Posts Tagged ‘Donn Clendenon’
A KEY DATE IN METS HISTORY
Forty-one years ago today, the New York Mets acquired first baseman Donn Clendenon from the Montreal Expos in exchange for Kevin Collins, Steve Renko, Bill Carden, and Dave Colon. Clendenon would hit .252 with 12 home runs and 37 RBI in 72 games for the Mets in the 1969 regular season, injecting some much-needed right-handed power into the lineup. He starred in the World Series that October, going 5 for 14 with 3 home runs and 4 RBI against the vaunted Baltimore Orioles staff to earn MVP honors in the fall classic for the Miracle Mets. Clendenon’s best full season with New York was in 1970, when he hit .288 with 22 home runs and 97 RBI.
On this same date in 1983, the then-woeful Mets again acquired a first baseman who would prove to be a key figure in a World Championship. The St. Louis Cardinals sent Keith Hernandez to the Mets in exchange for Neil Allen and Rick Ownbey. Hernandez hit .306 for the remainder of 1983 and hit .311 in 1984, when he finished second in the National League MVP voting and showed invaluable on-the-field leadership as the Mets became pennant contenders for the first time in a decade. Consistent Keith hit .309 in 1985 and .310 in 1986, when he helped led the team to its second World Championship. In 1987, he was named the franchise’s first team captain and hit .290. Injuries dogged him throughout 1988 as his average fell dramatically, though he still helped New York win the Eastern Division and knocked in 5 runs in a seven-game postseason series against the Los Angeles Dodgers. That season, he also claimed his eleventh consecutive Gold Glove.
HOW DID ‘69 METS WIN SERIES? PITCHING, PITCHING AND MORE PITCHING (AND CLENDENON AND WEIS)
Now that we’ve completed our day-by-day recreation of the 1969 World Championship season, we can take some time to analyze how the Mets pulled off their miraculous upset of the Orioles in five games.
First, if someone had said that New York’s top two hitters from their everyday lineup, leadoff man Tommie Agee and third-spot slugger Cleon Jones, would hit a combined .162 (6 for 37) in the series – and that Art Shamsky, the only other Met (aside from Jones) to post a .300 average in the regular season, would be hitless in 6 at-bats in the World Series after hitting .538 against the Braves in the NLCS - one might have thought Baltimore had swept the series.
So how did the Mets win? Simple: pitching. True, New York had a less than amazin’ .220 team average in the series, but their pitching staff held the O’s to an anemic .146 team mark in the five games. After scoring 4 runs off Tom Seaver in Game One, the AL champs scored just 5 runs over the final 4 games. Jerry Koosman, the team’s second best hurler in the regular season, was its best in the series with a 2-0 record and a 2.04 ERA in 17 2/3 innings. With Koosman’s two wins bookending Gary Gentry’s 6 2/3 scoreless innings in Game Three and Seaver’s 10-inning masterpiece in Game Four, New York subdued the Birds by holding them to just 4 extra-base hits across the 5 games. Out of the bullpen, Ron Taylor, Nolan Ryan, and Don Cardwell threw 5 2/3 innings without allowing a run.
The top two men in the Baltimore lineup, Paul Blair and Don Buford, had just 4 hits in 40 at-bats. Boog Powell led the Orioles with a .263 average but had no home runs or RBI.
Meanwhile, the Mets got enough offense from two members of their right-handed platoon lineup - one expected and one unexpected. Seeing the majority of the action at their positions with southpaws Mike Cuellar and Dave McNally starting 2 games aipiece for the O’s, cleanup hitter Donn Clendenon hit .357 with 3 home runs, and eighth-place hitter Al Weis opened eyes with 5 hits in 11 at-bats (.455) including the game-winning RBI in Game Two and a game-tying home run in Game Five. As they had throughout their 100-win campaign, the 1969 Amazin; Mets used timely hitting and dominant pitching to bring a happy end to a miracle season.
‘THERE ARE NO WORDS’

Thursday, October 16, 1969
The New York Mets are World Series champions.
The Amazin’s overcame an early three-run deficit to beat the Baltimore Orioles 5-3 in Game Five and close out the series at home. Jerry Koosman pitched a complete game to earn his second series win, series MVP Donn Clendenon homered in his third straight appearance, and Al Weis hit a key game-tying home run, his first ever homer at Shea Stadium.
After hitting .215 in the regular season, Weis finished with a .455 series average.
The Mets fell behind in the third when Orioles pitcher Dave McNally smacked a two-run shot over the leftfield wall. Three batters later, Frank Robinson drove a towering home run over the centerfield fence for a 3-0 Orioles lead.
But it was the last time Baltimore would score in ‘69.
Koosman settled into a groove, and the Mets got on the board in the sixth when Cleon Jones was hit by a pitch and Clendenon followed with a drive that ricocheted off the upper deck in leftfield. At first, umpire Lou DiMuro ruled that McNally’s pitch had missed Jones’s feet before it hit the ground and bounced into the Mets dugout. But manager Gil Hodges emerged with a ball that bore the mark of shoe polish, and after inspecting it, DiMuro awarded Jones first. This enraged Baltimore manager Earl Weaver, as in the top of the inning, Frank Robinson had struck out after claiming to have been hit by a Koosman pitch.
With the Mets trailing by one, Al Weis sent the fans to their feet with his game-tying home run off McNally in the seventh. In the eighth against reliever Eddie Watt, Jones led off with a double high off the centerfield fence, and he scored the go-ahead run one batter latter on Ron Swoboda’s bloop single to left, which landed just in front of a lunging Don Buford to the delight of the enraptured Shea faithful. After Ed Charles flew out, Jerry Grote lined a hard grounder to Boog Powell at first, and when Watt mishandled Powell’s toss to first, Swoboda came around to score a key insurance run.
Protecting a two-run lead, Koosman made a mistake in walking Frank Robinson to begin the ninth. But Koosman got Powell to ground into a force play and retired Brooks Robinson on a fly to right.
Davey Johnson stepped to the plate next. I recount what happened next in 1969: The Year Everything Changed:
Second baseman Davey Johnson hit a deep fly ball to left that might have made many a fan hold their breath, but when Jones stopped moving backward and calmly settled under the ball just shy of the warning track, it was all over.
He collected the ball and brought his hands down as he practically knelt to the Shea grass in a solemn gesture. Veteran baseball writer George Vecsey wrote, “Shea Stadium was caught quivering as Jones sighted the ball, and the whole city erupted as he caught it, and the fans poured onto the field, and the New York Mets were the champions of baseball. There were a million exciting things happening and it was hard to focus on any one incident. But out in left field, if you had been looking there, you would have seen Cleon Jones, with fans racing over to pummel him, stop for a moment, drop quickly to one knee. Later, he explained his brief genuflection. ‘Someone was good to us.’ ”
The Mets, the laughingstock of baseball in their first seven years of existence, were now the best team in all of the land. All jubilant hell broke loose. Fans ran onto the field in celebration. Some collected dirt from the infield; others dug out home plate as a souvenir. It was just before 3:30 on that Thursday afternoon, October 16, and throughout the city, New Yorkers began their celebration. White-collar confetti danced downward upon spontaneous revelers. Strangers danced in the streets, young with old, black with white—one of the few moments of harmony during a year that had seen the nation divided by age and race.
In the stands, one Karl Ehrhardt – a.k.a. “Sign Man” – the commercial artist who has attended Mets games since 1964 with a catalog of message-emblazoned signs to hold up for seemingly any occasion that might arise during the game, held up a sign that summed up the improbability of events that New Yorkers and the rest of the baseball world had just witnessed:
THERE ARE NO WORDS.
WORLD SERIES GAME FIVE: Mets 5, Orioles 3. W: Koosman (2-0) L: Watt (0-1)
METS WIN SERIES 4-1
METS EVEN SERIES ON KOOSMAN’S GEM, WEIS’S TWO-OUT HIT SCORES GAME WINNER
Sunday, October 12, 1969
A Mets starting pitcher finally threw a good game in the playoffs, and the bottom of the order delivered when it counted most for New York in Game Two of the World Series.
After three rocky outings in the NLCS by its the team’s top three hurlers - Tom Seaver, Jerry Koosman, and Gary Gentry – and a loss by Seaver in Game One of the World Series, Koosman took the mound in Memorial Stadium and carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning against the potent Baltimore Orioles lineup.
Don Clendenon had given the team its first lead in a Series game with his home run off Dave McNally to begin the fourth inning. Koosman, owenr of a 17-9 record in the regular season, made that single stand up until Paul Blair lead off the seventh with a single to left, stole second, and scored on Brooks Robinson’s two-out single into center.
The score was knotted in the top of the ninth when Ed Charles singled with two outs and moved to third on a perfectly executed hit-and-run by Jerry Grote. Manager Gil Hodges left eighth-place hitter Al Weis, who hit just .215 in the regular season and had just one at-bat in the NLCS, in to face McNally. Weis had singled off the Orioles southpaw back in the third, and he rewarded Hodges’s confidence by rapping a single into left to score Charles with the go-ahead run.
Koosman took that lead into the bottom of the ninth and retired the first two men in the Orioles order, Paul Blair and Don Buford. But there the lefty faltered, issuing walks to both Frank Robinson and Boog Powell to put the tying and winning runs on base. Hodges called for closer Ron Taylor to put out the fire.
Up stepped the dangerous Brooks Robinson, who drove in 84 runs in the 1969 season and starred with a .500 average in the ALCS. Robinson swung at a Taylor offering and bounced a hard smash to Charles at third base. The man they call The Glider gloved it and took a step toward third for the force out. But realizing he might not beat Frank Robinson to the base, Charles stopped and fired across the diamond to first. Clendenon stretched and dug Charles’s throw out of the dirt to get the final out and preserve a 2-1 win in the Mets’ first World Series victory.
Both Charles and Weis were 2 for 4 in the game. McNally suffered his first postseason loss despite giving up just six hits while striking out seven batters.
The series now moves to New York, where the Mets and Orioles will square off in Game Three at Shea Stadium on Tuesday, October 14.
WORLD SERIES GAME TWO: Mets 2, Orioles 1. W: Koosman (1-0) L: McNally (0-1)
RECREATING THE MIRACLE SEASON, 4/20/69
CUBS SPLIT TWINBILL IN CANADA
Fergie Jenkins struck out 10 Expos in Game One of a doubleheader Sunday at Jarry Park. After 5 innings, the Cubs had touched pitchers Carl Morton and Steve Shea for 6 runs, and Jenkins made the lead stand as he threw a complete game. Ron Santo scored 3 runs and Al Spangler knocked in 3 for Chicago.
In Game Two, Donn Clendenon’s touched Joe Niekro for a 3-run homer in the 1st inning. Second baseman Gary Sutherland collected 3 hits for Montreal, and Coco Laboy tallied 2. Expos rookie Mike Wegener went 7 2/3 innings for the win.
Cubs 6, Expos 3 (1) W: Jenkins (2-1) L: Morton (0-1)
Expos 4, Cubs 2 (2) W: Wegener (1-0) L: Niekro (0-1) SV: McGinn (1)
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CATCHER GROTE LIFTS METS OVER CARDS
Mets bats busted out in a big way at Busch Stadium on Sunday.
The Cardinals came out swinging and put up a 3-spot in the first inning off New York starter Jim McAndrew. St. Louis would never score again, but the Mets did. Jerry Grote got his team started with an RBI double in the top of the 2nd. Then in the 5th, his leadoff walk sparked a rally that included a home run from Kevin Collins and 2-run homer from and Ron Swoboda. By the end of the frame, the Amazin’s had batted around and rung up 5 runs off St. Louis starter Nelson Briles. New York scored exploded for 5 more runs in the final three innings. In the 9th, the Mets catcher’s opposite field double with the bases loaded scored all 3 runners.
A Mets lineup that had been sluggish in the early season recorded 14 hits in the game. Cleon Jones went 3 for 4 and scored 4 runs, Grote was 3 for 4 with 4 RBI, and Ed Kranepool and Swoboda combined for 5 RBI. Fastballer Nolan Ryan came got the win by pitching 4 2/3 scoreless innings in relief.
Mets 11, Cardinals 3 W: Ryan (1-0) L: Briles (0-2) SV: Koonce (3)
NL EAST STANDINGS AFTER APRIL 20
Team Name W L PCT GB CHICAGO CUBS 11 2 .846 - Pittsburgh Pirates 8 4 .667 2.5 Montreal Expos 5 7 .417 5.5 NEW YORK METS 5 7 .417 5.5 St. Louis Cardinals 4 8 .333 6.5 Philadelphia Phillies 3 8 .273 7.0