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OFFSEASON HIGHLIGHTS
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Hank Aaron and Bob Friend,
both likely Hall of Famers, retired the day
after winning Game 7 of the 1973 World Series.
Veteran managers Timothy J. Smith and Glen
Reed started work with their expansion clubs,
Denver and Montréal.
The league
welcomed three new GMs: Joanna Graham was hired
by the St. Louis Maroons, Terrance Carlsson
joined the Brooklyn Superbas, and Douglas
Kohn took the reins of the Detroit Griffins.
Ernie Banks and Lew Burdette were elected to
the UL Hall of Fame with comfortable vote
margins. They become the 10th and 11th
inductees to Beachville.
Cy Young winner Larry Dierker will earn $6.5
million next year after winning his salary
arbitration case. Willie Crawford of
Dallas and Mike Epstein of Los Angeles also won
the same amount.
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ON THE MEND |
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ATL
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2B Joe Morgan (career) |
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BOS
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SP Jerry Koosman (10-11 mo)
MR Mike Kekich
(11 mo) |
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BRO
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SP Ernie McAnally (8 mo) |
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CHI
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MR Rich Folkers (5-6 mo) |
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CLE
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--- |
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DAL
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DET
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--- |
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LA
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2B Dick Howser (9-10 mo) |
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MAN
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--- |
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STL
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MR Chuck Hartenstein (6-7 mo) |
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SF
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--- |
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WAS
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min 6 months
new injury |
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TRADES |
October 17 (290)
MANHATTAN gets
SP Chuck Dobson
MONTRÉAL gets
SP Mike Nagy
MAN '75 3rd round pick
November 3 (291)
BROOKLYN gets
SP Bill Hands
RF Art Shamsky
LF Ron Swoboda
DENVER gets
SP Ray Burris
CF Darrel Thomas 2B Mike Tyson
CLE '74 2nd rd pick (#26) MAN '74
3rd rd pick (#36) BRO '74 4th rd
pick (#46)
November 3 (292)
BROOKLYN gets
CHI '75 1st rd
pick CHI '75 4th rd pick
CHICAGO gets
LF Steve Braun BRO '74 2nd rd
pick (#18) WAS '74 3rd rd pick
(#38)
November 3 (293)
BROOKLYN gets
RF Joe Rudi
CF Cito Gaston
WAS '74
1st rd pick (#10)
WASHINGTON
gets
2B Dick McAulliffe
1B Bob Watson
LF Pat Kelly
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 Banks,
Burdette Elected to Hall
BEACHVILLE, Ont. (Nov.1 ) -- Ernie Banks and Lew
Burdette became the newest members of the UL Hall of
Fame today. Banks won a record 95 percent of possible
votes, and Lew Burdette won 92 percent. Banks won two
MVPs, eight Ullies, and was named to the 1950's All
Decade Team. Burdette notched 305 wins, third all time,
over 19 seasons, including nine 20-win seasons, and
holds the UL record for complete games with 261. He won
nine UL championships, eight with Brooklyn and one with
St. Louis.
Ray Narleski, the UL's all-time save
leader, finished third in balloting, raising his tally
from 54 to 70 percent this year, and is poised to cross
the 75 percent threshold next year. Carl Erskine (62
percent), and Eddie Mathews (58 percent) rounded out the
top five, and Willie Jones finished last with 45 percent
and will be dropped from the ballot.
 Expansion
'74
14ers, Voyageurs Stock Rosters
NEW YORK (Oct. 17)
- The league's two expansion
teams took a big step closer to becoming a reality
today, drafting their first players during a 35-round
expansion draft. The Denver 14ers selected San
Francisco shortstop Tim Foli with the first overall
pick, and the Montréal Voyageurs took Cleveland second
baseman Don Money with the second pick.
The 14ers
leaned heavily toward pitching, drafting three starting
pitchers with their first six picks, including fourth
overall pick Larry Christenson of Dallas.
While
Denver was drafting pitchers, Montréal was
snapping up high on-base percentage guys, like
Washington center fielder Rich Coggins and Atlanta left
fielder Greg Gross.
Three teams lost the maximum
eight players to the draft, led by the Brooklyn Superbas,
who accounted for eight of the first 45 picks.
Manhattan and Detroit were the other two. Four
teams (Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, and St. Louis) lost
only four players to the draft. The only
big-salary veterans selected were San Francisco left
fielder Lou Brock (7200) by Montréal in the 27th round
and Los Angeles center fielder Curt Flood (5870) with
Denver's 28th pick. Frank Linzy, a 33-year-old
Atlanta reliever drafted by the Voyageurs, was the only
Top 40 Player scored by either team, according to OSA
scouting. The 14ers scored the highest rated prospect in
SP Larry Christenson (#3), but Montréal picked up five
Top-50 batting prospects: CF Rich Coggins, 1B Dan
Driessen, LF Mike Easler, 2B Phil Garner, and C Jim
Essian. Montréal scores higher on the Top
Prospects list--2nd in the league, in fact--but several
of Denver's top players--like SP Steve Kline and 3B LF
Tom Grieve--are 24 or 25, just missing the cutoff for
prospect rankings.
Next up, the newlings will
wait to see which players are cut from UL rosters during
the arbitration and auto-renewal phases of the
offseason. Montréal will have the first overall
pick in the March 1 rookie draft.
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Age |
Denver |
Montréal |
| 17-23 |
6 |
20 |
| 24-27 |
14 |
7 |
| 28-32 |
12 |
5 |
| 33+ |
3 |
3 |
The
Morning After
Aaron, Friend Retire
CHICAGO (Oct. 13)
- One day after the Colts' dramatic Game 7 victory
sealed the club's second league title, two UL legends
announced their retirements. Hank Aaron, one of
the circuit's all-time great sluggers, will hang up his
cleats after a career spanning 19 years and over 10,000
at bats. The first overall pick in 1954, "Hammerin'
Hank" spent eight full seasons with the Colonels, six
seasons with Los Angeles, and his final five with
Brooklyn and Chicago. He won a UL championship
with Louisville in 1958 and the Most Valuable Player
Award in 1960, and set the
single season home run record with 50 in 1964.
Aaron ranks second all-time in games, at-bats and total
bases, third in hits and home runs, and fourth in RBIs.
He was a bit player in the Colts' 1973 campaign, hitting
.194-12-43 in 120 games, and hit just 1-for-16 in the
World Series, but his lone hit was a home run in Game 7.
Bob
Friend was one of the last remaining "original ULers"
dating from the league's inaugural draft in 1951, when
he was selected 127th overall by the New York Gothams.
The righthander from West Lafayette, Ind. spent 14 years
with the Goth-Feds then bounced around between Chicago,
Cleveland, Brooklyn, then back to Chicago. One of
the top pitchers in Goth-Feds history, he won 23 games
in 1961 and 24 in 1963 and twice racked up over 300
strikeouts in a season. Friend was a key cog in
the two-time pennant-winning Cleveland sides in 1965 and
1967, and won 22 games in between the pennant years.
He participated on the losing side in five World Series
with three different teams, before winning this year
after throwing a single pitch in Game 6. He ends
his career with 271 career wins (#6) and 3,922
strikeouts, second only to Johnny Antonelli.
Friend's retirement leaves Mickey Mantle as the last
active player from the 1951 inaugural draft class.
Mantle, at 18, was the youngest player selected in 1951.
The 23-year veteran is up for free agency this offseason
unless St. Louis offers an extension on his $10 million
contract.
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