“It was a wacky war”

Yogi Berra

A colourised version of perhaps the most familiar image of Yogi Berra in his Navy uniform.

Note: Today is the eighty-second anniversary of history’s largest amphibious war invasion. Officially named Operation Overlord; colloquially known as D-Day from then until now. It began  the liberation of France and in due course all western Europe from the grip of the Third Reich.

Among those of the U.S. Navy playing an active role in the invasion was a Yankee prospect who’d survive the war to become a Hall of Fame catcher against whom all to follow would be measured. I republish this essay in his honour (with a very few necessary changes) and as a tribute to those who served with him but didn’t make it home.

Yogi Berra once gave a half-puckish beginning explanation as to how he became part of D-Day, World War II’s major Allied invasion of Europe from the Normandy beaches, as an eighteen-year-old Navy seaman. He made it sound like relief from boredom. As he so often did with his fabled Yogiisms, he had a knack for good humoured understatement.

Something still seems to be missing from America since Berra’s death over eleven years ago, which was also more than a year and a half after his beloved wife, Carmen, preceded him. And there may be worse reasons to think about the Hall of Fame catcher and personality than remembering how he got himself aboard a Navy rocket boat in time to be part of D-Day.

Berra was a Yankee prospect playing for their Norfolk, Virginia farm in 1943. Norfolk also just so happened to be the headquarters of the Fifth Naval District. Which meant it was also the governing center of the Navy’s Atlantic Fleet. Which also meant Norfolk and nearby Newport News overrun with sailors and civilian defense workers, an estimated 750,000 of them in a pair of towns whose populations combined weren’t quite as large as that of the Bronx.

His biographer Allen Barra, in Yogi Berra: Eternal Yankee, has written that the lad’s first real problems in Norfolk were long lines at the movie houses he loved and trying to stretch his $90-a-month minor league salary. “I never got too hooked on cigarettes, because I couldn’t afford them,” he once said. “Maybe starvation kept me from getting cancer.”

Once, knowing his team’s two other catchers were ailing, Yogi launched a unique version of a strike, telling his manager he wasn’t well for lack of food and the ploy worked toward getting him a $5 a month raise. His mother, Paulina, helped by slipping him a few extra dollars in the mail with instructions not to tell his father. And Berra became popular enough on the Tars that one ardent fan, a lady, provided him a full hero sandwich of salami and provolone every Sunday game.

That sandwich, Barra wrote, “was for Yogi what spinach was for Popeye.” After he received the first such gift, he smashed twelve hits and drove in 23 runs in two games against Roanoke. (This was the doubleheader that prompted Carmen Berra to remember, “When I heard about the 23 RBI day, I figured he had a future.”) He played well enough to be able to think an equal or better 1944 would get him a Yankee call-up. “Yogi was looking forward to an explosive 1944,” Barra wrote. That’s a polite way to describe the one he got.

Berra knew only two things: 1) He’d be in military service soon. 2) He had no idea where. Told his draft papers were drawn back home in St. Louis, he asked for and got them sent to Norfolk. After the Tars played an exhibition game with the Norfolk Air Station (some of the Norfolk players included such Show men as pitchers Fred Hutchinson and Hugh Casey, outfielder Dom DiMaggio, and Yogi’s future Yankee teammate/fellow Hall of Famer Phil Rizzuto), he talked to a warrant officer at Norfolk’s Navy training station and took the man’s suggestion to enlist in the Navy.

When his boot camp in Maryland ended, his mother underwent surgery; he was allowed to be with her until she could return home. After that, Yogi went to Little Creek to train for the amphibious service. The routine otherwise was so hurry-up-and-wait that the kid relieved his boredom at the base movie theater and with the comic books he fell in love with. Then one night he was watching Boomtown, the Clark Gable-Spencer Tracy film, when the film suddenly stopped and the theater lights suddenly came back up.

Berra and all the other sailors in the theater were ordered to line up. Officers asked for volunteers—for rocket boat duty. None of the young swabbies had a clue about rocket boats but when someone called them rocket ships, Yogi perked up. The idea that volunteering in military service was tantamount to being very careful what you wish for hadn’t yet been programmed into his mental data base.

The boats, as Barra noted, “turned out to be small landing craft, LCSSs (Landing Craft Support Small), whose purpose was to spray rockets on the beach before troop landings. There were duller things to train for. Some of the men got the hint that they might be participating in a major troop landing, perhaps the invasion of Hitler’s Fortress Europe that the papers were always writing about.”

The sailors called the rocket boats big bathtubs. If you played with toy boats in the bath when you were a small child, try now to imagine having a bath with 48 rockets, one twin .50-caliber machine gun and two .30-caliber machine guns. The boats affirmed the aforementioned hints: their purpose in life was to hammer the Normandy beaches and clear the way for the troops’ landing crafts. Yogi and his fellows had a name for themselves: “The landing craft suicide squad.”

The rocket boatmen first went to Plymouth, England. Once again it seemed to be hurry up and wait. Three weeks after they arrived, though, Berra’s LCSS was attached to what was thought to be the smallest transport ship in the Coast Guard fleet, the USS Bayfield. It made for Normandy early on 4 June. The Bayfield carried six LCSSs. “Just before dawn, on the morning of June 6, 1944,” Barra wrote, “their rocket boat was lifted on the davits and lowered over the side and, in Yogi’s words, ‘expendable as hell, we headed in for Omaha Beach’.”

The LCSSs were the tiniest boats on the waters heading into firing position.

“It was scary,” Yogi would remember, “but really something to see. I was only eighteen, and I didn’t think anything could kill me. I didn’t know enough to be scared. I had my head up over the side of the boat all the time, looking around like it was the Fourth of July in Forest Park and after the fireworks we were going to go over and get some hot dogs and Cokes.”

Bless his innocent soul, Yogi probably had no idea how vulnerable the LCSSs were. The sides of those boats weren’t exactly thick. One errant enemy shell, especially one hitting any of the boats’ rockets, would have made not the Fourth of July hot dogs but them into duck soup. Berra’s peekings over the edges to see the show ended when his lieutenant advised him to put his head down if he had plans to keep it.

The LCSSs waited for their lead boat to fire a test and see if it reached the beach. If it did, the other boats would move in close. It did. And inimitably, Yogi described the boats moving in “closer than the hitter is to the left field [wall] at Fenway Park.” One and all of them began firing. “I couldn’t see all the bloodshed that they showed in the movie [Saving] Private Ryan,” he remembered years later, “but I did see a lot of guys drown.”

Berra’s and all the LCSSs did what they were sent to do. Well enough that by D-Day’s afternoon they could actually relax, though they were under orders to remain through 9 June for cover fire in the event the Nazis had ideas about the counterattack that never came.

They had more trouble from an anticipated storm smashing in on 8 June, battering the boats and even flipping Yogi’s over. Before that they had trouble through no fault of their own—a friendly fire incident. Three fighter planes appeared above and the LCSSs were under orders to shoot down anything flying below cloud level. The LCSSs fired and hit one plane. The pilot bailed and parachuted before the plane hit the drink. Yogi ordered his boatmates to keep him covered, expecting to hear a stream of German.

What he heard was a stream of English language swearing. The crew had shot down an American plane whose markings they couldn’t see in the murk of the storm. When the storm worsened, Berra’s boat flipped over. Try to resist the temptation to say that only Yogi Berra and his boat crew could survive D-Day just to get thatclose to drowning after the artillery stopped.

They hung on until they were rescued and returned to the Bayfield. A Nazi bomb fell near the ship but no serious damage occurred, according to Barra and others. Berra said later he was too tired to be scared. Years later, when he met D-Day’s mastermind, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, he couldn’t bring himself to ask Eisenhower about the invasion. “I never talked about D-Day,” Yogi remembered. “It didn’t seem right, but now I wish I had.”

With good reason. Numerous sailors believed Eisenhower was aboard one of their ships on D-Day. This was because of his soon-to-be-immortal radio message (You are about to embark on a great crusade) that was actually recorded at the 101st Airborne’s headquarters while watching the first Allied aircraft reach for the skies on that day. Even today, it sounds so clear that when you play it it sounds as though Ike’s telling it to you side by side as you’re about to hit the links.

Berra and his squadron got a break to rest at Portsmouth before going to Bizerte, the North African coastal town, and by 15 August 1944 he was part of the LCSS force hitting Marseilles and strafing hotels and other facilities co-opted by German forces. Berra’s boat was almost hit by mistake by a British shell that turned out to be a dud.

Berra himself got close enough to death when ships of the British Royal Navy behind the LCSSs fired at targets past the hotels and, while holding a rocket, one of his crew hollered to hit the deck. As he ducked under a gun mount, Yogi accidentally dropped the rocket. “It did not go off,” Barra wrote, “or you wouldn’t be reading this book.”

During a furious barrage, Berra got nicked by a bullet from a German machine gun before he manned his twin .50s and fired to cut down fleeing Nazis. As American troops landed, the locals swarmed the sailors with gifts and song. “It was a wacky war,” Yogi would remember. “A half hour after we were getting shot at by the Germans, the French were welcoming us.”

He rarely talked about his World War II experiences in the decades to follow. When he did so, even that provoked a little humour, as in the Los Angeles Times overhearing Berra talking to Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Palmer and Hall of Fame broadcaster Tim McCarver. Wrote the Times: “Yogi survived D-Day and George Steinbrenner, and all in forty years.”

He had to survive a more sensitive customer, though: his mother. After receiving a month’s leave for the Christmas holidays, Berra went home and showed his family his hard-earned decorations: a Distinguished Unit Citation, two battle stars, a European Theater of Operations ribbon, and a Good Conduct Medal.

Paulina Berra was already in tears as it was. Her boy also earned the Purple Heart when he was nicked by that Nazi bullet, but Yogi didn’t dare make the formal application for that medal. He figured that if Mama Berra knew what the Purple Heart really meant, she’d suffer a purple heart attack.

The coming CBA: And, the battle begins. Sort of.

Dodger Stadium

Contrary to reputedly popular opinion, this is not the home of the root of all baseball evil.

The initial proposals between the owners and the Major League Baseball Players Association were delivered last week. They’re probably going to end up looking like anything but how they were presented. But it couldn’t hurt to look at them in earnest, anyway. And, the battle begins. Sort of.

The owners’s introductory proposal includes a first-year salary cap of $245.3 million and a salary floor of $171.2 million, plus a 50-50 revenue split. The players association’s initial proposal, which came forth a day before the owners’s opening, includes revenue sharing guaranteeing smaller-market teams minimum $240 million a year, a $150 million “competitive integrity tax” (a kind of soft salary floor) and raising the luxury tax threshold to $300 million, also known as a “soft” cap.)

“To put the state of negotiations in baseball terms, we’re still in the first inning,” wrote The Athletic‘s Ken Rosenthal in response. “Actually, that might be overstating it. The teams are not even in their respective clubhouses yet. I’m not even sure they’ve left their hotels.”

That sounds about right so far. Especially if you consider someone’s already trying to play a little three-card monte. A TwitterXer named The Captain’s Blog offered a breakdown:

1) What is revenue? With the cap threshold tied to a percentage of revenue, this becomes a paramount question. Based on the initial proposal, MLB owners are seeking to define revenue narrowly. So, for example, pro rated revenue from businesses like YES and Legends Hospitality would be excluded from the Yankees’ ledger. So too with Battery Atlanta revenue for the Braves, and the Chavez Ravine Joint Venture for the Dodgers. MLB owners own lots of businesses that are highly leveraged to their baseball teams, and all of these revenues, though bolstered by the existence of the team, will be excluded from player compensation.

2) What is payroll? Is it cash or cap? In the NFL, this question creates massive disparities between what teams actually spend and what their cap hit is on paper. The MLB proposal, which reportedly is based on AAV, would be similar to the NFL. In other words, it would be highly manipulative and misleading, and not truly oriented toward “fairness”. It would also disadvantage the players by misaligning actually money paid out to current revenue. As an illustration, MLB 2025 total [average annual value] was $6.06 [billion], where as actual final payrolls (cash paid out) were $5.3 [billion].

What hasn’t been said just yet, but will probably need to be said as the process ambles forward, is what nobody seems to want to hear: big spending doesn’t guarantee smothering success, or even minimal success.

You’d think that would be a given. But it isn’t. Good luck trying to convince a crowd bellowing about the big bad Dodgers and their big bad bankrolls that the real reason they won back-to-back World Series and had concurrent ownership of the National League West was that they also had a sound organisation.

From what’s left of the farm systems the Manfred Regime gutted to the player development personnel, from the major league front office to the coaching staff, and, oh, yes, the players whom they knew might cohere into a unit no matter how many bazillions any or all of them brought home after taxes. The Dodgers know what they’re doing over, under, sideways, down.

It’s been said only too often, but it seems we’ll have to say it again. Spend with (and for) brains, you have the Dodgers. Spend without (and against) brains, you have the Mets. That’s only two examples, but they ought to tell you much.

Remember: An owners’ lockout will cost the owners fortunes worth of lost ticket sales and ballpark concessions. Remember, too, that MLB wants to renegotiate its media rights for 2029 and past that: “If the sport looks unstable,” says attorney and Three Inning Fan podcaster Kelley Franco, going from there, “MLB won’t have any leverage to get a good deal on that.” That, she says, means motivation for the owners to come to an agreement with the players,

Reality: Baseball’s media viewership is up. Attendance is likewise. Shutting the sport down for 2027 could mean a longer recovery period than the owners-provoked 1994 strike.

Here’s a piece of leverage the players could seize for themselves: demand that all thirty ownerships open their books for review by legitimately independent auditors. Auditors with no incoming agendae beyond giving the books an honest examination and giving both sides the truth, the whole truth, nothing but the truth, about who really can’t afford to build solid organisations versus who’s throwing fork-you-balls.

(Sidebar to the owners: If there’s an ownership group among you who really can’t afford to build or rebuild a solid baseball organisation, isn’t it in your better interest to ease that ownership out and see the team in question sold to an ownership that actually would like to see the organisation return to honest competitiveness again?)

Further reality, which isn’t exactly news unless you’ve been partying like it’s 1926: Unless its to demand certain malpractising owners sell their teams, fans don’t buy their tickets to see their teams’s owners.

Walkoff Sunday: Almost louder than bombs

Colton Cowser

Colton Coswer (Orioles) demolishes Kenley Jansen (Tigers) Sunday afternoon in the bottom of the ninth. 

Here, I’d like you to visit the first three departments. Guess what’s unique about the events in question other than that they were part and parcel of a walkoff Sunday.

No Drought About it Dept.—Aaron Judge couldn’t have chosen a better way to end a home run drought if he tried Sunday. After eleven games without hitting one out or driving one in, Judge ended a scoreless game with a two-run blast that also handed his Yankees their first win against their American League East rival Rays this season.

The win also pulled the Yankees to 4.5 games back of the Rays.

Till the Cowser Come Home Dept.—Continuing the apparent Day of the Walkoff, Colton [The Milkman] Cowser–a late-game insertion as his Orioles opened a doubleheader with the Tigers—decided enough struggle was enough, for himself and his club.

A wise decision. He yanked a game-ending three-run bomb into Camden Yards’s center field bleachers. His victim: veteran reliever Kenley Jansen, formerly a bullpen ace with the Dodgers, the Braves, the Red Sox, and the Angels. The bad news was the Tigers getting revenge in the nightcap, 4-1.

“I feel like we’ve been right there a lot of the year. It feels like we’ve been one hit away a lot of times,” Cowser told reporters postgame. “I feel like you’re always just a couple wins away from getting on a roll. I feel like we have the clubhouse to do it. I think everyone has the right mindset in here and just got to keep showing up and getting your work in and playing good, clean baseball.”

From Zero to Quarto Dept.—Bad enough that the Mets lost a series to the Marlins on their own demerit at the plate. Worse had to be the way Heriberto Hernandez rubbed it in in the bottom of the ninth Sunday: after a double, a sacrifice, a walk, and an intentional walk, Hernandez ripped a hanging changeup from Devin Williams over the center field fence.

Until that blow, Williams had spent his previous ten appearances allowing no runs. It left the Mets finishing a road trip 2-5 and shut out for the sixth time this season so far. The Marlins, meanwhile, swept a set for the first time since they swept the Rockies to open the season.

Hernandez’s salami was also the first to end a ball game when the score was 0-0 entering the plate appearance since Justin Maxwell did it in 2013, according to the invaluable Sarah Langs of MLB.com.

INTERMISSION: FIGURE IT OUT, YET?

DRY CYCLE DEPT.—Time’s up. Those three walkoff bombs amounted to three-quarters of hitting for a home run cycle: two-run homer, three-run homer, grand slam. The only thing missing was a walkoff solo blast. The last opportunity for it would be the Angels, hosting the Rangers, and tied at one going to the bottom of the ninth.

Sure, Angels lefthander Reid Detmers set a career high with fourteen strikeouts. It tied him for the fourth-most strikeouts in a game without surrendering a walk, with Dan Haren (2012) and Andrew Heaney (2019), but two behind franchise leader Frank Tanana (17, in 1975).

Only who cared about him? Whom among the Angels, with Mike Trout having struck out to end the eighth, had it in him to walk it off with a solo nuke now?

Vaughn Grissom? Leadoff strikeout. Jorge Soler? Base hit to left. There went that opportunity. So Jo Adell was then hit by a pitch to set up first and second. And Oswald Peraza grounded one to second that looked like a certain extra innings-sending double play . . . until Rangers second baseman Justin Foscue threw off line, enabling pinch-runner (for Soler) Donovan Walton to score the winner.

On the bright side, the Angels finally became the final team in the Show to hang up their twentieth win of the season. It only took them about two months. But the further bright side was the Angels sweeping the Rangers this weekend. It’s their first series sweep all season so far.

NOW, BACK TO OUR REGULARLY-SCHEDULED PROGRAM

Running of the Bulls Dept.—Decades ago, Casey Stengel hectored his Yankee hitters, “Get your runs now—Father Time is coming!” He meant Hall of Fame legend Satchel Paige, when Paige worked for the Indians and the St. Louis Browns. But these days, those managing against the Dodgers might hector their players, “Get your runs now—the bulls are gonna grab you by the horns!”

With their 5-1 win over the Brewers Sunday, the Dodgers bullpen pushed its scoreless inning streak to 38. The Elias Sports Bureau says it’s the longest in the Show since the 2017 Indians,  and seven-and-two-thirds shy of the Show record set by the 1962 Tigers.

The Dodgers broke a one-all tie in the fifth with Kyle Tucker’s two-run triple and Andy Pages’s two-run homer, and the pen picked up where starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto left off, Yamamoto keeping the Brewers scoreless following a second-inning, run-scoring infield out, before the pen took over for the final two.

Sunday’s win meant the Dodgers taking two of three from the Brewers, the first of the wins an 11-3 Saturday blowout. It also meant the Dodgers going up another half game on the Padres in the National League West, the imperialists!

Some rivalry weekend ups and downs

New York Mets

Jubilant Mets celebrate after Marcus Semien scored the winning run in the 10th on an unexpected Yankee infield collision in Citi Field Sunday.

Don’t look now, but the Mets and the Phillies didn’t exactly finish what was ballyhooed as Rivalry Weekend on the wrong side of the ledgers. We’re not quite ready to pronounce them fully resurrected, but we’re not exactly ready to write them off entirely either. Yet.

I’m not entirely sure who thinks the Braves and the Red Sox are rivals, unless someone with a perverse historical appreciation decided that the Braves having originated in Boston counts the Red Sox as their rival. The Giants and the Athletics, of course, had a regional rivalry upended by the shenanigans leading to the A’s ditching Oakland.

Well, Sacramento is only an hour and a half from San Fran, if you want to be technical. Otherwise . . .

Fancy Running Into You Here Dept.—You may or may not have noticed that the Mets have had some, shall we say, issues this season. We’ll be kind and not review them here. Not while we’re about to notice that, since they ended their notorious twelve-game losing streak, they’ve gone 13-10.

The way they got number thirteen was almost classic. The whom against whom they got it was even more classic, taking their second of three from the Yankees Sunday afternoon. Now, for the whackadoodle part: The Mets didn’t so much walk it off as the Yankees bumped it off for them.

Tyrone Taylor tied it for the Mets with a three-run bomb in the ninth to send the game to extras in the first place. With two on in the tenth, shining Mets rook Carson Benge bounced one up the middle in the tenth . . .

Who did Yankee left fielder Max Schuemann (at the infield’s back in a five-infielder defense) and shortstop Anthony Volpe think they were—the 1962 Mets? They bumped into each other behind the mound going for Benge’s bouncer, enabling Marcus Semien to shuffle home with the winning run.

Maybe that’s one reason why Yankee fans might see that their pets are 14-10 in their last 24 games and still wonder when the earth’s going to give way beneath their feet.

Philly Phlog Dept.—Do you know how the Phillies have done since Rob Thomson’s execution and Don Mattingly’s acceptance of the interim bridge? How does 14-4 strike you?

It probably strikes Phillies fans almost as joyously as the Phillies struck against the Pirates this weekend. They swept the Pirates in Pittsburgh, including mayhem from Bryce Harper, who followed up his jolting Saturday home run off the batter’s eye behind the PNC Park center field fence with another bomb into the bullpen Sunday.

Sunday’s game had more than Harper going for it, of course. Zach Wheeler pitched a gem for seven innings, striking eight out, walking one, and coming away with a 1.99 earned run average since he came off the injured list. And the Phillies slapped Paul Skenes a little silly on the afternoon and the Pirate pen a little silly, winning 6-0 to finish the sweep.

“I thought we just fought him. And that’s what you have to do against guys like him,” said Mattingly postgame about manhandling Skenes. “He’s going to get his outs; he’s going to make pitches. But you’ve got to keep fighting and just keep fouling off, trying to fight just to get something. And I thought we did that kind of up and down the order.”

Kind of. This keeps up and “interim” may not be part of Donnie Baseball’s job title very much longer.

On the other hand, both the Phillies and the Pirates finished Sunday at 24-23. The Pirates are 14-12 at home, 11-10 on the road; the Phillies are 12-11 on the road and dead even at 12 each at home. There’s still a long road to go, but neither team should feel too horrible right at this moment.

Oblique Strategies Dept.—The struggling, injury-battered Astros could use some after their franchise face, Jose Altuve, landed on the injured list with an oblique strain. The veteran second baseman was unable to run after grounding one to third base against the Rangers in the eighth Saturday, and the strain was the net result shown on an MRI.

The former ogres of the American League West look like a clinical waiting room now: fourteen on the IL entering Sunday, though Jake Meyers (CF), Jeremy Pena (SS), and Nate Pearson (RP) were expected to be re-activated come Monday, when the 19-29 Astros open a set with the Twins.

The good news: The Astros have a small drop of momentum to take into that set: they spent Rivalry Weekend taking two of three from the Rangers in Houston, the Rangers deciding Sunday that a sweep just wasn’t in their planning and bopping the Astros, 8-0.

Lucky Thirteen Dept.—By battering the Red Sox, 8-1, on Sunday, the Braves—currently the comfortable owners of the National League East’s lead—won their thirteenth series out of fifteen on the season thus far.

Austin Riley and Mike Yastrzemski homered for the Braves while Grant Holmes pitched six scoreless. Riley’s three-run shot opened for the Braves in the first; Yastrzemski went solo in the fourth; and, the hot ‘Lanta Lads scored otherwise on a bases-loaded walk and run-scoring ground out in the second; an RBI single in the fifth; and, a sacrifice fly in the eighth.

The lone Red Sox score came by way of a Kevin Sogard RBI double in the ninth, the only blemish upon a Braves bullpen that kept the Red Sox in check otherwise for the final three innings. The Red Sox are now 19-27: 11-13 on the road; 8-14 at home.

Is it any wonder Red Sox Nation might be tempted to switch from warbling Neil Diamond’s “Sweet Caroline” to the Kinks’s “Where Have All the Good Times Gone”?

Ill Wind Dept.—Well, it was an ill wind for the Las Vegas Athletics of Sacramento via Oakland on Sunday. For the visiting Giants, the wind was more than welcome, when Harrison Bader hit one into the wind with the pillows full and, this time, the wind delivered it over the right field fence for the grand slam that slammed exclamation points upon the Giants’ eight-run eighth.

It was a grand way to climax a rally begun by Bader himself when he reached on a fielding error to open the inning. It was also Mother Nature repaying Bader for having stolen a grand slam from him the day before, blowing the ball back in when it looked to one and all as though headed behind the fence.

The hapless A’s let three fielding mishaps help define their Sunday doom, the final 10-1, Giants. The good news, sort of: the A’s still hold first in the AL West . . . with a 23-23 record. The Giants remain a National League West basket case at 20-27.

But on Sunday afternoon, what was blowing in the wind was the Giants playing more than a little bit over their own heads: They matched their most runs in a single game (10, on 17 April) and improved their season’s record in blowouts to 7-9. They also improved their road record to 10-15. The A’s fell to 5-6 in blowouts and 10-12 at home.

Bobby Cox, RIP: “Come on kid, u got this!”

Bobby Cox

Bobby Cox, standing up for his player[s], should be remembered for more than his record for getting sent to the showers.

The only man you might have expected to get ejected from his own Hall of Fame induction has gone to the Elysian Fields at 84. Well, maybe Earl Weaver, but his 96 don’t cut the mustard in Bobby Cox’s 169 ho-heaves living room. Hopefully, Cox didn’t get himself ejected from there, if not at the Pearlies themselves. Kidding.

Cox’s passing yielded a flood of grief especially in the immediate wake of longtime former Braves owner Ted Turner’s passing just a couple of days earlier. “Haven’t posted on social in quite some time but can’t stay quiet in this time of loss,” began a tweet from Cox’s Hall of Fame third baseman Chipper Jones, whom he drafted as the Braves general manager before returning to the dugout.

I’m struggling to tell all what Bobby Cox meant to me and so many others in Braves Country. He was the leader of men and a second father to so many Atlanta Braves thru the yrs. I’m so sad today, but as I sit here watching my two youngest boys play in their championship games on the day he passed, I can’t help but shout the same things he did from the corner of the dugout. ‘Come on kid, u got this!’ We are gonna miss him so much, but his legacy is forever cemented with the success of this franchise for the last 35+ yrs. He started it as GM, continued as manager, and passing the torch to others, the Atlanta Braves will continue to be force that Bobby Cox always wanted us to be. We love you Skipper. You were our rock. I love you more than words can express. My boys won both of their games…..Bobby had a hand, I have no doubt!

Maybe the number one quality his former players wanted the world to remember was Cox the skipper having their backs. It was probably the likeliest reason why he got to set the record for a major league manager getting thrown out of a game. Cox above all figured it better to get himself sent to his room than the player who was still liable to land a game-winning hit or the pitcher liable to deliver the game-ending out.

“I generally don’t go onto the field that much,” he once said, “but 90 percent of the time it’s because my player is upset.”

And I’ve got to get in there right away and keep him in the game or at least stick up for him. My relationships with umpires, in my mind, is great. I like them, every single one of them. Being a major-league umpire is the single toughest job in sports. It’s hard. Those guys are good. But again, I have to stick up for my players.

Cox also had the knack of spotting when a player of obvious talent was mispositioned and doing something about it. “What can I say? He saved my career,” said one such player, 1980s Braves center fielder Dale Murphy, the brightest star on moribund teams following their brief rise in the early 1980s. “Hung in there with me during my early days and made the decision to move me to the outfield. Changed my career/life forever.”

Brought up a catcher, Murphy wasn’t even the second coming of Choo Choo Coleman, never mind Yogi Berra. Cox spotted Murphy’s throwing problems from behind the plate and converted him in time to an outfielder. Murphy might have become a Hall of Famer had it not been for a round of injuries ensuring his decline phase would be more like an eighty-story drop.

Cox’s first term managing the Braves ended in his firing after the 1982 season. After a spell managing the Blue Jays, he returned to the Braves in the front office first. As general manager, he began bringing in pieces that would help found a National League dynasty—trading for Hall of Fame pitcher John Smoltz, drafting Jones and Hall of Fame pitcher Tom Glavine, and providing himself a foundation of solid defense, solid pitching, and solid, smart hitting when he returned to the Braves dugout.

He liked things kept businesslike but not without humour, even if the outside world didn’t always see the lighter side of his Braves as they began and continued their dominance of the National League in the 1990s. Described often enough as gentle but firm, Cox seemed a combination of father figure and older, experienced friend without letting anyone forget whom the boss was.

Need pitching reinforcement? Cox helped prod his front office successor John Schuerholz to dip into the free agency pool and sign Hall of Famer Greg Maddux, whom the Cubs had left to feel less than appreciated despite the team-first ethic that held hands with the brainy talent. Jokers in the Braves deck? Cox prodded for and got their dismissals. Hit the road, Neon Deion Sanders and John (Off His) Rocker.

“What made him a great manager,” said Glavine once upon a time, “was that he was so good at handling his players.”

He was so good at getting the best and most out of his guys. He treated everybody with the utmost respect and made everybody understand that whether you were a superstar or the 25th man coming out of spring training, you were going to be an important piece of the puzzle. He made guys not only understand that but believe it.

 

“Every day,” said Marquis Grissom, a Braves outfielder from 1995-96, “he would ask me, ‘How you doing? How’s your family doing?’ (He was) able to push all of us in the right direction and get the best out of all of us, and I think that says the world about Bobby Cox—and if you can’t play for him, you can’t play for nobody.”

Cox managed to win one World Series among the five pennants among that closet full of division championships. Opposing managers like Bruce Bochy weren’t the only ones who wondered how much deeper Cox teams would have gone in the postseason if they’d had better relief pitching. Yet the best they got—Smoltz, already one of the greatest Braves starting pitchers—recovering from Tommy John surgery and sending himself to the bullpen a couple of seasons—still wasn’t quite enough.

The skipper knew only too well that you could be the 1927 Yankees and still get taken down by a slightly better team. When the Braves lost his final postseason on the bridge (2010) thanks largely to defensive miscues and Chipper Jones’s absence (season-ending August knee surgery), Cox still wouldn’t blame his players. He credited Bochy’s Giants for their superior play.

“RIP my second father,” tweeted Cox’s longtime center field mainstay, Hall of Famer Andruw Jones, who turned into the single most run-preventive center fielder ever under Cox’s leadership. Jones was hardly the only player who did better under Cox’s guidance than anyone else’s.

Cox earned four Baseball Writers Association Manager of the Year awards, tying him with fellow Hall of Fame skipper Tony La Russa. Those two plus Buck Showalter are the only skippers to win the prize in three different decades, while Cox stands alone as an eight-time Sporting News Manager of the Year winner. He also got to stand for induction into the Hall of Fame with two of his pitching mainstays, Maddux and Glavine.

His retirement included working as a Braves advisor until the 2019 stroke a day after he went to the Braves’s regular-season home opener. He rehabbed from it and regained enough to be able to enjoy a little travel with his wife and more time with his children and grandchildren, but he now confined his Braves activities to watching and rooting from a safe home distance.

That included watching the Braves win their next World Series, beating the Astros in 2021.

“A small part of Bobby Cox changes you as a baseball player,” said Smoltz of the man who was first spotted as managerial material when knee injuries killed his potential as a young Yankee third baseman in the mid-1960s. “Twenty years with the man changes your life.”

It’s not unreasonable to suggest, then, that eternity in the Elysian Fields (we imagine the Lord urging him in: “Come on, kid, you got this!”) will change a few of its citizens, either.