Gates Brown (Image: mansfieldnewsjournal.com) |
Contemporary baseball doesn't embrace pinch hitting. The current game's financial economics preclude teams from designating a precious roster spot to a single, late-inning at bat. Also, the designated hitter essentially eliminates pinch hitting in the American League. Gates Brown would probably have never made today's major league teams. During his career, Brown very rarely played in the field. His meal ticket was producing big hits in late innings.
What endeared Brown to his teammates, the Tiger organization, and fans was his clutch hitting, his warm personality, and his ability to overcome his criminal background. The pinch-hitter's first opportunity with the fences was through stealing and selling. Brown was convicted of burglary and did time in the Ohio State Reformatory. While behind bars, prisoner Brown played on the pen's baseball team. (Brown had been considered an outstanding high school football player, with big-time schools interested in recruiting him.) The Detroit Free Press' obit relates that a prison guard tipped baseball scouts about Brown. The Tigers took the plunge; Brown remained associated with the organization to his death.
Image: Detroit Free Press |
Gates Brown -- a proud member of the '68 World Champions. He was a man you could root for, on a team you could root for. And, yes, I rooted for them, proudly.
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