tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4877881702352775713.post2493478863232811942..comments2023-04-21T11:11:25.591-06:00Comments on A Bordello Pianist: The Greatest Baseball Player of All TimeThomas Warkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11953195197253264621noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4877881702352775713.post-89691921051307238852011-02-22T19:23:48.845-07:002011-02-22T19:23:48.845-07:00This Eddie Miller that I never heard of, did you h...This Eddie Miller that I never heard of, did you happen to be watchin' him about the same time I was watchin' such smooth-field, no-hit infielders as Leo Righetti, pitcher Dave's pop, struggling to hit his weight all over the Sally League -- Charleston, Augusta, Greenville, wherever they'd give him work? I think he missed Columbia, SC, where I went to collitch, and which was too strongly anchored to its poppa team to entertain Leo. In fact, Columbia had one of those umbilical-type ties to Cincinnati, and in the late '40s (early '50s, too) the top Redleg farm team was this one in only Class A, where the local Reds polished up Kluszewski, Baumholtz, Merriman, Wally Post (a pitcher with other possibilities who kept a couple homers in there with an occasional goose egg till they took his egg-crate away and made him play every day); a guy named Frank Robinson who stood right up to the plate while a couple of aging, leather-lunged Augusta fans had a little fun yelling "Hit him in the head!" like they wuz mean people or something. But they wuz jes' nice Southern fellas, never you mind. (Well, there wuz times we did wonder about 'em, but it wuz plum wunnerful how easy it was, back then, to accept disrespect directed at other folks. Has anything really changed since then, I wonder?) And Joe Bill Adcock (notice the dropped Bill, and NO, he wasn't no "Billy Joe" like the one that played all-American basketball for Vanderbilt back then, or the other one who jumped off the Tallahatchie Bridge). This fella, Joe Bill for Joseph Wilbur, was a baseball all-American from LSU who hung around for a couple of seasons trying to fix his swing in Columbia, and finally got it about as fixed as it would get before he headed on up the hill. It did need some fixin', though not much. Anyway, back in '48, fella named Joe Nuxhall couldn't buy a win in Columbia.<br /> <br />Speaking of fans yelling and all, the guys who broke the Sally League's color line did it as part of a roommate-combination deal for the Jacksonville Tars, who belonged to the NY Jints. Their names were Henry Aaron, Horace Garner and Felix Mantilla, and they came along in those same few years. This fellow Henry won the batting title first time out by a heap (gettin' about the same kind of good-natured support he got years later when he started whacking away at one of Mr. Babe Ruth's big records)and I always figured Horace woulda done a lot better if he wasn't a rightfielder playing up against kindly, well-meaning folks who had to get rid of all their empties from the right-field bleachers, and some of 'em saw only one guy to fling 'em at. Or so someone told me at the time.<br /><br />Actually, the answer to my question is probably No. Eddie Miller was a few years earlier. Say, do you remember a guy named Johnny Temple? What about Lou Brissie, who went straight from Savannah to Cleveland to join their great bunch of pitchers, even though he was a cripple -- or Tommy LaSorda, who got in some good hurlin' for the Spinners of Greenville, SC, in those same years, when they was in the Brooklyn Dodger sheepfold?<br /><br />All the best, Tom! Good to learn, at last, about old Eddie Miller!Mort Perskynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4877881702352775713.post-79947072293162902002011-02-19T19:45:33.012-07:002011-02-19T19:45:33.012-07:00Great article! thanks for posting this information...Great article! thanks for posting this information. I would love to read a lot of information regarding pianists because I play the piano too. I plan to teach my niece on playing the piano soon. <br /><a href="http://www.pianoperfection.co.uk" rel="nofollow">wedding pianist for hire</a>Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com