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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK By “Bull” Allen. July 31, 2011:
Now for something truly significant.

Connie Mack Stadium (Old Shibe Park) 1961. Scene of the Streak.
Thanks to Felix Hernandez, the Seattle Mariners stalwart big righthander, who snapped the Mariners 18-game losing streak Wednesday in Yankee Stadium, and crummy start by Phil Hughes, something truly meaningful has been preserved:
The all-time major league losing streak in the modern baseball era of 23 straight losses by the 1961 Philadelphia Phillies that has stood for 50 years, has been preserved for another generation and perhaps for eternity.
Only the Cleveland Spiders of the 1899 National League, hold the pre-modern era record when they finished 20-134 in 1899, with multiple losing streaks of many more games.
As I watched the Mariners from the upper deck last Monday night, boot away a game to the Yankees, 10-3, the losing streak signs were there: mental errors. Failure to hit in the clutch. Poor managing (leaving your starter in too long until the game is gone. Eric Wedge is horrible, sympathies, Seattlers). And in anxiety to make plays, pressing to make plays, poor defensive decisions in the field.
When you’re going bad in ball. It shows and you can see why. Everybody is screwing up at bad times to screw up. Managers, pitchers, hitters, fielders contribute. It is a team meltdown.
Yes,
Yes, fans who viewed this Phillie ball club of 50 years ago from the intimate upper decks of old Connie Mack Stadium (the Shibe Park of the famous Philadelphia Athletics), can sink back in their memory La-Z-Boyz chairs now, confident their suffering watching the futile Phils of that year will also always be remembered. All that is missing is the ka-pock of paper beer cups going off in the empty upper deck at old Connie Mack. Play got so bad that fans looked for cups to stomp to amuse themselves. (Another loss from yesterplay– you cannot stomp a plastic cup and make it pop, sorry kids of today.)
These were the Phils of legend: the starting staff featured some good hurlers, Art Mahaffey, 11-19; Chris Short, 6-12, John Buzhardt, 6-12, then an assembly of pitchers in the Gene Brabender/Joe Nuxhal/ Warren Hacker vintage, pitchers who used to start only in nightcaps of natural double-headers, not the day night travesities of today.
Young men up for cups of coffee. Old castoffs hanging on in the show. Jim Owens, 5-10, Frank Sullivan, 3-16, Don Ferrarese, 5-12.—pitchers who when appearing under the legend “Today’s Pitchers” in the old grid standings of the time –signaled fans their team was going to feast at the plate, and that Phils fans would shake their heads in dread with every pitch, every 3-2 count. It was excruciating. The team had 13 saves all year. As a fan in New York you watched the Phille box scores noting the mounting losses the pain, and feeling what Phil fans were feeling.
John Buzzhardt beat the San Francisco Giants 4-3 on July 28 50 years ago this week, and for almost a month to come, the Phils did not win. Listening to the Phils with Byrum Saam on I think WCAU Philly at the microphone was like listening to the baseball version of Inner Sanctum.
That day (July 28, 1961) as the Phils left the ballpark in San Francisco, I think, they were a respectable 30-64. Then the
They had fading stars and up-and-coming rookies: You had Pancho Herrera at first, the great Tony Taylor at second, Ruben Amaro at short and Charlie Smith at third. The outfield had a young Johnny Callison and Tony Gonzalez, Behind the plate, a young Clay Dalrymple.
23 games later, Buzzhardt stopped the 23-game losing streak beating
Losing streaks snowball, the rest of the way the Phillies went 16 and 20, finishing at 47 and 107, showing as all losing streaks tell you you are really not as bad as you’re playing.
It was ironic that three years later when the young players on this team matured and lead the National League all year and had a 6-game lead with 10 games to go they reverted to form and lost all 10 and the pennant. The most amazing collapse in the final two weeks in baseball history. This is a wound that will always be remembered in
It is significant to note that when the Phillies snapped the 23-game losing streak in the nightcap of the
Say what you will about the
When baseball players struck the sport in 1994, they killed that belief in fans, at least this one.
No one would come out to meet the Mets after they lose 23 in a row today. In fact, the Mets are a 56-52 team and the fans are not coming out. Because the Mets have written the season off to save money.
We remember the 1961 Phils today with respect.
The
You have to hand it to the inept U.S. State Department. They operate a little like Major League Baseball, but are far more incompetent.
State Department — (there’s a department to cut folks. Let’s close a few embassies and fire some diplomats.)
They decided this week not to allow the Uganda Little League team into the country to participate in the Little League World Series.
This is a disgrace. The reason: according to the State Department: some of the visa applications included birth records that “several parents admitted had been altered to make some players appear younger than they actually are.”
Hey, they pose a real threat to the country. But the law has been upheld.
I feel so safe now. And good as a American.
I happen to recall a certain team from the
Come on.
We let Mexican teams in, Venezuelan teams in, Japanese teams in. And I suppose they are all clean and documentation impeccable.
This is very sad. The question is how much older were they? Was it flagrant by two or three years? What difference can it possibly make? The little league had to have approved the team being invited, didn’t it?
Is anything to be gained by keeping this team out, except pompous self congratulation by the state department?
It is sorry that
The State Department that let in the 9/11 terrorists to study how to fly airplanes, missed those hideous threats.
The Department could at least have provided security for the team to prevent any threat to the country.
I breathe so much easier knowing the State Department is on guard for thee.
But once again, Little League does what it does best: break hearts because adults want to win at all costs and will bend the rules. Ugandan officials have remarked this is a disgrace to Uganda.
Well the leaders erred on the side of trying to help kids. The idea of including kids with unclear birth records because it would have helped them should have been run by the Little League officials.
A little reason, please!




