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Portrait of a Young Arm, 1954 |
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In an era where teenage pitchers are coddled like never before
-- limited game-by-game by pitch counts
and rarely approaching the 150-200 inning mark -- it's been
fascinating research to track one year in the life of a young arm
back in the heyday of semi-pro ball on the prairies. (Left
- Altman at Fresno State in 1954. Right - nearly 50 years later on
the mound at the Field of Dreams in Iowa.)
In
February, 1954, a young lefty from Fresno, just a month past his
19th birthday, began a season which would bring out the heart
medication for pitching coaches today.
Jack Altman of
Fresno State University pitched for seven teams (including the
Vulcan Elks of the Foothills-Wheatbelt League) over a ten month
period compiling a 32-11 record in 59 games (with complete games
in 34 of 37 starts).
(Left : Altman pitching at
the 2004 Fresno State Old Timers
game.)
Altman worked a total of 365 1/3 innings.
He fanned 431 batters and compiled an earned run average of 1.60.
All this at age 19.
He'd take a break for Christmas and New
Years, then begin again.
Baseball legend Hub
Kittle was Altman's manager during Jack's pro season with
Yakima in 1956.
"When he first started he was pretty
funny but boy when he learned what to do he was something. He was
a good one."
"He wore glasses, was
square-built and he took every sign from the catcher from behind
the rubber and then would walk up to the rubber, moving his arms
back and forth, and then pitch. I never saw anybody pitch
like that. But, I finally got him straightened out and boy
he was a guy who just loved to pitch. Anytime I had trouble,
anybody got on base, he wanted to go in and get 'em out."
Kittle was particularly impressed
with Altman's "intestinal fortitude".
"I
had Dick Renner playing second base and Chuck Essegian put a
football block on Renner, dislocated his knee and was was
gone for life. Didn't play anymore." "The next
game, Altman wanted me to let him go in and he knocked Essegian
down twice with balls right under his chin.
Essegian was a big, tough football
player. Jack wasn't very big, but he was tough, man was he
tough."
Kittle began his pro career in 1937
tossing 279 innings and followed up with 271 the following
season. Surely, a manager who could understand and appreciate
Altman's love of the game. (More on Kittle below).
The portrait of a young arm,
1954 :
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Fresno State Junior Varsity
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Cumulative Stats
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Altman began his long journey on the 17th of February as he picked
up a win in relief in his first game action of
the season -- a 7-5 win over the Fresno Junior College Rams.
|
G GS CG IP W
L
1 0 0 2.0 1 0
|
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The following day, February 18th, he'd work three innings in
relief against Fresno JC.
|
G GS CG IP W
L
2 0 0 5.0 1 0
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February 23rd, still from the pen, Altman went another four scoreless innings against
Reedley College.
|
G GS CG IP W
L
3 0 0 9.0 1 0
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March 5th, in his first start he tossed a six-hitter allowing just
an unearned run against Los Angeles Valley College to pick up his 2nd win.
Fresno won, 9-1.
|
G GS CG IP
W L
4 1 1 18.0 2 0
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March 12th, the Hawaii product notched his third win in a three inning relief
effort against Fresno JC.
|
G GS CG IP W
L
5 1 1 21.0 3 0
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March 22nd, the smooth lefty tossed a complete-game six-hitter to beat
the Modesto Junior College Pirates, 5-1, and run his record to 4-0.
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G GS CG IP W
L
6 2 2 30.0 4 0
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Back on the hill the day after a complete game? Not these
days,
but not surprising in 1954. March 23rd, Altman gave up his first earned run in a relief
appearance against the Coalinga College Falcons.
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G GS CG IP W
L
7 2 2 33.0 4 0
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His 5th consecutive win came March 25th in a five inning relief
effort against Fresno JC.
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G GS CG IP W
L
8 2 2 38.0 5 0
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The following week, March 31st, Altman went the distance for his
sixth win as Fresno dumped Coalinga JC 15-5.
|
G GS CG IP W
L
9 3 3 47.0 6 0
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April 3rd, Altman beat the Reedley College Tigers, 8-2, on a two-hitter for his 7th victory.
|
G GS CG IP W
L
10 4 4 54.0 7 0
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With just one days rest, he ran up another complete game win, April
5th, to top Fresno Junior College.
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G GS CG IP W
L
11 5 5 63.0 8 0
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April 7th, 1/3 of an inning in relief against the Fresno State
Freshmen.
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G GS CG IP W
L
12 5 5 63.3 8 0
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His 13th game of the season proved to be the best so far, a
one-hitter with 17 strikeouts as Fresno shutout Coalinga JC 1-0, April
9th. Coach Pete Beiden's comment to his young
lefty, "Gol darn, Altman -- there must have been a power
failure at the Coalinga ballpark last night."
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G GS CG IP W
L
13 6 6 72.3 9 0
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Promoted to the Varsity, Altman
picked up a win in his debut with the Bulldogs, April 15th,
tossing a complete game to down Chico State.
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G GS CG IP W
L |
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April 20th, back with the JV squad, Altman tossed his second straight
league whitewash, a three-hit. 4-0, shutout against Reedley
JC.
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G GS CG IP W
L
15 8 8 90.3 11 0
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April 28th, he made it three consecutive shutouts and 11
straight wins for the JVs in downing the College of Sequoias
Giants, 8-0.
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G GS CG IP W
L
16 9 9 99.3 12 0
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May Day marked the young lefty's worst
game, as he gave up four runs (one earned) in 6 2/3s innings in
his first loss, to the Sacramento Junior College Panthers,
defending state junior college champs.
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G GS CG IP W
L
17 10 9 106.0 12 1
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Altman wrapped up his JV season on May 6th with, a five hitter over
Reedley College, 6-2.
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G GS CG IP W
L
18 11 10 115.0 13 1
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Fresno Junior Varsity totals :
G W
L IP H ER BB SO ERA
17 12 1 106 58 7 28 126 0.59
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Fresno State Bulldogs
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April 15th, Altman went the distance in his first varsity start to
beat Chico State.
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(Above)
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May 8th, an inning in relief against the Cal Aggies.
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G GS CG IP W
L
19 11 10 116.0 13 1
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May 13th, in his 20th game of the season, Altman took the
5-4 loss in a relief inning
against Cal Poly.
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G GS CG IP W
L
20 11 10 117.0 13 2
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May 15th, a four inning stint with the Wasco Dons against Delano (to
qualify for duty with the semi-pro club later in the season)
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G GS CG IP W
L
21 11 10 121.0 13 2
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May 21st, an inning in relief vs Tulare Aztecs.
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G GS CG IP W
L
22 11 10 122.0 13 2
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In a highlight of his college career, Altman was in the lineup for
4 2/3s innings against the University of Oregon in the NCAA playoffs at
Eugene, May 29th.
" ... It was a highlight for me. I wouldn't have made the trip, except that
three of our top pitchers, including Bob Doig, were freshmen and not
eligible for the playoffs. We defeated USC twice, behind Jack
Hannah and Ted Wills, but lost twice to the U of O. After the last
loss, 1-0 in a rain-shortened 5 inning game, three other ballplayers
from Fresno picked me up and we drove on to Vulcan."
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G GS CG IP W
L
23 11 10 126.7 13 2
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Fresno State Bulldogs total :
G W L IP
H
ER BB SO ERA
5 1 1 16 2/3 20 8 7 9 4.32
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Vulcan Elks, Foothills - Wheatbelt League
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On June 2nd, Altman made his debut
with the Vulcan Elks of the Foothills - Wheatbelt League. In what
would be an unfamiliar role, the left hander came in in relief as
the Elks whipped the RCAF entry 14-4.
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G GS CG IP W
L
24 11 10 128.7 13 2
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In his first start, two days later,
he tossed a four-hit shutout with nine strikeouts in an 8-0 win
over Stavely.
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G GS CG IP W
L
25 12 11 136.7 14 2
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There were some bumps along the
road. June 6th the Hawaiian-born lefty dropped a 7-5
decision to Lethbridge
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G GS CG IP W
L
26 13 12 143.7 14 3
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At the Carmangay Tournament, June
11th, Altman tossed 3 2/3s innings in relief getting the win as
Vulcan won its semi-final match, 20-10 over Champion.
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G GS CG IP W
L
27 13 12 147.3 15 3
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Altman put on an iron-man show June
13th going 13 innings as Vulcan topped the powerful Granum White
Sox 4-3. He fanned 17 and helped out at the plate with a
pair of hits. With he effort he moved over 160 innings for the
season and brought his overall record to 16-3.
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G GS CG IP W
L
28 14 13 160.3 16 3
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June 18th, A brilliant pitching
duel highlighted first round play In the first annual Granum
Baseball Tournament. Rookie Mel Wilson, a high school product of
Sceptre, Saskatchewan, held Vulcan to four singles as Lethbridge
upset the Elks 2-0. Southpaw Jack Altman fired a
three-hitter for Vulcan while fanning 13 in the six-inning
contest.
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G GS CG IP W
L
29 15 14 166.3 16 4
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In his next start, June 23rd, his
offense would garner the headlines. Altman rapped out a triple,
double and two singles as he went the distance on the hill as
Vulcan trampled the Champion Red Sox 19-4. It was his 30th game of the
season.
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G GS CG IP W
L
30 16 15 175.3 17 4
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Altman added to his laurels June
27th with a no-hitter as Vulcan whipped Stavely 15-0 to take a
two-game lead atop the standings. He fanned 15 without
allowing a base on balls.
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G GS CG IP W
L
31 17 16 184.3 18 4
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Next up, July 4th, was a loss in
relief as Vulcan dropped a 12-10 decision to Lethbridge.
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G GS CG IP W
L
32 17 16 186.3 18 5
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In an 18-1 thrashing of Claresholm,
July 7th, Altman had a four-hitter with 14 strikeouts.
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G GS CG IP W
L
33 18 17 195.3 19 5
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A three-hit shutout would follow on
July 11th in a 5-0 win over Carmangay. He fanned 13 and walked 2
in registering his 20th win of 1954 and topped the 200 inning
mark.
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G GS CG IP W
L
34 19 18 204.3 20 5
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The Elks downed Granum 7-6 July
14th to take top prize money in the Vulcan tournament.
Altman scattered ten hits to get the win.
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G GS CG IP W
L
35 20 19 213.3 21 5
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July 18th, the pennant-winning
Vulcan Elks wound up the regular season with a 6-3, 10-inning win
over Lethbridge Cubs. Altman held the Cubs to just four hits
in going the distance.
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G GS CG IP W
L
36 21 20 223.3 22 5
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Altman led Vulcan into the final of
the Champion Tournament holding Carmangay to seven hits as the
Elks won 5-2, July 22nd. He fanned 14.
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G GS CG IP W
L
37 22 21 232.3 23 5
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The following day, in the Champion
Tournament ,Altman took over in the 9th with none out and a runner
on second. Altman proceeded to strikeout the side to
preserve a 6-5 win over Champion.
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G GS CG IP W
L
38 22 21 233.3 23 5
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Elks opened the playoffs July 25th
as Altman continued his sparkling season with a seven-hit, 12
strikeout performance as the Elks beat Lethbridge 8-3.
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G GS CG IP W
L
39 23 22 242.3 24 5
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July 28th, Vulcan took its
semi-final in two straight with a 5-1 victory over
Lethbridge. Altman was again the story on the hill as he
held the Cubs to six hits, fanned eight and issued just one base
on balls. It was his 25th victory against 5 losses on the season
and pushed his work load to more than 250 innings.
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G GS CG IP W
L
40 24 23 251.3 25 5
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At the Lethbridge Rotary
Tournament, July 30th, the Foothills - Wheatbelt All-Stars scored
an upset in opening round action with a 5-3 win over Nampa, Idaho
Clippers. Altman was the key for the All-Stars holding the
American club to eight hits in his third complete game of the
week. In his 40th game and 25th start.
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G GS CG IP W
L
41 25 24 260.3 26 5
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August 4th, Granum White Sox shaded
Vulcan 5-2 in the opener of the best-of-five final series for the
Foothills - Wheatbelt championship. Altman gave up 12 hits,
including a pair of homers. He had 12 strike outs issuing a
free pass.
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G GS CG IP W
L
42 26 25 269.3 26 6
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August 8th, Granum downed the Elks
4-2. Altman allowed eight hits in a losing cause.
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G GS CG IP W
L
43 27 26 277.3 26 7
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Granum bounced back from a 4-2
deficit to shade Vulcan 7-6 August 11th to win the final in three straight
games. Workhorse Altman went all the way for Vulcan allowing 10
hits in his third complete game in 8 days.
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G GS CG IP W
L
44 28 27 284.3 26 8
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Vulcan Elks totals :
G W
L IP H ER BB SO ERA
20 12 6 148 2/3 107 21 17 190 1.27
Foothills-Wheatbelt All-Stars
totals :
G W L
IP H ER BB SO ERA
1 1 0 9 8 2 3 7
2.00
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Wasco Dons
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May 15th, a four inning stint with Wasco against Delano (to
qualify for duty with the club later in the season)
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(Above)
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August 19th, back in California after
an Alberta summer, Altman suited
up with Wasco and tossed an eight-hitter in a 9-4 exhibition
victory over the famed barnstorming club, the House of
David.
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G GS CG IP W
L
45 29 28 293.3 27 8
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August 22nd, in playoff action,
Altman went the route in a 13-3 win over San Bernardino. In
his 30th start, he moved over 300 innings for the season.
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G GS CG IP W
L
46 30 29 300.3 28 8
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August 25th, an uncharacteristic
effort, 3 runs in 4 innings.
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G GS CG IP W
L
47 30 29 304.3 28 8
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August 29th, a two-inning relief stint.
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G GS CG IP W
L
48 30 29 306.3 28 8
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Wasco Dons total :
G W L IP
H ER BB SO ERA
5 2 0 26 26 8 15 40 2.77
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Fresno City League, Beiden Red Sox
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A relief stint, September 6th, with the Red Sox in a 6-2 win over Fresno Indians
in the final of the American Baseball Congress district championship.
This
ended the summer season for the Beiden Red Sox. The club won a
trip to Dallas, Texas, but declined the invitation.
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G GS CG IP W
L
49 30 29 310.3 28 8
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Fresno Red Sox totals:
G W L IP H ER BB SO ERA
1 0 0 4 4 0 1 5 0.00
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Fresno Winter Ball, Blue Sox
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September 26th, a win as the Blue Sox
beat the Red
Sox 5-3.
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G GS CG IP W
L
50 31 29 314.3 29 8
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October 3rd, a three inning relief
stint (Ted Ellis was the starter) as the Blue Sox topped the Giants 12-7.
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G GS CG IP W
L
51 31 29 317.3 29 8
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October 10th, Altman picked up his
30th win in a 4-inning start, Blue Sox over Telco
10-3
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G GS CG IP W
L
52 32 29 321.3 30 8
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October 17th, a complete game (his
30th route-going performance) in a 2-1 loss to the Red Sox and Bobby
Doig.
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G GS CG IP W
L
53 33 30 329.3 30 9
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October 24th, 6-inning relief stint,
1-0 loss to the Giants and Jerry Burcher.
|
G GS CG IP W
L
54 33 30 335.3 30 10
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October 31st, another complete game
in a 6-6 tie, Blue Sox and Telco. (Len Tucker belted a grand
slam in the 8th off Altman for the tie.)
|
G GS CG IP W
L
55 34 31 344.3 30 10
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November 7th, CG, 11-2 loss to Red Sox
as the inning total for the season climbed over 350 innings.
|
G GS CG IP W
L
56 35 32 351.3 30 11
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November 11th, Altman threw a
one-hitter in a 2-1 complete game win over the Giants. The
lone safety was a double by Altman's childhood friend, Greg
Seastrom.
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G GS CG IP W
L
57 36 33 358.3 31 11
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Altman's final 1954 regular season mound work came November
21st and it was typical -- a complete game victory, 3-2 over Telco.
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G GS CG IP W
L
58 37 34 365.3 32 11
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Fresno Blue Sox total :
G W L
IP H ER BB SO ERA
9 4 3 55 56 19 28 54 3.11
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Altman also put in a couple of innings with the All-Stars in a 8-2 loss to the Red Sox.
Specific stats are not available for this lone game as Altman
shared the pitching duties with Jerry Burcher and Frank
Avinellis.
Among the all-stars, many who played in Canada -- Jake Abbot,
Skip Winn, Dick Hayes, Tom Higa,
Roy Lattimore, Jim McMahon, Greg
Seastrom, Art Shahzade, Bobby Doig,
Bob Bennett, JD Peterson, Tony
Levaggi.
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G GS CG IP W
L
59 37 34 365.3 32 11
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1954 total :
G W
L IP H ER BB SO ERA
59 32 11 365 1/3 279 65 99 431 1.60
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Hub
Kittle was a legend in the game. When he passed
away February 10th, 2004, at 86, he had been a
pro player, coach or manager for 65 years, including stints as a
pitching coach in the majors with Houston and St. Louis.
Even in failing health the last few years, Kittle had worked
with young pitchers in the Seattle system.
In 1980, Kittle took the hill for
Springfield of the American Association to become the oldest
player in organized baseball. At age 63 he retired the
side in the first inning and got an out on one pitch in the
second before calling it quits. In 1969 he had become the
oldest player in Southern League history when he pitched an
inning and two-thirds to help out his short-handed staff.
There is a Canadian connection as
well. In 1939, Kittle played in Vancouver. "In
that park you ran uphill to get to first!" He
also pitched in Victoria ("Shut them out five
times. The papers called me The Bandit.")
Kittle
(left) as the New Jersey Cardinals of the NYP retired his
uniform (#34).
On salaries. "In
1939 I made $125 a month in Yakima. I won 20 games and I got my
new contract -- for $125. I wanted a $50 raise and held
out. On opening day they gave me $135. After the
season they sold my contract to San Francisco for $3,000."
Charlie
Beene, former WCBLer on Hub Kittle :
"
... What a guy!! I've told a thousand people if I'd had a pitching coach
like him when I first started, who knows. He was just fantastic at the
little things of pitching. Example: 0 and 2 on batter, don't brush (knock
down) him down automatically . . . just as you wind up and kick to start to
pitch . . . look at center field fence. It will drive a batter nuts, cause
he won't know where the hell you're going to throw it. It sure worked. Hub
could talk baseball for hours. If you spoke of something else . . .
"time to go to bed." ... If there was ever a "book to be
written about a baseball player," that's the guy to write about."
Sports
Illustrated, 1989 :
Kittle's
salty language and gruff voice camouflage the man inside; he's the happiest
man on the field. "He's the Santa Claus of pitching coaches,: says an
admiring Kissell. "Only he can't come down the chimney anymore,
his bag is so full of tricks. Nobody teaches pitching like he
does." Kittle's
own pitching career was notable less for its brilliance than its
length. He first pitched as a pro in 1936 -- he was 17 -- making $50 a
month with the Cubs' Catalina Island (Calif.) team, for whom he went 15-3,
with two no-hitters. He later made a name for himself as a forkballer
in the Pacific Coast League but never reached the majors. He retired
as a player in 1955, but in 1969, while managing at Savannah at age 52, he
ran out of pitchers and inserted himself for two innings. That got some
attention, so four years later, when Kittle was Houston Astros' pitching
coach, manager Leo Durocher let the old fellow pitch an inning in an
exhibition game against the Detroit Tigers at the Astrodome. Kittle,
rising to the occasion, retired three straight batters and earned a
save. Kittle says, "That gave me the idea of pitching in six
decades." He
got his chance in Springfield, Ill., on Aug. 27, 1980, courtesy of the
Cardinals, who had rehired him as minor league pitching coach. It was
Senior Citizens Night, and the old folks rose and gave 63-year-old Hubert
Milton Kittle a sustained ovation when he took the mound against Iowa of the
American Association. "The
place was packed with people as old as me," he recalls fondly.
"I signed a contract for one dollar just before the game, and when I
walked out there, the national anthem was playing and the moon was shining,
and I tell you, it felt great to be alive." The
first batter Kittle faced was no sentimentalist; he tried to bunt on the old
man on the first pitch but fouled it off. A mistake. "He went
down on his ass the next pitch, I tell you," Kittle roars, his eyes
flashing. "I put one under his whiskers." Kittle
needed just nine more pitches to retire the side. In so doing, he
became the only man to have pitched in organized ball in six different
decades. That
may serve as Kittle's claim to fame but his legacy is that of the man who
cussed and roared and squeezed more joy out of baseball that anybody before
or since. (August 14, 1989, Sports
Illustrated, The College of Cardinals, by John Garrity)
Posted
May 10, 2002
Baseball
legend Kittle has long loved Mid-Columbia (By
Jeff Morrow, Yakima Herald)
Herald
sports editor Hub Kittle has more baseball stories than he knows
what to do with. That's what happens when someone has played,
coached or managed in baseball for 63 years. Kittle is the closest
thing to a living legend there is, and that's why he'll be
inducted into the Central Washington Sports Hall of Fame on
Saturday. Kittle
began his pro career at Catalina Island in 1936. He pitched in
Ponca City, Okla., in 1937 and 1938 before being sold to the
Yakima Pippens of the Western International League in 1939 for
$400. He went 20-10 with a 3.44 ERA that season. "Hub
always told me that when he came over Satus Pass and looked down
into the Yakima Valley, he felt like Brigham Young looking into
the Salt Lake Valley and saying 'This is the place,' " said
Jim Scoggins, a long-time friend and former sports editor of the
Yakima Herald-Republic. "And you know, he's never left here.
He had baseball jobs all over the country, but he made his home in
Yakima in 1939 and stayed here the whole time." Kittle's
love affair with Yakima baseball would produce managing stints
with the Yakima Bears in the Northwest League. He led the Bears to
NWL titles in 1956, 1958 and 1959. And as the team's general
manager he was voted the minor league executive of the year by The
Sporting News in 1960. He coached 17 years of winter ball in the
Dominican Republic, Venezuela and Mexico. Those were wonderful
times for Kittle. But he had numerous thrills in a long baseball
career. "One
of the biggest has to be a guy who stays in the minors 38 years
and at 54 years old finally gets to the major leagues (as a coach
for the Houston Astros)," Kittle said. "Then to get to
the World Series (in 1982 with St. Louis). You can't imagine what
it feels like." Kittle had five seasons (1971-75) with the
Astros, and three more with the Cardinals (1981-83). He
was also the only man to pitch in a professional game in six
different decades. He went three up, three down for his only
inning. Even today, Kittle is employed as a special assignment
pitching coach for the Seattle Mariners. This is his fourth season
with the M's, but health problems have slowed him down at the age
of 85. "I've been under the weather for quite awhile,"
said Kittle, who has vasculitis, a deterioration of the arteries
that affects the kidneys and the lungs. "I'm on oxygen. I
tried to get the Mariners to fire me. I went down to spring
training for a week but could only stay four days. When Everett
comes to Yakima, I'll go out to the park. And when Everett goes to
the Tri-Cities, I'll get a hotel room down there and work with the
pitchers." And that's fine with Benny Looper, the Mariners'
director of player development. "Even at his age, Hub's
brought a lot of energy to the game," Looper said. "He's
one of the characters of the game. He's a great coach. I think
it's his knowledge of the game, his passion, his sincere desire to
help young pitchers. And they know he has a sincere
heart." And
he's touched by being selected into the Hall of Fame. Even though
he's ill, he plans on attending Saturday's event. "I'll be
there even if I gotta crawl there on my belly," he said.
Associated Press, February 11, 2004 YAKIMA, Wash. -- Hubert "Hub" Kittle, pitching coach of the 1982
World Series champion St.
Louis Cardinals, has died at the age of 86.
His death Tuesday was confirmed by Keith & Keith Funeral Home.
Kittle was a major league pitching coach for eight years, five with the Houston
Astros (1971-75) and three with the Cardinals (1981-83).
His baseball career began in the Los Angeles Angels' system in 1936 as a
pitcher. In 1939, the Yakima Pippins of the Northwest League bought his
contract for $400.
He bounced around several minor league systems until World War II, where he
served in the South Pacific while also playing on Army baseball teams.
Competing Army teams managed by Yankee greats Joe DiMaggio and Red Ruffing
simultaneously recruited him, but Kittle chose to play for another pitcher
in Ruffing.
Upon his return from the war in 1946, Kittle migrated through the minor
leagues for the next 25 years, both as a pitcher and manager.
Kittle was manager and general manager in Yakima from 1955-59 and helped
save the Northwest League by arranging major-league affiliations for some of
the its struggling teams. The Sporting News named him Minor League Executive
of the Year in 1960.
He also managed winter teams for 17 years in Mexico, Venezuela, the
Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico and said he was proud of helping to
develop a number of players who went on to major league success.
One of those players, Whitey Herzog, later became manager of the St. Louis
Cardinals and hired Kittle as his pitching coach in 1981. The next season,
the Cardinals won the World Series.
He pitched in six decades, including throwing a perfect inning in an
exhibition game with a Triple-A team in 1980 at the age of 63.
When his wife fell ill, he took a job closer to home as an organizational
pitching instructor for the Seattle
Mariners. Despite health problems, he had worked with the team's
pitching coaches during the past year.
Born Feb. 19, 1917, in Los Angeles, Kittle had maintained a permanent home
in the Yakima area since 1939 and always returned there during the offseason.
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