19
to 21
No, that’s not how many times 500-home run hitters have
been traded, it’s,
Baseball... Then and Now
Volume 6, #27, August 4, 2008
News Item: August 17, 1967 – The Houston Astros trade Eddie
Mathews to the Detroit Tigers for the ever-popular PTBNL.
As is usually the case in baseball, there are a multitude of subtleties
to explore in conjunction to the frenzy that took place on Thursday,
July 31, 2008. Let’s see…
- Three future, no-questions-asked Hall of Famers were traded
in the same day, in three different deals.
- The Pittsburgh Pirates once again confirmed their status as
a minor league farm team for the major leagues
- Theo Epstein once again confirmed his status as the reigning
genius among GMs.
- The principals in the tightest pennant race in baseball –
the National League East – fell on their collective faces
in their efforts to improve for the stretch run.
- A staggering total of 1118 home runs were traded in the person
of just two players.
For purposes of discussion herein, the first four angles can be
dismissed relatively quickly. Only an Act of Congress (or hanging
around with Pete Rose’s friends) will keep Ken Griffey, Jr.,
Manny Ramirez and Ivan Rodriguez out of Cooperstown. Trading two-thirds
of the best-all-around hitting outfield in the National League for
eight minor leaguers does nothing to dispel the thought that the
Pirates are not playing for keeps. On the other hand, Epstein and
the Red Sox are playing for keeps. Faced with an untenable situation,
that is, Manny Being Manny to the extent that he managed to alienate
his teammates and, even worse, was dogging it in the field, Epstein,
despite being backed into the proverbial corner, managed to turn
Manny (and a couple of minor leaguers they won’t miss at all)
into a younger, cheaper All-Star outfielder. Said outfielder, known
as ex-Pirate Jason Bay, while not being as good a hitter as Ramirez,
is hardly chopped liver at the plate (his OPS+ for the year is 138,
Manny’s is 147) and is a whole lot better fielder (of course,
my nine year old twins Jared and Joseph are better fielders than
Manny, as is 10 year old Conor Coyne, but you get the picture) and
will prove to be a better citizen of the Fens as well. While the
Sox may or may not be a better team on the field today than they
were at this time last week, they’re not all that worse, either.
Compare, if you will, what the Phillies got for two stars (Curt
Schilling and Scott Rolen) who backed them into similar you‘ve-got-to-trade-them
corners in 2000 and 2002 … Omar Daal, Nelson Figueroa, Travis
Lee, Vicente Padilla, Placido Polanco, Mike Timlin and Bud Smith.
Theo Epstein is a genius. Finally, those same Phillies, along with
their compatriots formerly know as the Mets and the Marlins, despite
(or maybe because of) various holes in their rosters, managed to
pick up exactly Arthur Rhodes (to the Marlins) at the trade deadline.
Although all three teams made efforts to improve their pitching
and hitting on July 31, all three failed, partly because none of
them have Theo Epstein running the show. (And partly because they
don’t have the minor league assets of the Red Sox.)
No, the Big Story on Action News, certainly from the historical
perspective, were those 1118 home runs changing location. The trading
of Manny Ramirez and Ken Griffey, Jr., both on the same day was,
to put it mildly, unprecedented. In all of baseball history, there
had previously been just seven trades wherein a player with 500+
home runs was traded… and three of those deals involved the
same player – Frank Robinson. Wait, there’s more…
only three times previously has a player with 500+ home runs been
traded during the season.
Since F. Robby was dealt three times after he reached 500 home
runs (exactly what that says is a little hard to figure at this
point), prior to July 31, 2008, just five individual big hitters
have been part of an actual trade… Henry Aaron, Willie Mays,
Sammy Sosa, Robinson and Eddie Mathews. Leaving aside Robinson’s
case(s) for the moment, the other four were all under unusual circumstances.
| Name |
HR when traded |
from/to |
| Henry Aaron |
733 |
Braves to Brewers |
| Willie Mays |
646 |
Giants to Mets |
| Sammy Sosa |
574 |
Cubs to Orioles |
| Frank Robinson |
503 |
Orioles to Dodgers |
| Frank Robinson |
522 |
Dodgers to Angels |
| Frank Robinson |
572 |
Angels to Indians |
| Eddie Mathews |
503 |
Astros to Tigers |
Aaron and Mays were both going home. After breaking Babe Ruth’s
career home run record early in the 1974 season, the 40 year old
Aaron would hit just 18 more in a little over 300 at bats during
the rest of the year. Although still a good outfielder (his fielding
percentage and range factor were above the league norms) in ’74,
Aaron could only play in 112 games that year, having, in fact, not
topped 130 games since the 1971 season. Although he was still a
dangerous hitter (a 177 OPS+ in ‘73 and a 128 OPS+ in ’74),
he was clearly slowing down and the Braves, who weren’t going
anywhere themselves, traded him and his 733 home runs back to Milwaukee
(where the Brewers weren’t going anywhere either), the city
where he’d played the first dozen years of his career. For
Dave May and a Player To Be Named Later (minor leaguer Roger Alexander.)
There he played two more years as a DH, hitting 22 more home runs
with an OPS+ of right around 100 in 736 at bats. Mays, in going
from the San Francisco (where he never seemed quite at home) Giants
back to New York (in this case the Mets) on May 11, 1972, was one
of the rare cases where a home run hitter of this stature was traded
during the season. For the one and only Charlie Williams. Although
the 41 year old Willie seemingly had very little left after 21 years
and 646 home runs, he bounced back to fashion a 145 OPS+ in 195
at bats for the rest of the ’72 season, thanks mainly to 43
walks (which says something about the rest of the Mets’ unthreatening
lineup.) Of course, he was clearly beyond the hill in 1973, hitting
just .211 in 209 at bats.
Sosa, like Manny, had worn out his welcome, in this case with the
Cubs, despite the fact that he’d hit 35 home runs in just
478 at bats in 2004. So they shipped him off to Baltimore prior
to the start of the 2005 season for Jerry Hairston, Jr., Mike Fontenot
and a minor leaguer – not much of a return for 574 home runs,
including 367 in the preceding seven seasons. Sammy proceeded to
stink up the harbor in Baltimore (not an easy thing to do) with
a 78 OPS+ in 102 games before retiring for the 2006 season and making
an average comeback (102 OPS+) at the age of just 38 with the Rangers
in 2007.
The Mathews trade was his second. After spending 15 years with
the Braves organization in three cities (a truly unique feat), including
13 years teaming with Aaron, Mathews was cruelly turned out of Atlanta
following the 1966 season… traded to the Astros along with
Robby Alomar’s dad for strikeout king Dave Nicholson and Bob
Bruce. At that point, on the last day of 1966, Matthews had 493
home runs. Matthews hit 10 homers for the Astros in 1967, including
his 500th (great trivia question there – for what team did
Eddie Mathews hit his 500th home run?) and then, with the Tigers
in a three-team pennant race in the summer of 1967, he went from
Houston to Detroit on August 17 for yet another PTBNL. However,
in this case, the PTBNL was a pretty fair relief pitcher, Fred “Flintstone”
Gladding, who would save 76 games for Houston over six seasons.
Although the Tigers would fall short in ’67, Mathews hung
around long enough to play in the 1968 World Series with them (right
around the time of his 37th birthday) and finish with 512 home runs,
thus cementing his future status as either the second- or third-best
third baseman of all time.
Robinson’s odd odyssey included two true blockbuster trades.
The first came after the 1971 season (and a World Series wherein
the O’s coughed up the bit against the Pirates) when Robby
and his 503 homers went to LA, along with Pete Richert, for four
young Dodgers -- Doyle Alexander (the only even decent player to
come to Baltimore in the deal and one who would later become famous
for being traded even-up for John Smoltz), Bob O’Brien, Sergio
Robles and Royle Stillman in a trade, that to this day, still doesn’t
make any season, Maybe the O’s thought he was an old 36. After
one year in LA, Robby was on the move again in an even bigger trade.
Along with his 522 home runs, he went across town to the Angels,
accompanied by Billy Grabarkewitz, Bill Singer, Bobby Valentine
and Mike Strahler, for Andy Messersmith and Ken McMullen. By way
of attempting to explain this one, it should be noted that Messersmith
was a good pitcher for the Angels from 1969 to 1972, and would also
have three good years for the Dodgers (53 wins) before flaming out
with the Braves as one of the first free agents. Still, Singer and
Messersmith were pretty much an even match – the former winning
20 twice and 118 for his career, and the latter winning 20 twice
and 130 for his career. Which makes this essentially a trade of
a certain Hall of Famer, plus two decent utilitymen, for Ken McMullen
(whose career OPS+ is about the same as Grabarkewitz’). Go
figure.
Robby’s travels as a player ended on September 12, 1974,
a little more than seven years after Eddie Mathews was traded with
503 home runs, and two-and-half seasons after Willie Mays was traded
with 646. With possibly the idea already in mind of making him the
first African-American manager, the Indians picked up Robinson and
his then-572 home runs from the Angels for a short melody, namely
Ken Suarez (who would never play for the Angels) and Rusty Torres.
As noted, it was just the third time that a player with 500+ home
runs had been traded during the season. And now, just short of 34
years later, it’s happened twice in one day. Only in baseball.
-- John Shiffert
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