New Jersey Newspapers - August 26, 1980
Camden Courier-Post
Dodgers outslug Phils in bench-clearing 9th
By Rusty Pray of the Courier-Post
PHILADELPHIA – Ho hum. For the first five innings or so, last night's confrontation between the Phillies and Dodgers had all the appearances of a normal, everyday baseball game.
There was Dodger lefthander Jerry Reuss, he of the 15-4 record and 2.12 earned run average, cruising along with a 3-1 lead he helped create with his first major-league home run, a two-run shot to left field off Nino Espinosa.
But wait... The Phils and Dodgers seldom stage a just another ballgame. And, by the time this one had ended, the two clubs had, in order, twice exchanged the lead; gotten a two-run single off a pitch that was supposed to be ball two in an intentional walk; had a batter hit by a pitch and charge the mound, and staged a bench-clearing brawl.
DODGER CATCHER Joe Ferguson, pinch hitting for Rick Monday against lefthander Tug McGraw, became the catalyst of the fight when he reached across the plate and punched a McGraw pitch – intended to be part of an intentional walk – to right field for the final runs of a four-run ninth that gave Los Angeles an 8-4 victory.
"I always try to hit every pitch when they're walking me," Ferguson later said. "Unfortunately, in 13 years they've never thrown one close enough."
McGraw did, and was so upset with himself that he threw his next four pitches extremely close to the next hitter, righthander Bill Russell. McGraw missed with his first three, then nailed Russell on the buttocks with his fourth.
Russell immediately retaliated, charging the mound and going after McGraw, who gamely dropped his glove and held his ground. The incident touched off a wild, if short-lived, melee that did not officially end until Dodger Manager Tom Lasorda was ejected by second base umpire John McSherry.
LATER, A quietly distraught McGraw was quite willing to talk about Ferguson's embarrassing hit, but wouldn't discuss the circumstances that led to the melee.
"I just want to keep the thing in the proper perspective," McGraw said. "It's never happened to me before. He went out after it pretty good. I didn't even pay that much attention...
"I don't prefer to discuss the Monday night fights."
The Dodgers, however, were somewhat more vocal in their response to McGraw hitting Russell with a 3-0 pitch.
"THE HITTER'S hands are tied," said Russell, who was automatically ejected when he charged the mound. "I'm not proud of what I did, but I had to do it. He's throwing a ball 85-90 m.p.h. How do I protect myself? The only protection I have is my helmet. If I go out there with a bat, that's assault with a deadly weapon.
"Throwing at the hitter is part of the game, but something like that... I know he's upset with himself, but if you're going to take it out on somebody, take it out on Ferguson."
Said Lasorda, who was ejected after arguing with crew chief McSherry that McGraw should have joined Russell on the sidelines: "The thing that made me upset was the fact that Tug was allowed to stay in the game. If you brush back, that's a different thing, but he threw at the guy four pitches. That shouldn't be in baseball."
Second baseman Davey Lopes, who opened the eventful ninth with a walk off Dickie Noles and scored the go-ahead run on Dusty Baker's double off Warren Brusstar, was even more emphatic.
"THERE WILL be a day when McGraw hits and he'll be dead and you can put that in the newspapers," said Lopes. "That was bush. He's got his day coming. I don't care if it's eight years from now. I thought he had a little more class. I guess he doesn't."
Buried beneath all the goings-on was a game important to both teams. The Phillies, who remain 3½ games behind the Pirates in the National League East, put together a two-out, three-run rally in the sixth that gave them a 4-3 lead and sent Reuss to the showers.
Manny Trillo's two-run triple over the head of rightfielder Jay Johnstone was the big hit of the inning. But Mike Schmidt and Greg Luzinski, who went 3-for-3, set it up with singles and Garry Maddox followed it with an RBI double to right.
The Dodgers tied it in the eighth off Noles when Monday doubled, went to third on Russell's sacrifice and scored on a single by No. 8 hitter Steve Yeager. The Phillies might have intentionally walked Yeager to set up a possible double play, but decided to pitch to him rather than a pinch hitter.
Or, maybe Manager Dallas Green was playing it safe. After all, anything can happen during an intentional walk. Just ask Joe Ferguson... and Tug McGraw.
PHIL UPS – Crowd of 34,267 was on hand in Veterans Stadium to witness the wild happenings... Crew chief McSherry said that in his report to the league he would say that Tug McGraw definitely tried to hit the batter on the fourth pitch... McGraw draws a $50 fine for throwing at Russell... "He can pay that out of his piggy bank," snorted Lasorda... Trillo tied a club high by hitting in his 12th straight game... Pete Rose, who was 1-for-4, is now tied with Tris Speaker for fifth place on the all-time hits list with 3,515... Dodgers placed outfielder Reggie Smith on the 15-day disabled list with a sore right shoulder... Don Stanhouse, plagued all season with arm problems, picked up the. win with two innings of one-hit relief… Don Sutton, scheduled to pitch tonight for the Dodgers, was returned to Los Angeles because of a hairline fracture of his right big toe... Rick Sutcliffe will take his place against Bob Walk.
Sometimes it helps to be a little crazy
By Ray W. Kelly of the Courier-Post
PHILADELPHIA – The Phillies are beginning to look like the guy who discovered one day that his smoke alarm factory just burnt down, his wife skipped town in his rented car and his son had just been elected homecoming queen.
And, as he stood on the ledge of a building screaming at the sky, "Why me?", a voice from the crowd below yelled, "What's the matter? Can't you take a joke?"
Pity the poor Phils. They have run out of the ways and means to laugh at a brand of luck that must have originated from a doll, a handful of needles and a strange incantation by Woody Allen.
Stumbling over invisible rocks in the outfield, watching opposing pitchers bit their first major league home run and having the most basic of baseball maneuvers, such as the changing of relief pitchers or the intentional walking of a batter, turn into the center ring of Monty Python's Flying Circus finally took its toll on the Phillies.
You can only take so many cream pies in the kisser before you come up grumbling the kind of high-caloried suggestions that Manager Dallas Green made to umpire Paul Pryor in the ninth inning of last night's 8-4 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers.
That was just before the Dodgers scored four runs to break a 4-4 tie. It was also before the retaliation pitch, the fight, the lockerroom scream scene and all the rest, which we will get to in due time.
First there was Green trudging out of the dugout after watching reliever Dickie Noles walk the leadoff batter, who in turned reached second base on the mishandling of a Dodger sacrifice bunt.
Green told borne plate umpire Lanny Harris that he wanted Warren Brusstar to come in out of the bullpen. Harris told first base umpire Paul Pryor, who waved Tug McGraw to the mound.
Now, although it is true that all those relief pitchers look alike, it is possible to distinguish righthanders from the lefthanders.
"Wake up!" Green screamed at Pryor, the Phils' top candidate for the annual Rip Van Winkle Award.
"Maybe I should have stuck with Tug," the manager would say later, after Brusstar yielded a two-run double, an intentional walk and another double before passing in review on the way to the showers and giving one Veterans Stadium heckler an Italian salute. Either that or he got a cramp in his bicep muscle.
Back for a return engagement on the mound, McGraw tried to intentionally walk Dodger pinchhitter Joe Ferguson. Only Ferguson decided to fulfill a lifelong dream by reaching out and poking Tug's toss to catcher Bob Boone into a two-run single to right field.
"This is not a court of law," Tug would say later, when cross examination by the press went into the matter of baseball justice, which he dispensed upon the next batter, Bill Russell.
Justice may be blind, but Russell saw the light when he danced away from three pitches before getting tattooed in the county seat.
Russell charged Tug. Tug charged Russell. Everyone charged everyone else. And, when the dust cleared, Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda's speaking engagement at home plate was cut short by the umpires, who objected to either Tommy's language or not being invited to Frank Sinatra's softball game later that night.
That's the way it goes. Lasorda gets to tell his side of the story to Old Blue Eyes and Green gets to sing the blues to the writers, one of whom demanded to know, "Do you condone that type of baseball?"
What the Phillies manager doesn't condone is having one more guy throw a banana peel in his path. So, he sang the 1812 Overture, complete with booming cannons and the order to evacuate all civilians from his office.
Yet, even as he fumed behind closed doors, Green's refuge was threatened as pacifist-clubhouseman Kenny Bush clashed verbally with several Los Angeles writers looking to pay their respects.
"Is everyone around here crazy?" asked pitcher Dick Ruthven, who happened to be walking by.
The answer is no. But, if they were, it would certainly help explain an awful lot.
McCarver set for action in fourth decade
By Rusty Pray of the Courier-Post
PHILADELPHIA – The Phillies announced yesterday they will activate Tim McCarver Sept. 1 so that the retired catcher can become the 11th player in modern major league baseball history to play in four decades.
McCarver would be the first catcher ever to accomplish the feat. He retired after last season with the Phillies and became a part of their club's radio and television crew.
The Phillies also will bring up eight minor league players next month.
Joining the club from Oklahoma City will be pitcher Marty Bystrom (5-5), second baseman Jay Loviglio (.285), catcher Don McCormack (.268), shortstop Luis Aguayo (.249), and outfielder Orlando Isales (.272).
Players coming from Reading will be 19-year-old lefthander Mark Davis (18-6, 181 strikeouts in 183 innings), outfielder Bob Dernier (.298) and catcher Ozzie Virgil (-270, 26 home runs, 94 RBIs).
The Oklahoma City season ends Friday and their players will join the Phillies in San Francisco Aug. 25. Reading, however, leads the second half of the Eastern League by a game and could become involved in playoffs. In that event, their players would join the Phillies Sept. 8.
Rose best in decade?
NEW YORK – Bjorn Borg, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Pete Rose, and Pele were among 10 athletes selected yesterday as the leading performers in their respective sports, ending the first phase of the election of the Athlete of the Decade, 1970-80.
Selected as contenders for the award were: Abdul-Jabbar (basketball), Borg (men's tennis), Roberto Duran (boxing), Chris Evert Lloyd (women's tennis), Guy Lafleur (hockey), Nancy Lopez Melton (women's golf), Pele (soccer), Rose (baseball), O.J. Simpson (football) and Tom Watson (men's golf).
The winners were selected by a panel of 150 sportswriters and broadcasters. One performer will be elected Athlete of the Decade, and will receive the award at a dinner here in November.
The award is sponsored by the American Cancer Society.
The Press of Atlantic City
Dodgers Dump Phillies
As Full Moon Takes Its Toll
Los Angeles 8, Philadelphia 4
By Harry Hoffman, Press Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA – Monday night's full moon not exert an influence over Veterans Stadium until the ninth inning. Then suddenly a tight Major League baseball game turned into a whacko war dance.
When the inning had finally melted into the moonlight, the visiting Los Angeles Dodgers had scored four runs and wound up with an 8-4 victory over the Phillies.
The top of ninth had an ominous flavor from the start when the third of four Philadelphia pitchers, Dickie Noles, walked Dave Lopes and started the 34,267 fans fidgeting. They were watching a 4-4 battle at the time and did not like to see that leadoff walked.
Rudy Law turned a perfect sacrifice bunt attempt toward third base into a single. When catcher Bob Boone's throw hit the runner on the leg, Lopes hustled to third.
Now is when the full moon started to take over. Philadelphia Manager Dallas Green strolled to the mound. He called for a relief pitcher. When he saw southpaw Tug McGraw emerge from the bullpen cart, he started to vent his rage on first base umpire Paul Pryor because he had called for Warren Brusstar.
"I had told the home plate umpire (Lanny Harris) I wanted Brusstar. Maybe it wasn't a big thing. But I just wanted Pryor to wake up. He's been asleep on us most of the year. Tonight, he missed that pickoff play because he was asleep," Green said.
McGraw was sent back and Brusstar came on.
Dusty Baker apparently was glad to see Brusstar, since he lined a run scoring double to centerfield. However, that old devil moon got Baker caught in a rundown when he hustled to third base only to find Law still there. Baker was tagged out by shortstop Larry Bowa.
It could have hurt the Dodgers, b but it didn't.
Steve Garvey was given an intentional walk. Ron Cey lined a double to leftfield, scoring Law and sending Garvey to third.
This time, Green got the relief pitcher wanted, McGraw, maybe. Green told McGraw to give pinchhitter Joe Ferguson an intentional walk. Again, the wackos intervened. Tug's second pitch was too close to the plate. Ferguson punched a single to rightfield, scoring two runs, which was a little better than just strolling to first base.
That was only the first punch.
A moment later, on a 3-0 pitch, McGraw hit batter Bill Russell in the ribs. Russell never broke stride as he burst toward the mound to throw a punch at the pitcher. Both benches erupted. The next few minutes everyone was throwing punches and catching punches.
When the mele was over, the only person ejected was Dodger Manager Tommy LaSorda, who did his own war dance around umpire John McSherry.
After the game, Green ejected a lot more people from his office. When the manager was asked if he condoned that kind of baseball (the hitting of Russell), he made LaSorda look like a ballet dancer. First Green answered the question with a very loud string of bleeps. Then he waved all the writers out of the office.
Until the ninth inning, the game rolled along on its own merit. The Dodgers broke on top against starter Nino Espinosa with three runs in the second inning. The most damaging blow was a two-run homer by starting pitcher Jerry Reuss, the first his Major League career.
Bob Boone singled home a run for the Phils in the fifth inning. The home team chased Reuss and took a a 4-3 lead after the first two men were out in the sixth inning.
Mike Schmidt singled. Greg Luzinski also singled for his third straight one base knock. Manny Trillo, the National I League's leading hitter, lined a two-run triple to right-center and tied the score. A double over first baseman Garvey's glove by Garry Maddox scored Trillo with a go-ahead run.
Noles was on the mound when the Dodgers tied the score in the eighth and wound up with his fourth defeat in five decisions. Rick Monday doubled, was sacrificed to third by Russell and scored on a single by Steve Yeager.
Quiet, Personable Ozark’s Gone; Now Phils Have Talkative Green
Tales of Hoffman by Harry Hoffman
PHILADELPHIA – Danny Ozark was back in town Monday night with the Dodgers. That makes it a good time to throw open again this line of debate: What is the best way to handle the current crop of Philadelphia Phillies, to get the most out of the multitalents they possess as individuals?
During his managerial tenure, Ozark used the quiet, calm approach. Sometimes he would come down hard on an individual when he thought that player was not putting out his utmost. But Ozark did it behind closed doors away from the media.
Ozark always protected his guys from newspaper people. No matter how hard a guy with a pad and pencil tried to lure Ozark into a negative quote, Ozark would cut him short. He'd readily knock himself, but never one of his flock.
If you fans have been listening or reading you know the current manager of the Phils, Dallas Green, has a loud voice and is not worried about using it. His philosophy is the players are big boys now, and should be able to handle criticism or praise on an equal basis.
If Green feels one of his players screwed up a game, he says so. He doesn't worry about hurting feelings. He thinks the huge paychecks most of the guys take home is salve enough for their injured pride.
Right now the Phils are in a situation that is causing a bit of dissension. When Greg Luzinski came off the disabled list Monday, Green found himself with four outfielders.
Rookie Lonnie Smith, who took over leftfield on a regular basis when the Bull left the ring for the disabled list July 8, is currently bashing the ball at a .356 pace, stealing bases like a wild man and generating more excitement for the fans than any young player has in this town for some years.
Bake McBride in rightfield, despite nagging knee problems, is in the midst of his most production big league season. He's hitting .313, has already driven home a career high 74 runs and is a defensive genius.
Garry Maddox in centerfield has gone hot and cold with the bat, but his glove always stays warm. And his ability to grab everything in centerfield is a major reason the Phils have stayed in contention.
For Ozark, there would be no problem. He would immediately sit down the rookie and go with the veterans. Ozark would figure the veterans have already been in a few pennant battles, and thus are better prepared to cope with the pressure.
But Green doesn't think that way. As the director of the Phillie farm system before he became manager, Green often got upset with Ozark for his mishandling of the young players sent to the main club.
"I will go with the guys who are producing and Lonnie definitely has been producing for this team," Green said Monday.
"I can't worry if some of the veterans get upset. They should know by now we are in a tough pennant race. It's up to me to manage the way I think will help us win. It's up to them to put out their best every game to help us.”
For the second straight night with a southpaw pitcher, Jerry Ruess, on the mound, McBride was not in the starting lineup. Smith moved into rightfield while the Bull, who stroked his 16th homer Sunday, was in left.
"Sure, I'm not happy about it," McBride said. "I've done a lot to get us where we are and I feel physically able to play. I've never really had any trouble hitting against Reuss. In fact the stats show I hit most southpaws as well as righthanders when I have my stroke together like it is right now. I want to keep playing, but the manager makes up the lineup."
Green says that lineup will be determined before each game.
"A manager has a lot of tough decisions to make. I'll make them the way I think is best for the Philadelphia Phillies.”
Ozark might see it another way. But right now he's a coach for the LA Dodgers and deesn't have to worry about the Phillie lineup.
Ozark won three straight division titles with the Phils, but never was able to get them by the playoffs in the World Series. Then when the Phils dropped into third place behind Pittsburgh and Montreal last season, Ozark was gone.
Now it's put-up or shut-up time for Green.
Phils To Activate McCarver; He’ll Play in 4th Decade
PHILADELPHIA (AP) – The Philadelphia Phillies said Monday they will activate Tim McCarver Sept. 1 so that the retired catcher can become the 11th player in modern major league baseball history to play in four decades.
McCarver would be the first catcher ever to accomplish the feat. He retired after last season with the Phillies and became a part of the National League club's radio and television crew.
The Phillies also said Monday they also will bring up eight minor league players next month.
Joining the club from Oklahoma City will be pitcher Marty Bystrom (5-5), second baseman Jay Loviglio (.285), catcher Don McCormack (.268), shortstop Luis Aguayo (.249), and outfielder Orlando Isales (.272).
Players coming from Reading will be pitcher Mark Davis (18-6), outfielder Bob Dernier (.298) and catcher Ozzie Virgil (.270, 26 home runs and 94 RBI).