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Sterling
Slaughter (on travel in Western Canada 1960) "I
remember so well those car rides between towns ... we'd ride and
ride and ride all night so we'd take turns driving and I'll
never forget there was this radio station we used to get up
there, a clear channel station from Oklahoma of all
places. It would come in after midnight ... and I remember
listening to the Flamingoes, my favourite group. I used to
stay awake all night just so I could hear the Flamingoes and
their songs. It was KOMA, Oklahoma City."
Bill Gatenby
(Sceptre, 40's early 50's) "Those were marvelous times
... if I had to relive any three weeks in my life ... I'd probably
pick three weeks in '47 and '48 when certain tournaments were on
and go back and play ball. It was just marvelous, and you know
I've been to Moscow three times and Japan 14 times on business,
and lived in New York, lived in Los Angeles, lived in Miami, lived
in Venezuela 12 years, all those were good times but none of them
compared to playing semi-pro ball in rural Saskatchewan."
Bill Gatenby
(on documentation of baseball on the prairies) "The
records that were kept, even when we were playing, were not
particilarly good ... you know somebody kept the scorebook but
nobody kept it the same and if you looked at a scorebook a year
after it had been created it was awful hard to be exactly sure
what all the symbols meant. It was more the individual style. Most
of it's hearsay and memory and it just makes it so difficult. And
we all remember things a bit different at times."
George Mahaffy
(on the changing times in Sceptre) "My memory says they
hired players in '46. There were a bunch of kids home from
the war, needed a pitcher, pretty soon they needed a
catcher, a second baseman. In '48 when I got mixed up in it, it
would be three-quarters Sceptre. By the time '51 came there
two Sceptre ball players and the rest were brought it ...
somebody had a contact down in Fresno State. We'd phone up,
"We want a catcher", and five days later some guy
would show up and say he was a catcher. "
George
Mahaffy (on probable intimidation) "Jesse
Blackman played on that team (Indian Head Rockets). The
rumour we had was that Jesse had killed a man with an inside
pitch. We didn't hit too well against him."
George
Mahaffy (on Chet Brewer) "Chet Brewer was 42
or 44 at the time and he had a little money because he came up in
a big, green Buick and he brought two Cuban ballplayers with him
-- Pedro Osorio and Bobby Prescott ...Chet Brewer got 450 dollars
a month at a time when a room in a hotel was worth a dollar a
night. Chet was the highest paid we ever had."
George
Mahaffy (on Hal Price) " We hired him away
from the St. Louis Black All-Stars. He was recovering from a
bullet wound in the leg and he was working in a car wash in St.
Louis. He was at a tryout camp of the Chicago Cubs or White
Sox and you know how ball players do, they got in a ruckus and
somebody shot him. He went home and got traveling with this
club and he stayed with us for two years and I tell you he was
good." George
Mahaffy (on the origin of the Sceptre Nixons)
"We got in the Western Canadian playoffs, representing
Alberta as we won a couple of tournaments in Alberta. Indian
Head represented Saskatchewan and BC had Trial. A big deal
in Saskatoon. By the time we got there we had gone broke and
everybody muttered around and we had a local guy who was in the
oil business and said I'll put thousands of dollars into your club
if you'll let me put my name on the back of your uniforms.
We became known as the Sceptre Nixons. Red Nixon. So Red is traveling
with the team and he hardly knew first base from third base ....
so we're in the final game and Red comes out and says to me,
"Big George you're pitching:". Now Fergie Shields
was the backbone of our team, he was our local man and played ball
for forty years. Now Red has money in the team, he's the
boss. So, Fergie comes over to me and says, "George you
go out and warm up and get a sore arm". So I go out and
it's wet, the old field on Avenue A, Cairns Field. I throw
the hell out of the ball for five minutes and my arm's
sore. So there's Hal Price who pitched a three-hitter
the day before. "What do you say Hal? Want to
start the game and go as far as you can, then we'll do something
else?" Hal pitched another nine innings, eighteen
innings in 24 hours."
Emile Francis
(on Max Bentley as a ball player) " ... We
played against Jerry Adair one night and the next
night he played against the New York Yankees. They gave him
60-thousand dollars and flew him right out of North Battleford and
the next night be played for the Baltimore Orioles ...
Edmonton had this centre fielder, 18 years old, and the
Dodgers signed him. They gave him 120-thousand dollars. Ron
Fairly. This was the era of free agency. Max
Bentley, to me, was a better ball player than either of those
guys. One year out of our league there were eighteen guys
who went out of our league as bonus players and I'll tell you, Max
Bentley was better than any of them. He was a real good ball
player … the best ball player we saw on the prairies at that
time, a centre fielder, left hand hitter, and I'll tell you
he was quick, nothing escaped him in centre field. He could
hit with power, hit to all fields, he was a real good ball player.
Greg Seastrom
(on the Alex Rodriguez-like salaries in 1955-56) "We
got paid two-hundred dollars a month, cash. Twice a month,
on the first and the fifteenth, we would report to the bank and
we would get a one-hundred dollar bill."
Greg Seastrom (on a dollar
dinner in Vulcan, 1955-56) "It was an actual boarding
situation. We were all unmarried males, some working in
the oil industry, some ball players. There was this gigantic
table, just full. It cost us a dollar a meal."
Curly
Williams (on playing in the US & playing in
Canada) "It was
awful. I cried so much when I was in professional baseball, I
tell you. (In Canada) we were treated so well up there
that's why I stayed up there so long ... We had so much
fun there and everybody was accepted, you know, didn't have
problems going any place we wanted to eat.
Just wonderful people. May not have made a whole lot of
money but people were excited and they enjoyed you and would
invite you to their homes."
Jim Lester
(on
Willie Walasko's revenge -- a 6+ inning relief effort, no-hits,
17 Ks, 1956) "I remember his young brother Jim came
over and pitched one game against Medicine Hat and they banged
him around a little bit and Willie was mad. He came in and
struck almost everybody out. He was just on fire."
Jack
Altman (on a Skip Winn ejection)
" ... one Sunday game in Champion, Alberta. I threw a good
pitch, umpire Stan Bernard called it a ball, Skip
said, "Jesus Christ, Stan, that was a good pitch."
Stan said, "You're out of the game!" Skip asked
"What in the Hell for?" Stan's reply: "Cussing on
Sunday!"
Len Breckner
(on when Cliff Pemberton belted the Regina owner, Denny Evenson
during a 1955 game) "We're playing in Regina.
Pemberton is playing third base, and I'm playing first. Denny
Evenson, who liked to drink a little, was leaning over sort of a
snow fence along the third base line. He's bugging Cliff
Pemberton, making racial comments about some of our players.
Cliff says, "You do that once more." And, he did. All
of a sudden I heard this crack and I look over and Cliff had hit
Evenson on the nose. Blood is running all over the place and
Evenson is trying to get over the fence to get at Pemberton.
When I went over there, Pemberton had his two fists up, bouncing
up and down, waiting for this guy to come across. He never
did."
Clarence
Yanosik (on prairie profit-sharing) "If
we made a profit we would divide it at the end of the
year. One year the share was thirteen dollars a
person. I went to the bank and got everything in
one-dollar bills so that I could give everyone a fat
envelope! Thirteen dollars. Including the
owner and the manager."
Bob
Bennett (on the value of prairie ball in the
50s) "It was a great experience, I loved it. It
was the best game for baseball, far better than down here. Great
athletes."
Kirby
Wyllie (on being in Kamsack 1954, the California kid who had
the fortitude to face a prairie winter) "We
stayed on in Kamsack, several of us, that winter and worked for
the telephone company ... cutting those little trees down
under the poles. I can never forget this ... we were
chopping the trees and we had one game left. It was billed
as winner-take-all with Saskatoon, the last game of the
season. We had nine guys left and our catcher, from
Bakersfield, put an axe through his foot. And, Bob Bennett
(off the Saskatoon roster) caught for us that night in
Saskatoon. Bill Schulz was his name."
Jack Altman
(on
prairie ball parks, 1954-55) "The outfield fences were snow
fences and cars would park around the fences and if you did
something good, "beep, beep, beep."
Wayne
Wimpy Stephenson (on being the lone white face on the
St. Louis Black Cardinals) " ... I was playing with
the Swift Current Indians at the time (1949). They put a pretty
good team in that league with Estevan, Regina, Moose Jaw, all
through there. Pretty well the whole team was imported ...
and they ran into financial difficulties about the end of June
so there was an exhibition game against the St. Louis Black
Cardinals ... after the game, I beat them that night,
about a 2-1 ball game, I noticed there was only ten guys
sitting on the bench so I went over to them and I said
gee, I'm out of a job as of tonight. This is the last
fund-raiser to help Swift Current pay a few bills and I said,
sort of as a joke, do you guys need another chucker for the rest
of the summer? The guy said, if you can be ready by eight
o'clock tomorrow morning, that's when the bus leaves, be on it
and you're part of the team. It just happened that quick you
know."
Stephenson (on the
fabulous salary) " ... Payday was immediately after
the game and we split it ten ways. Whatever it was, you got paid
every day, no salary or nothing, split the gate ... we
came pretty close to winning it in the big ball tournament in
Lacombe and that was a little bit bigger pay day but you know
your pay in those years would be anywhere from six bucks to
fifteen to maybe whatever on any given day. Old man Cobb out of
San Antonio he was the manager and owner of the club and he paid
the hotel bill and everybody looked after their own meals and
every once in awhile you'd stop and get a little dry cleaning
done if you had a rainy day or whatever. Most of the time
you were in that bloody bus trying to make the next
tournament."
Stephenson (on the origin
of his nickname, taken from a Popeye cartoon character with a
passion for hamburgers) " ...I think it started in about
grade five. Somebody took me to the bigger town and we got
introduced to hamburgers for the first time and I had two or
three of them and they started to call me Wimpy from that day
on. Funny how it sticks with you."
Sterling
Slaughter (on the benefit of prairie experience)
"It (playing in Canada) was really what
I needed. It was what my coach (at Arizona State) had
hoped would happen ... see better competition and determine if I
really had what it took. It turned out to be a very good
thing for me as prior to that I hadn't been pushed."
Steve
Schott (on arriving in Lethbridge, by bus, from San
Francisco) "The first guy I met was Gary Kirk,
he was running the bus depot. So I said, "Hey, we're
a couple of guys (Dick Creighton was the other) from Santa
Clara, we're going to set this league on its ear."
And Gary says, "We don't know who you are. We don't
have any record of you guys." Well, I said,
"Where's the team?" "They're on the
road," he says, "Who got you these
tickets?" We said it was George Wesley and the
manager who sent us the tickets. Well, it turns out that
the manager who was supposed to be there was no longer there so
they didn't know who we were. So it turned out to be a
little bit of a try out camp. Fortunately, our first
starts were pretty good ones and we stuck."
Roberto
Zayas (on the slight climatic change from Cuba to
Saskatoon) "The
first year I was in Saskatoon. Before we started the season it was
rain, rain, rain. We couldn't even practice and overnight it snowed
and we didn't know that. We were staying at the YMCA and the next morning we
all got up and saw all this snow. The newspaper phoned and they came
over with hockey equipment and things like that and took pictures of
everybody in this park across from the YMCA. I didn't go because I was
too cold. I stayed in my room. It was the first time I had even seen
snow."
Small
world. Kirby Wyllie (from Tulare, CA) took
time to visit Toronto in 1954 during his tour in Canada.
Of course, one Toronto stop was at the ballpark. "We
walk in and I hear they're announcing the lineup and pitching
tonight is Vic Lombardi from Tulare, California.
I could not believe it.
It was such a small world."
Charlie
Beene (on his season-long battle with North Battleford's
Curtis Tate) "It was just typical. If a guy shows you
up, when you're out on the mound, then you brush him back.
If he's hitting you real hard and you have 0-2 on him, you brush
him back. Well, when I'd brush Curtis back, he'd bunt down the
first base line and run over me. And, so we had a running battle
all summer. He ran over me a couple of times and I'd nail
him in the ribs a couple of times."
Bob Milano (looking back at prairie
ball) "How much fun we had. Playing every day,
supposedly working on the fields, which we didn't.
Traveling. Just the competition was great. It was
just one of those wonderful things you got to experience."
Reg Chopp
(playing in Moose Jaw, 1954) "My salary in Moose Jaw
was $275 a month, plus bonuses based on average, home runs and
ribbies. Might have worked out to $100 at the end of the
year. Never got it anyway."
Roy
Taylor (on Darrell Martin) "Darrell Martin was
one of the best pitchers I ever had as a young kid and he never,
ever got a break. He got up to the Pacific Coast League
... but it was just that time when they didn't pull people up
and give them a chance ... they just thought that college
kids were green nothings."
Jim
Lester (on his first game in Canada, after arriving midway
through the opening game and being hastily pushed onto the field
to play for Vulcan) "I remember being on
second base and John Vaselenak was playing shortstop and I looked
and him and he looked back at me, we smiled at each other and
we've been friends forever."
Curly
Williams (on Barney Brown) "Let me tell you, he was
great. When we had him in Lloydminster he'd probably throw
two pitches that would hit the front of the plate that couldn't
even get to the catcher. Then he'd come up there and
strike the side out. And he was an old man. When Barney Brown
came to Lloydminster he was almost fifty years old. He was
like Satchel Paige, he just didn't get the breaks. That
guy was something else. Just a little guy too.
Didn't weight over 170 pounds. But he had so much stuff on
the ball he had guys swinging at the ball before it got to the
plate. He was amazing."
Greg
Seastrom (on ownership of home plate) " A club owner who was pretty much responsible for
starting the importing of players didn't want to stop. When he got
voted down, it seemed he had bought home plate, so he went out and ripped it up
saying, 'I don't want any bushers crossing my home plate.' Floyd
Atkinson."
Modie
Risher (on playing in Lloydminster and Western
Canada) " In my life that was the nicest year
I ever had in baseball. (The people) were so
wonderful I will never forget them ... because they looked at
you as a person. We didn't have any problems up there and
nowhere we went in Canada ... Do you remember the McLeans?"
Rod and his brother, Joe was like a father to me. I never
met anybody like them. You know how I met them? I
was in the store one day and Rod and his mother, you know Rod
was a little fellow, were there and Rod said "Momma look at
that black man. Doesn't he have a beautiful tan." His
mother was a little halfway embarrassed. The next thing I knew
the father called me and they had me over for dinner that Sunday
and from then on ... in contact every year."
Bob
Milano (the big city kid on his first impression of the
prairies) "It was a shock basically, because we were not
used to that kind of country. "
Emile
Francis (on How many times were you thrown out of ball
games?) " (Laughs) ... Oh, I couldn't count them
all! In Saskatoon, Cairns Field was one of the greatest
ball parks and right across from Cairns Field, Gordie Howe's
dad, that's where he lived in a little house Gordie bought his
dad. I got thrown out there several times and had to get right
out of the ball park. I'd go over and sit there on the
front porch with Gordie Howe's dad, turn the radio on and listen
to the game and we'd shoot the breeze.
Charlie
Beene (on how kids will be kids, even facing Gordie Howe)
"Roy (Taylor) is driving along with Gordie in the front
passenger's seat. Bob Garcia and I are in the back. What are 17,
16 year old guys going to do? You're going to slap him in
the back of the head right? Punch each other and you're
going to fool around in there to pass the time. Well, Bob
reached up and slapped Gordie behind the head. We act like
nothing's happened and we kept on going. Finally, Gordie says,
"Stop the car." We get outside and me and Bob
say "We can take ya." I go high, because I'm
six-foot three and Bob goes middle and we go piling down the
side of the road down about a fifteen foot embankment. I mean
it's as good as any Hollywood movie. I mean we're flailing
away. And, we get up and my nose is bleeding all over and
Gordie's is bleeding, apparently I punched him accidentally.
And, Bob says "Ha, I'm the only one who doesn't have a
bloody nose." Well, Gordie got him with one of those
big hockey hands right across his face. I think we won,
but I'm not sure!"
Curly
Williams (on Bennie Griggs) "He was a good golfer.
We'd go over there to play baseball and they'd have to get him
off the golf course to pitch. They say man go get Bennie
the game is getting ready to start. He'd rush from the
golf course, put his uniform on and throw about two pitches and
he'd be ready."
Curly
Williams (on Cliff Pemberton) "He wore the
Canadian league out. He almost led the league every
year. Man he could hit. Wonderful man."
Roberto
Zayas (hitting off Fidel) "I was an
amateur then, maybe 17 years old, and we used to play against
the University of Havana where Castro was a pitcher. We
played a few games against him when he was in his first year
of university. Yes, I got some hits. Honest."
Bill Walasko
(on his 1954 season, which included a no-hitter) "I
don't know about a no-hitter but I do know that I beat Granum
because they were the powerhouse. Of course Wesley (George
Wesley, the Granum owner) remembered that so the following year
he recruited me for Granum."
Lil
McLean (on the end of the line for semi-pro ball in
Lloydminster) "They were broke. They had so
many games rained out and no lights. Some of the
businessmen, including my husband, Joe McLean, and Russ
Robertson and Ben Gulak bailed them out and got them enough
money to leave."
Don
Stewart (on one of the wildest nights in Western
Canada baseball, June 12, 1957) " It was very, very
weird. I was playing left field and Bob Gerst was up. You
didn't wear helmets in those days, and a big right-hander from
North Battleford, Bennie Griggs, beaned him. And he was
down for the count and, no skull cap, and so they were waiting
for the ambulance. In the seventh inning I singled and was given
the steal sign. I started to steal but saw I was going to be
thrown out so put on the brakes went back to first. I just got a
brand new pair of spikes that day and they were extra long and I
slid over the spikes and I broke my tibula, fibula and turned my
foot completely around, looking at me. But I was
safe! My uncle was in the stands way at the top and said
you could hear that break, just a snap, way up there. So
we're both laying on stretchers waiting for the ambulance.
Later Francis threw the bats and everything else was going on.
And the cops. Crazy game."
Emile
Francis (on the Riot at Renfrew) "There are three
policemen behind the Edmonton bench and three behind ours.
All of a sudden I see six policemen coming, one is about to grab
me and Johnny (Ford) nails him. They call for the wagon
and off we go to jail in there with prostitutes and
drunks."
Johnny Ford
(who says he didn't belt the policeman) "I choked him and threw him to the
ground. It was Kenny Nelson who was walking over him with his
cleats. It was all Emile Francis' fault. He got away
with nothing. It cost me fifty bucks, but the club paid for it
anyway."
Bill
Murray (playing with Gilbert Plains in 1948) "The
first year I came up here I got $150 for the three months I
played ball ... I survived ... I was married and had one
son at that time. I pulled through, I don't know
how."
Curly
Williams (on salaries in the Negro league) "When
I first went up to Newark in 1947, my salary was $250 a month
and you got $3 a day for meal money and you could get breakfast
for 50-cents and you'd leave a tip of 10-cents. And, I
used to save some of that. My mother said, "Two
hundred and fifty dollars a month? They don't pay nobody that
kind of money to play baseball." When I went to the
Dominican Republic I used to sent so much money home, because I
was getting about $600 a month down there, she couldn't believe
it. "
Roy
Taylor (on a special exhibition game, 1959) "One
year Satchel Paige was on a tour with a bunch of kids, seventeen
or eighteen years old, and we played them an exhibition game in
Saskatoon. I pitched for Saskatoon and he pitched for his
kids. He was famous for throwing that alley-oop ball, he
throw it kind of up high and let it come down over the plate and
everybody would wait and wait for it to come down. So he
threw me one of those when I was up at bat and so when he came
up to bat I threw him one. You know, he could still play and
after that he went back to the majors and finished enough to get
his pension."
Len
Tucker (on the treatment of black players in
Canada) "Oh superb. It was just so free
and mind at ease and everything. Just wonderful. The
treatment was beautiful."
Ken McCabe (on
the transformation of the Jacksonville Eagles) "I
don't know when they actually played in Jacksonville because
they came up to Saskatchewan in around April, the first of May, and
took off their Jacksonville Eagles' uniforms and became the
Indian Head Rockets. They stayed here until about the
first of September and went back down south again."
Reg Chopp
(on moving from Canadian junior ball into the Western Canada
League) "You know you're twenty-one and cocky as a
bull and nothing fazed me. I just kind of fit
in."
Len Breckner
(might as well hear it first hand) "In 1953 early in
the year the Gems weren't playing very well and I know Pete
Beiden and Ralph (Mabee) were talking about trading me to Moose
Jaw. I was driving Ralph's car back from North Battleford
and they were sitting in the back seat trying to improve the
team."
Bill Walasko
(on Calgary's entry in the league in 1960) "Lot of
the teams like Picture Butte and Vulcan they just couldn't stand
the extra expense of bringing up college kids like George Wesley
did so they folded and to get sufficient teams to make a league
George Wesley agreed to finance the Calgary operation. Vic
Stasiuk was taken on to run the team, but I understand Wesley
bankrolled it to keep the league going."
Jim Lester (on
a part of the Granum contract which prohibited players from
drinking alcohol during the baseball season) "We
wouldn't have any ball players if everyone signed that
contract. And, I'd hate to tell George, if I could, his
son Gordie was with us all the time!"
Len Breckner
(on a possible lost opportunity) "In the spring of
1953 we went down to California and I tried to get into Fresno
State with Pete Beiden. But, I didn't get in as I didn't
have enough education. But, Roy Taylor (at COS) told me
after that, "I didn't want to interfere but you could have
come to school at Visalia." I didn't know it at the time so
I just stayed there and practiced with the guys for a month or
so and came home. And, that could have changed my life I
suppose."
Len Breckner
(on the domination by the Mandak league clubs in the 1956
interlocking schedule) "They were a little better than we
were. We were playing one time in Williston and I was
playing right field and all these line shots were going out and
bouncing off the wall. I think they beat us 13-3 or
something. Those guys could hit and, I guess, we didn't
pitch that well either."
Kirby
Wyllie (on the Elite Cafe, Lloydminster)
"Everybody hung out there. I can picture it right
now."
Bob
Milano (on ever-fresh memories of prairie ball) "We talk about it now and then and laugh about it and
reminisce. I see Mike Noakes and talk to Bill Oakley a
lot, and John Rebelo. We still talk about all that
stuff. I run into somebody like Gary Adams (UCLA coach)
and we laugh about some of the days of Calgary against
Lloydminster. It always comes back, you know, it's never
lost in the memory of the guys who played in that era."
Len Breckner
(on
why didn't we know this earlier?) "1955, seventh game of the
finals I come to bat. Two on base and Jim Ryan (the
Edmonton manager) walked me to load the bases. Jose
Valladares comes up and Ralph (Mabee, the Saskatoon manager)
goes to him and says, "Mario Herrera (who was very fast) is
on third base, just put the ball down, Mario scores and the
game's over." Jose says, "I can't
bunt." So he hit a smasher to second base, the second
baseman threw it home and Mario just slid in and was out.
And, we lost the game in the 13th inning."
Greg Seastrom
(on his bedmate for the summer of 1956 ) "I was in an
actual rooming house -- Mike Miller's. I had two nurses
from the hospital living right across the hall. The second
year I slept all summer in the same bed with Pat Gillick.
Not just the same room, the same bed!"
Pat
Gillick (on making his way to Alberta from Los Angeles)
"Actually,
I hitch-hiked from LA to Alberta. Well, money was tight in those
times and I was trying to save a little money. I took about four
days. I got into Salt Lake and went up to Idaho Falls and into
Helena and Great Falls and up through that way and just kind of
hitch-hiked along the way."
Greg
Seastrom (on an early example of pay cuts) "When Pat Gillick was playing for us (Vulcan)
he didn't win a game ... but in the middle of the
season George Wesley picks him up to go up north somewhere to play
in a tournament and he throws a no-hitter. Well that didn't
sit to well with the people of Vulcan. The next time he went
to the bank (to collect his pay), before they gave him the money,
they asked, 'Did Wesley pay you?' When Gillick said
yes, they said, 'We're docking that from your pay' And
they did."
Pat
Gillick (confirming) "That's true! I was playing for the team in Vulcan, but played in those
tournaments with George Wesley's team in Granum and basically they said
if you're going to be playing with him you can draw half your salary
from the Granum White Sox and half from the Vulcan Elks. My salary
was $250 a month."
Lou
Pisani (on a minor player revolt in 1950) "We
got just room and board. In those days if they found out we got
paid we would have been ineligible back in the states, so it was
kept secret, But, we got together in Regina. We were playing
a series, set up in a hotel, a big room they had for teams coming
in. In fact, I brought this up with coach Beiden, "Look you've got
us on room and board and we're winning all this money in these
tournaments, and the guys were talking that we should get a
little money." Finally we voted on it, and told Brick
Swegle (the promoter) if we don't get it we're going home. We got
thirty dollars a week. Pay them a little bit that's what Swegle
did in 1950 and in 1951 it was the same way although it then
became how important you were on the team, I think the pitchers
got a little more."
Jack
Altman (on arriving in Vulcan 1955) " I
came up with a fellow who had played at Vulcan the year before,
Skippy Winn. They picked me up in Eugene, Oregon, four of us drove. We drove over Crow's
Nest Pass in a big storm ... when we got to Vulcan it was real
stormy. They were burning gasoline on the Vulcan field.
Our first game was against RCAF Claresholm. We won 14-4."
Bob
Milano (on why so many of the Western Canada players became
such celebrated college coaches) "I think a lot of it
had to do with our era. That was a prestigious occupation
in those days. If your coach asked you to run through a
wall, you did it. We loved the game and wanted to continue
what we knew about the game and help the next generation ... It
was so enjoyable because of the kids. They made it
worthwhile showing up every day. It was fun to watch them
grow as people more than maybe as a baseball player."
Stan
Busch (on the prairie experience for a college guy)
"It was just a great time, a chance to play and meet people
... definitely a place to hone your skills, play every day and
go back to the college game hoping it would help and it really
did."
Charlie
Beene (on the miracle in Kamsack, 1951 ) "When we
went in there for that tournament I was a slow pitch guy,
I threw the ball very moderately for high school
even. And it was kind of rainy and about the second game
we played it was sprinkling rain and it was like a
miracle. All of a sudden I could throw the ball hard.
Wham. I felt like Bob Feller. In one day. Something
magical came over me in one day. I was never a fireballer
like Jack Hannah, but at least it was a medium, major league
fastball. It was the turning point for my career and my
life."
Bob
Bennett (on prairie driving, 1952) "There
were dirt and gravel roads and we had five in our car going from
Regina to North Battleford. We hit a bump and flipped
over. We crawled out, thankfully nobody was really
hurt. The first thing I hear is Tom Sommers yelling
"Where's my bat?"
Bob
Bolingbroke (on lessons learned and applied)
"Being on your own up here was great, you learned
responsibility ... and I think the three years I spent up
here helped in that as far as what I ended up doing career wise.
It set the stage for that. Plus, you had to work hard to
make things payoff and, hey, that doesn't hurt anything in life.
The whole association up here was just a great framework,
foundation for the next forty years quite frankly."
Bob
Bolingbroke (on quitting ball to go back to school)
"Probably the one thing I would turn over again. I do
regret ... just to see how far I might have been able to
go. It's tough to argue with the success I have had, but
still there's always that nagging thing, "Could I have made
it." So that's one regret I have, I did not try to go
further."
Steve
Schott (on thinking back to Lethbridge 1959)
"The one thing that sticks out more than anything else ...
the fabulous groups of friends that we had, the chance to play
with, live with. We boarded together ... in the old Ma
Fisher, Pa Fisher boarding house just off main street ... Great camaraderie.
Forty years later we run into each other and it's like we hadn't
missed a beat. It's an amazing. There's a bonding, I
guess you would call it, of friendship that we were able to
develop while we were here, to play ball together, enjoy each
others company, having an opportunity to win a championship and
having an opportunity to share people's lives together,
experiences, just a great bunch of memories."
Clarence
Yanosik (on making choices) "I
thought I was a good ball player until just before I left the
Vancouver Capilanos when the boys from the higher up leagues
started coming back down. When I saw what was coming down,
compared to what I was, I realized I wouldn't be going to the
majors for sure. And, I thought that was a good time to
get serious about completing my education and playing ball when
I could."
Ray
Washburn (on his 1959 no-hitter) "Nobody
thought it was a no-hitter, I walked so many guys, eight I
think, and there were runners on the bases all night. I
walked in two."
Arley
Kangas (on meal money) "When I played pro
ball in the Northwest League in 1961 we got $3.25 a day.
Believe it or not, you could get three meals for that. You
had to shop around and you weren't eating at the best
restaurants but you could get three meals for $3.25. You
didn't tip a lot!"
Clarence
Yanosik (on his career choice) " I
love judging. I would never go back to the practice of
law, it's too hectic. From what I hear I did a relatively
good job. I was a better judge than I was a ball
player!"
Bob
Bennett (on an introduction and almost an exit,
1952) "After days of traveling, including a stop in
Plentywood, Montana where we practiced in an empty lot for half
an hour, we arrived bone-tired in Regina. We got a call at
six a.m. for a game that day. We drove to Estevan, a
couple of hours. After the game, Denny Evenson wanted to
send five of us back home, me, Bolger and Bartels among
them. Pete Beiden told Evenson, "If you send them,
you send the whole team." We stayed."
Curly
Williams (on Slim Thorpe, the Lloydminster owner) "He
used to get out of the dugout and go down the third base
coaching line and try to coach. He was so funny the whole team
used to laugh at him. He was kind of tall and skinny, a
well-liked guy, everybody loved him."
Tug McGraw (on
some differences between the US and Canada) " It was my first time away from home and I really
didn't know anything. We'd be on a bus trip going from
Lethbridge to Calgary or Edmonton and they'd stop the bus and
say, you want a beer. Everybody else did, so I did. I'd order a
six-pack, because that's what all the guys ordered and I figured
it was the thing to do. But I didn't realize that there was a
big difference in the alcohol content between Canadian beer and
U.S. beer, and sometimes I wound up getting slightly smashed
between bus stops ... I used to crawl up on the luggage rack, I
was so small. I'd bring a blanket from the hotel, climb up on
the rack, and snooze away." (McGraw,
Tug & Durso, Joseph. Screwball. Houghton Mifflin Co., 1974)
Stan Busch (on
waking up with Walkingshaw) "I got a call from Lester (Jim) and a
couple of hours later I was on a bus, 48 hours on a bus, all the way to
Calgary ... I was picked up there and, two hours later, we were in Lacombe
for a tournament. It was past midnight and they take me into my hotel
and tell me I'm in a room with Darwin Walkingshaw, who I've never met
before. What they didn't tell me, it was the same bed with Walkingshaw! Well, we got up at six or seven, as we had a
triple-header that day, and shook hands for the first time."
Jack
Altman (on college kids working for their pay) "One of the jobs I had was lifting big, heavy
boulders into a pickup truck. I did that a day or two and said I don't
think I can pitch well if I keep doing this. So I didn't have to do it
anymore ... Once, several of us had jobs driving tractors from Vulcan to
Lethbridge."
Greg Seastrom (on
the stadium facilities) "We would dress at home. The little ballparks didn't have facilities.
It was not uncommon to see, at a dance after the game, ball players
still in their uniforms out on the dance floor."
Bill Walasko
(on working for Wesley) "George had us painting the farm
buildings, maintaining the ball park in town, hauling building materials for
the hired carpenters that were adding new barns, cattle and hay sheds. I did
this for two summers and went to school in the winters. It was a good
experience and it kept us fit and busy. We dressed like the workmen we
were on the ranch and ate in the cookhouse with the cowboys."
Emile
Francis (on the Rosetown riot,
1962)
Greg
Seastrom (on "what, me worry?") "Jack called and had convinced them (Vulcan) to add
another player. The worst part was he told them they needed a third
pitcher and he let them know I could pitch. I was not a pitcher. I had
pitched enough to know how to step on the mound and not to balk, but I
certainly didn't have any ability at it. But, that didn't bother me at
the time."
Jack
Altman (on the anxiety in the spring) "Pete Beiden (Fresno State coach) arranged for
us to come up to Vucan. We used to wait around with bated
breath in the spring to find out if he was going to have
openings for us. He called all the shots."
Clarence
Yanosik (on the days of the Lord's Day Act) "
Most of them were Sunday games, doubleheaders and you couldn't
charge admission. A silver collection. We were happy for weekday
games because we could charge, not very much, but we could
charge."
Dale
Zeigler (on how a California college kid ended up
playing in Edmonton in 1956) "A lot of the guys used
to go to Northern California, but you know they'd play ... a
couple of times a week and they'd work for the saw mills or
whatever up in these small towns in Northern California. I
don't know how this opportunity came about, I was just told
you're playing summer ball in Edmonton. I said okay! How do I
get there? I don't have any money I can't afford to go. They
tell me your transportation will be paid for and you'll work for
an accounting firm and you'll earn $300 a month."
Dale
Zeigler (on the state of coaching for pitchers in the
50s) "I had no control over my body, I was a thrower,
I was trying to learn to be a pitcher. I had talent but, I was a
thrower not a pitcher. Instruction? None. Keep the ball
down, throw strikes. Bend your back, throw strikes. Even
professional baseball didn't have pitching coaches."
Dale
Zeigler (on the experience of prairie ball)
"A fantastic experience for me. Nothing I had ever
experienced before and it did help me in becoming a player
as a professional because we were playing every day and
traveling and I really think it helped the kids to grow up and
it was good baseball."
Dale
Zeigler (on an eye-opener in Lloydminster)
"In '56 at Lloydminster you guys needed a game, the last
game of the season against us in your park and you needed it for
the payroll but it had rained and the field was a mess. We're
all there waiting and they poured more gasoline on that field
... gasoline on the infield and lit the match and then somebody
in a car or a truck was going around in circles on the dirt to
try and dry it out. And then some more gasoline. I'd never seen
anything like that in my life."
Dale
Zeigler (remembering Stan Karpinski, whose Meridians
bounced Edmonton out of the playoffs) "He was a tough
old buzzard, always needed a shave, gruff looking probably had
grey hair, little bump on his nose, tall, not skinny ... threw
junk."
Dale
Zeigler (on apologies from Ernie Rodriguez)
"Ernie and I played against one another from junior high
school through college. We knew each other for a long time ...
In that Global World Series I threw a one-hitter and the one hit
was a ball that bounced about a foot in front of Ernie. And for
years, for years, he apologized. Every time he'd see me he'd
apologize for not making the play. This went on for something
like ten years."
Conrad Munatones (writing home
in June, 1957 on his experience in Edmonton) "I am really
happy to be with this club. I can't over express myself.
They do everything first class for us. We are not the
highest paid team in the league, but we get the best facilities
... This is a very potent lineup [Ken Guffey, Mike Castanon,
Larry Elliot, Tom Shollin, Ron Fairly, Con Munatones, Wayne
Tucker, Eddie Sada]. Everybody on the team is capable of
giving the ball a good ride. We hit the good fast ball
pitchers like we own them. However, we have had a little
trouble with the junkies. The junkies have beaten us the
majority of the games we have lost."
Cleveland
Grant (on the Texas kid playing in Edmonton in the
50s) "We played in Edmonton and it was snowing and the
manager did not want us to hurt our arms so we all played
different positions. The people wouldn't go home so we had to
play and it was very, very cold."
Cleveland
Grant (on a major difference for "coloured"
players in crossing the border into Canada)
"Felix
Valdez and Chino Valdez from Cuba ... they were brothers, one
was light skinned the other was dark and had kinky hair and one
had kind of straight hair. We'd play in Louisiana sometimes and
the light skinned one could go into places and get food and
bring it out to his brother because he had the darker skin they
wouldn't let him in there. In Canada we had no problems whatsoever. It was a
big change."
Marvin
Ligon (on "acceptance" in Canada)
"During that time we were not as excepted in
the States as we were in Canada. We could come and go and
stay in the hotels and things without any problem in Canada ...
A black face was somewhat unique out there on the prairies. We'd
go into areas there where they had never seen one and so they
were coming out to see the black faces as much as the baseball
game."
Marvin
Ligon (his first impressions of the prairies)
"Dusty roads. The war was just over ... making transition
to trying to play baseball and we;d play on some weird fields.
They just knocked down the wheat and we'd go out and play
ball."
Marvin
Ligon (on his "contract" with the Ligon
All-Stars) ""Get on the bus and ride 'til
September."
Marvin
Ligon (on a 1949 crowd in Regina) "I remember one
big day in Regina ... we were playing the Capitals and the park
was full of fans. I realized later that they were there to
see Barbara Ann Scott who had won the gold medal in figure
skating in the 1948 Winter Olympics. If that wasn't big
enough, she used my globe to go out and throw the first pitch
and I didn't even get her autograph."
Carroll
H. Rasch (who grew up in Minot, North Dakota and was a
member of the "Knot Hole Gang" in the mid 50s). "
...How amazing to see those faces. I remember a short term pitcher
named Cliff Lemme. They lived up the block and we would beg
his son, David, to let us see his dad's baseball glove. He
would bring it out into the yard and we'd fight over who could
wear it for playing catch. We would treat it like a holy relic,
but when bored, would leave it lying out in the yard. More than
once his dad had to go looking for it in a panic. All
of us thought we were Don Corcoran or Zoonie McLean.
I remember Othello Renfroe and KNOW that he managed
the Minot Mallards now and again. I have often wondered if he
might be the first black to managed a team in the USA. I remember
his humor and clowning. When Minot would be behind and the
sky was overcast, he would come out of the dugout and look up to
the sky and pray for rain. He was a wonderful comic."
"
... The ballpark was only eight blocks from my neighborhood. We
would walk past it every day and, in summer, would grab our
baseball gloves and hang out near the park, sending somebody in to
see if we could hang out in the outfield and shag balls for them
during batting practice. One of the Mallards would often hit us a
few towering fly balls to chase as a reward. I remember getting
under one and catching it and feeling as if I was the greatest. I
also remember being invited to stand in the batter's box as one of
the Mallards pitched. I was urged NOT to take a swing at the ball
but I recall them coming past me at 60 to 90 mph and was in real
awe of any man who can step up to the plate and hit a fast ball in
front of stands filled with screaming fans."
"
... My uncle was a cop in Minot. There was this street
of prostitution (Third Street West). It was made up of
about three blocks of little restaurants and homes which
advertised "HOT TAMALES." The police would often raid
these homes and arrest people for selling liquor illegally. (You
would ask for a cup of coffee and they would pour you a whiskey in
a coffee cup.) Well, one long planning period before a
series of raids, the police watched carefully to see who was
tipping off these bordello operators about an impending raid. The
police concluded that Sugar Cain was on the sidewalk
outside all the time and that he entered the nearest house when
the police were spotted. So, when the next raid was precipitated,
the first cops on the block arrested Sugar Cain for
"loitering" and hit the rows of houses. Sugar Cain ended
up in jail and was in danger of missing his place in the rotation.
My uncle (Det. Capt. Ray Lennick) was probably the least popular
man in town. Sugar was released, if I recall, and pitched (or may
have missed one start). I was young and don't remember it all, but
I was fascinated by the players, the Mallards, the hookers, Dee
Dee Goven and the whole underside of near west side Minot. When
they cleaned up Third Street, ran huge fluorescent lights down the
block and drove out the prostitution, they took the fun and heart
out of the city."
"
... I am stunned at some of the names who played in Minot. A
little voice in the back of my head said I saw Satchel Paige
pitch, but people would tell me it was impossible. Now I see that
he played in Minot for a year. I may have seen him pitch in an
exhibition. It makes me angry that I was as interested in showing
off for the girls in the Knot Hole section as I was in watching
the game!"
Don
Fleming (Edmonton Journal columnist) "Over the
years, the Meridians from Slim Thorpe's fair border town of
Lloydminster has delighted in tormenting the Eskimos at the
darnedest of times ... On two occasions, the Esks have gone into
playoff series as top-heavy favorites with the gamboleers, only to
have the Meridians come along to confound the dopesters." (Edmonton
Journal, June 9, 1961)
Lou
Pisani (Medicine Hat Mohawks, Colonsay Monarchs on the
hockey stars on the diamond) " ... Gordie Howe, played first
base ... Bentley brothers had their own field ... good baseball
players ... and you know how they used to slide
into a base ... you know in hockey they give you a shoulder ... well,
they used to come in and roll .. they didn't come in with spikes high,
they'd come in, slide in and roll into you with their shoulder and
knock the ball out of your glove. They played hard, they were
great guys, had their own team. Bert Olmstead, a mean winger, if you fooled around with him, he'd take ya
out."
Betty Travis (Minot, North Dakota) " ... My Mom did the
custom monogramming for the Mallards' uniforms etc. for years."
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