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For
a guy who had the skills to organize a reunion of teams which
played 45-50 years before, it's hard to believe James Allen Lester
began his
Southern Alberta career suiting up with the wrong team !
The
Illinois kid, who first came to Canada in 1956, signed on with Granum
for that season but began his Canadian career in the colours of
the Vulcan Elks
(see below).
He wouldn't get much else wrong
over a five year career on the prairies with George Wesley's teams
in Granum and Lethbridge. He learned a little about ranching
too, bunking down on the Wesley ranch and, ostensibly, earning his
"salary" (remember the NCAA didn't permit college kids
to earn salaries from baseball) from chores on the Wesley spread.

Lester's role as reunion organizer shouldn't
have come as a surprise given he was usually in the middle of
things at crunch time.
His
"serious" baseball career began with enrollment at Reedley College
in California in the fall of
1953. Coming from Galesburg, Illinois, Lester was a
three-sport star for the Tigers as an end on the football team,
guard on the basketball squad and third baseman on the diamond
nine. (see below for his 1999
induction into the Reedley Hall of Fame)
In 1954, he had three hits to lead Reedley
College to an 8-2 win over Sequoias to capture the California
Junior College championship. (He also got tossed in the 7th
inning after an argument with the home plate umpire.)
Two
grand slams in one game (against the Fresno JVs no less) was one
of his Reedley highlights of 1955. (Left -- Lester
at right with the late Ken Burns)
In his first season with Granum, Lester
singled in the bottom of the 9th to drive in the winning run as
the White Sox won the Southern Alberta crown downing Picture Butte
4-3. He had given Granum an early lead with a two-run homer
in the 1st inning. To display his versatility, Lester, a
fixture at third base, made two starts on the hill and made an
emergency appearance behind the plate.
At
Fresno State in 1957, Lester was the hero in what noted Fresno
journalist Bruce Farris called, "One of the most fantastic
finishes in local collegiate diamond history" (see
the full story below). That summer in Granum he hit
.355 to finish 4th in the batting race and be an easy choice for
the All-Star team.
Third
base is possibly the easiest of the lot at which to pick a
winner. It's Jim Lester of Granum leading the field by a
country mile over the lot. (Lethbridge
Herald)

Through 1958 and 1959 Lester was a key member of Pete Beiden's
Fresno State Bulldogs. The '59 club is recognized as
Fresno's best having finished 3rd at the College World Series. The
team had four All-Conference selections -- Lester at third base,
Jerry White at second, Mike Mathiesen at shortstop and pitcher
Leroy Gregory.
Lester stayed at home in the summer
of '58 to play in Illinois (years later he still had with no real explanation
for doing so), but was back in the Granum lineup in '59. His
fielding prowess was well known and he began piling up the stolen
bases as well.
Jim Lester of the Sox was
involved in the fielding gem of the day and an unusual stolen base.
Lester got credit for a steal when the throw to second by Jets' catcher Ken
Eilmes hit umpire Ira Bourne in the back of the head as he raced
to cover the play. (Lethbridge Herald)
Lethbridge
moved into the Western Canada Baseball League in 1960 (along with
Saskatoon, Lloydminster and Calgary) and, again, Lester would be
an All-Star and a key performer as the White Sox captured the
championship.
"Lester drew the applause of the fans on more
than one occasion as he ranged both to his right and left to gobble up hard
smashes and topped balls and rifle his throw over to the sharp fielding Lee Murphy."
(Lethbridge
Herald)
The 1961 season, Lester's final
summer on the prairies, must have been one of his most eventful
and satisfying. Among other things, he had a five hit day, 5
RBI afternoon, was fined $10 for having "threatened an umpire with a
bat", somehow got away with wrestling the team's
owner/manager to the ground (in trying to prevent George Wesley
from attacking an umpire) and finished the season as the team's
catcher.
But it was the 1961 playoffs which
provided a grand stage for Jim's final innings in Canadian
baseball. Lethbridge had finished 3rd in the regular season,
21 1/2 games back of the incredible Saskatoon Commodores (John
Boccabella, Tim Cullen, Ernie Fazio, Lyle Olsen, Dan Schneider,
Darrell Sutherland et al).
In the opening game of the
best-of-nine final, Len Tucker (recruited for the playoffs)
singled, stole second
and scored the game's only run on an infield out in the 15th inning to give
the Sox a 1-0 win.
John Boccabella's
run-scoring single in the bottom of the 12th inning gave Saskatoon a 4-3 win
and knotted the final and 1-1.
Lester's
bases-loaded bunt single in the top of the 9th scored Len Tucker
with the winning run as Lethbridge scored a 2-1 victory at Saskatoon.
After three, one-run
decisions in the WCBL final series, Lethbridge took advantage of eight hits
and four Saskatoon errors to plate ten runs and score a 10-2 victory.
Lester
knocked in the winning run in the bottom of the 10th inning to give
Lethbridge a 4-3 win and a 4-1 game lead in the best-of-nine final.
Lethbridge White Sox
claimed the Western Canada Baseball League title for the second straight
season with a 4-2 win over Saskatoon before 14-hundred fans at Henderson
Stadium. Lefty Dave Dowling pitched a brilliant five-hitter, striking out 18.
Len Tucker led the Sox with a triple, double and single while Jim
Lester, the hero of Monday's game, had two hits.

Then, back home to Peoria, Illinois where,
for the past 35+ years he's been a financial planner. Now
semi-retired, he has time to spend with Marilyn (left) and the couple's
three children and three grandsons (born in 1999, three months
apart). Time on the golf course has been restricted as
Jim recovers from back surgery. But, he's hoping to make the trip
to Fresno in April for the unveiling of the Pete Beiden
statue.
FANTASTIC FINISH
Bruce Farris, the noted Fresno
sports journalist called the 1957 Fresno - Stanford contest,
"One of the most fantastic
finishes in local collegiate diamond history."
It was Fresno at home against
Stanford at FSC Park. Stanford with a 5-2 lead going into
the bottom of the 9th.
Then the fun started.
Indians' starter George Avery walked pinch hitter Roy Zivanich.
Don Lohr struck out and Tony Levaggi flied out to centre.
Two outs. Gene Larrieu the pinch runner at
first.
Joe Pedrazzini bounced a single. Pat
Castro walked on a full count to load the bases.
Jim Lester at the plate. Stanford coach Dutch Fehring
sent Avery to the showers in favour of right-hander Dick Jones who worked the count on Lester
to three and two.
With the runners all getting big
jumps, Lester rifled the next pitch to right centre field
scoring both Larrieu and Pedrazzini. When the centre
fielder bobbled the ball, Pat Castro kept steaming for home.
The catcher, Art Von Wronski tried to block the plate before he
had the relay throw. Castro tumbled over the catcher scoring
the tying run.
Von Wronski then tried to nail
Lester, then chugging for second, only to have his throw sail into
the outfield past the centre fielder. Before Bob Fletcher could
get a relay home, Lester had safely crossed the plate.
Fresno 6 Stanford 5.
Are
you sure you spell Granum, V-u-l-c-a-n? Jim Lester's
introduction to Western Canada Baseball.
Sunday, June 3rd, 1956. Jim Lester, Greg Seastrom, Augie Scornaienchi and
Billy Joe Davidson
are still on the road in Billy Joe's two-door sedan. It's the opening day of
the Foothills-Wheatbelt season.
Vulcan (where Seastrom, Scornaienchi
and Davidson are to play) and Granum (Lester's club) both are at home for
opening day double-headers. In an effort to go non-stop from Visalia,
California to Southern Alberta, the players rotate driving with the previous
driver stretched out in the back with the other three in the front.
They're already behind schedule when two breakdowns in Montana and a dispute
at the border about the import of Louisville Sluggers ensures they won't see
the first pitch of the season.
Tired, hungry and a bit disoriented, the four finally arrive in
Vulcan. Obviously, the game is underway. Dozens of cars circled
the field.
"When they saw us there was hooting and hollering and
honking and cheering. We thought we must be pretty important. It
was like we were the President or something", said Lester.
What they didn't know immediately was that Vulcan had already dropped the
first game of the twin-bill 19-2 and was getting battered in the second
contest and the fans wanted some new players, any players.
Lester
recalled, "Greg, Augie and Billy Joe went to suit up and when I was
asked to play I told them I had signed to play with Granum and I didn't want
to get into trouble. But, the man said he was the league commissioner and if
he said it was okay, it was okay. So I ended up playing my first game
in the league with Vulcan." The new blood helped to make
the score in the second game more respectable, but Vulcan still lost, 14-7.
Little was known about the kid
from Illinois and James Lester knew even less about Reedley
College.
"Being 18 years old and
given a chance to go to California was pretty intriguing,"
said Lester, who came with a friend and then RC baseball player
Jake McBride.
"I knew Reedley wasn't close
to the ocean, but I got to see a few palm trees (the ones that
run along the west side of the campus on Reed Avenue) and the
weather was better than in Illinois. The sky was so clear
you could see the mountains with snow on top. Being from
the Midwest, I'd never seen that before."
But by the time Lester's playing
days were through, it worked for both sides as he starred for
successful Tigers' football, basketball and baseball teams from
1953-55.
Lester was an end on Reedley's
third-place football team, played point-guard on a second-place
basketball squad, and was the best player on the Tigers'
championship baseball team.
Arguably the best three-sport
standout in school history, Lester will be inducted into the
Tiger Athletic Hall of Fame Saturday, Aug. 7, but he won't make
the trip to Reedley since he is still recovering from colon
cancer surgery in February.
"Players today don't do it
(play three sports in college), but that's just the way we did
it, Lester said. "Coaches nowadays have players specialize
in one sport. There was never that pressure when I played."
Lester did have a demanding
coach, though, as he played for Pete Beiden at Fresno State for
three years after leaving Reedley.
"Pete was tough and
sometimes he was hard to read,: Lester said. "I saw
him about three years ago and he gave me a big hug. I saw
a soft side to that tough guy."
Lester was an all-conference
players for the Tigers who Coach Verne Horton called, "The
best third baseman I ever coached." Lester once hit
TWO grand slams in ONE game for the Tigers.
"Hey Sammy Sosa didn't hit
his first grand slam until last year," said Lester, a big
Cubs fan who now lives in Peoria, Ill. "I used to think
hitting two grand slams in one game was a big deal until that
kid from Florida State hit six homers in one game last
year."
Lester led Fresno State in
hitting and RBI in 1959. He was an all-conference third
baseman for a team that finished third in the nation. But
Lester didn't get to make the trip of the College World Series
since he was a fifth-year senior, which was allowed by the
college and the conference but not by the NCAA.
He finished his career playing
professionally in the Western Canadian League where he made $600
per month, which was good pay in those days, but amounts to the
charge per minute of today's pros.
"I played pretty good
defense, but I didn't have the power," Lester said. "I
had a lot of coaches tell me I was just as good as the guys in
the big leagues."
(Michael Remy, Reedley Exponent, 1999)
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