302

  facial hair, 227

  on Showalter, 291

  WFAN, 148, 275

  Wickman, Bob

  1992 season, 111–12, 128, 133

  1993 season, 158, 162, 169, 173

  1994 season, 187

  1995 season playoffs, 262

  1996 season, 291, 292–93

  Baseball America rank, 128

  career saves, 289

  as expansion draft untouchable player, 138

  in trade talks, 288

  Wilhelm, Hoyt, 70–71

  Williams, Bernabe Figueroa “Bernie”

  1987 season, 80–81, 83–84

  1990 season, 79, 84, 86

  1991 season, 88, 89, 114

  1992 season, 114, 128, 132

  1993 season, 137–38, 149, 156, 158, 161, 168, 170, 172

  1994 season, 183, 200, 201–2

  on 1994 strike, 209

  1995 season, 219, 223, 254, 255

  1995 season playoffs, 260, 265–67

  1996 season, 289, 292

  1996 season playoffs, 297–98

  1996 World Series, 299–300, 302, 303, 305

  background, 80, 81

  Baseball America rank, 87, 128

  “Bernie being Bernie,” 157, 158, 300

  career home runs, 298

  as expansion draft untouchable player, 138

  Hall’s hazing of, 89, 114

  hidden by Yankees, 80, 82–83, 297

  learning timetable, 132–33, 137

  on Mattingly, 209

  Michael’s funeral, 311

  minor league career, 80–81, 83–84, 86, 100

  personal character, 81, 82, 156–57

  scouted by Yankees, 81–82

  signing with Yankees, 83

  switch-hitting, 83–84

  on Taylor, 149

  in trade talks, 85, 86, 88, 114, 161

  on Yankee Way, 292

  Williams, Gerald

  1987 season, 80–81, 85

  1988 season, 85–86

  1990 season, 79, 86

  1991 season, 88

  1992 season, 128, 132

  1993 season, 135, 158, 172

  1995 season, 224, 254

  1995 season playoffs, 267

  1996 season, 289, 293

  Baseball America rank, 87, 128

  batting grip, 80, 85

  drafted by Yankees, 80

  as expansion draft untouchable player, 138

  family background, 85

  at Grambling State University, 80, 85

  “Ice” nickname, 81

  minor league career, 80–81, 85–86, 100

  persona
l character, 81

  in trade talks, 85, 86, 88

  Williams, Matt, 205, 211

  Williams, Ted, 211

  Williams College, 44, 45–46

  Wilson, Ron, 176

  Wilson, Willie, 115

  Winfield, Dave

  1981 season, 7

  1981 World Series, 13

  1989 season, 10, 17

  1990 season, 17, 29

  1992 season, 29, 128

  1992 World Series, 29

  back surgery, 17

  career longevity, 29

  charitable foundation, 13–15, 48, 50

  contract, 13–14

  Henderson and, 18

  respect for, 15

  Spira and, 15, 16, 47–48, 89

  Steinbrenner’s war with, 13–15, 47–48, 50

  traded to California Angels, 29–30

  winter meetings (1992), 139–41

  Witt, Mike, 29, 38

  Wohlers, Mark, 300

  World Series. See also specific players and teams

  1994 cancellation, xii–xiii, 203–4, 208–10

  largest comeback, 300

  World Trade Center bombing (1993), 148

  Worthington, Craig, 88

  WPIX, 171

  Wurth, Leon, 75, 91–92

  Y

  Yankee Stadium

  Monument Park, 245

  New Jersey talks, 12–13, 163, 189

  new stadium funding, 190

  new stadium opening, 308

  New York City talks, 12, 189–90, 252

  as outdated, xii, 12

  Showalter’s upgrades, 109, 145–46

  “the Yankee Way,” 121–23, 151, 192–93, 200, 254, 292

  Z

  Zimmer, Don, 293

  Zomer, Don, 72

  1

  * * *

  “BLESS ME, FATHER, for I have sinned,” Billy Martin said.

  He was in second grade.

  Billy did this every Friday in 1936, entering the confessional of St. Ambrose Church to sit before the same priest, Father Dennis Moore. Like most second-graders, Billy did not actually have that many wrong deeds to tell Father Moore about. To what could he possibly confess?

  Failing to honor his mother and father? Billy did not talk back to his parents. For one, he did not know his father, who left his mother when Billy was an infant. And he did not dare cross his mother, who ruled her household with an iron fist—a representation that was more than figurative. Jenny Martin knew how to throw a punch. Everyone in the family had seen with their own eyes her prowess in a fistfight, with women, and men.

  Would little Billy confess to stealing?

  In the gritty, crowded, downtrodden streets of West Berkeley where Billy lived, there was almost nothing to steal. California in the Great Depression was indeed a Garden of Eden, “a paradise to live in or see,” as Woody Guthrie sang in a ballad of the era, but no one would ever sing the praises of Billy’s neighborhood. He lived in one of the hundreds of tiny homes crammed against the East Bay docks across from burgeoning San Francisco. The tightly spaced West Berkeley houses were scruffy, set back just ten feet from busy, unkempt streets. They were homes without lawns and with tattered backyard fences. Factories and fish-canning plants towered over the neighborhood and seeded the sky with a smoky haze. The smell of the processed seafood filled the streets.

  Two miles east of the water, the verdant hills of greater Berkeley climbed, a setting dotted with two-story middle-class homes and princely estates belonging to the administrators, professors, and staff from the nearby University of California at Berkeley. The roads in those shady hills were lined with flourishing fruit trees, graceful sequoias, and ponderosa pines. These were homes spread across spacious lots, leaving room for front and back yards and a driveway for the family car. There was a steady breeze off the water, and except when it was foggy, their view was San Francisco and the shimmering distant harbor—so long as they did not look down at the roughly square mile of West Berkeley dreariness below them.

  No, Billy Martin didn’t steal. Only if you count some of the cooked crabs kitchen workers left to cool behind Spenger’s Fish Grotto, the roomy seafood restaurant near the docks. But that truly was not stealing. The Spenger’s workers, who had walked the few blocks from their West Berkeley homes, left the crabs out on purpose, knowing it was a furtive way to help feed the neighborhood.

  What else could Billy confess to? Cursing? Taking the Lord’s name in vain?

  His mother, who, unlike her five children, did not go to confession, had that commandment cornered, splicing profanities into virtually every sentence.

  “Swearing was like breathing to my mother,” said Billy’s sister Pat Irvine. “She didn’t leave room for anybody else to swear. And if one of us swore, we’d get the back of her hand across our face anyway.

  “So we did not swear.”

  What else for Billy to confess then?

  There was nothing of note, and in the dark of the confessional, Billy would instead strike up a conversation with Father Moore. He was never shy, always at ease with adults even as an eight-year-old. He had a crooked mouth and bad teeth, but he flashed his smile easily, and Father Moore, like others in the neighborhood, enjoyed being around the little boy who lived at 1632 7th Street, next to the house his grandmother moved to near the turn of the century. Billy most often regaled the priest with tales of the games he played at Kenney Park, just ten blocks away. There was basketball, swimming, diving, football, boxing, table tennis, and, of course, Billy’s favorite, baseball. Father Moore, seated deep in a quiet corner of St. Ambrose’s white concrete cathedral, heard about them all.

  And when Billy was done talking about sports, the priest would ask about school and Billy’s friends. And only then would Billy talk about being embarrassed to wear the same clothes to school when some classmates clearly had a closetful of choices. He talked about being ridiculed for his overly large nose and jug ears, knowing that other kids called him “Pinocchio” behind his back. They made fun of his dungarees, which were frequently marked with grass stains and dirt—the evidence of his nonstop play at Kenney Park. But he wore them every day anyway. They were the only pants he had that fit.

  While there was always food on the table at home, Billy said he knew his stepfather, Jack Downey, had to work two or three jobs to produce enough money for a household of six and he worried for him. There never seemed to be enough money to go around in a neighborhood where few of the adults had gone to school past eighth grade.

  His mother had no car and had to walk everywhere, and Billy said he wanted a car. In fact, he wanted a big car someday, like the ones he had seen in the Berkeley hills. The kids from the crowded, flat, and uninspiring streets of West Berkeley called the well-dressed people they saw striding up and around the hills “the Goats,” a term still uttered in West Berkeley today and still delivered with a familiar disdain.

  Billy wanted a car like the Goats had. And he wanted their clothes. And he wanted the money to go to the movies every day of the week if he chose. And he wanted his own bedroom, even if he did not mind sleeping with his aging grandmother, who had helped raise him since birth.

  But as Father Moore related in a newspaper interview nearly twenty years later, “Life had already made Billy most vulnerable.” And that unnerved the priest.

  “There was an insecurity, a lot of the kids from West Berkeley had it,” Moore said of Billy. “It’s the worry that you might some day have nothing. It was the idea, a constant fear, that it could all be taken away at any moment.”

  But Father Moore also said that little Billy Martin had a plan. He knew the only way to get all the things he wanted was to work his way out of grimy West Berkeley. And at eight years old, Billy already knew that his way out was going to be baseball.

  The greatest baseball team in the world in 1936 was the New York Yankees, the team of Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Tony Lazzeri, and Red Ruffing. Beginning in 1936, the Yankees won six of the next eight World Series and were r
unners-up in a seventh. It was a team that was a continent and seemingly a civilization away from 7th Street’s foundationless, rough-hewn houses, but Billy told anyone who would listen that he was going to be a New York Yankee.

 

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