Big Roger Connor, every inch the beau ideal of an early National Leaguer. |
In
the early years of Major League Baseball home runs were hard to come by. Ball
parks were small, but the ball was dead—much softer with a less elastic core then modern balls. Bats were heavy slowing down bat speed.
Pitchers had yet to perfect a
90 mile per hour fast ball. It took a dead eye, prodigious
strength, a bit of luck, and
usually a tail wind to get a ball over the fences. Instead of waiting for big innings where sluggers
clear the bases, as in the modern game, it was small ball—singles, doubles, stolen bases, daring slides
with sharpened spikes high, plus a
lot of walks and hit batsmen.
Before
there was a Babe Ruth, there was Roger
Connor, a towering first baseman—said
to be 6’3’’ in an age when men were generally much shorter—who started his
career with the Troy, New York Trojans in 1880 at the age of 22.
Then, as now, there were cash poor teams in small
markets who could not afford to pay the kind of stars like Chicago White
Stockings and teams in Boston, New York, and Philadelphia. The Trojans were one of them. They packed their teams with promising
amateurs like Conner, a kid who had played club ball in his hometown
of Waterbury, Connecticut.
The mighty batsman at the height of his career. |
On September 10, 1881 the Trojans were playing
another down-at-the-heels small city team, the Worcester
Ruby Legs. Down three runs
in the 9th inning, their cause looked hopeless.
But the plucky team managed to load the bases. With two outs Connor strode to the plate—and blasted
the first grand slam home run in
major league history.
The
thrilling storybook ending attracted
the attention of the mighty New York
Gothams. By the 1882 season Connor
was playing in the big city for one
of the National League’s elite teams. Soon he was the star of the team not only hitting
for average and power, but
despite his size a lithe and speedy base runner. Sports
writers began to refer to the team as the Giants in his honor. The nickname stuck.
In
1886 Connor gained fame for being the first person to hit a home run entirely
out of the Polo Grounds, a ball park
in which it was notoriously hard to hit homers.
Connor played first base in the gloveless era. |
In
1890 Connor was part of the revolt against National
League owners that resulted in the short lived Players League. As a member of
a team made up of rebellious Giants, he led the new league in home runs with
14, the only time he ever held a single
season home run title. But he was
consistent over an 18 year career. He
came in second four times in the National League and amassed a total of career
total of 138 homers—a record that
stood until Ruth broke it 23 years after Connor’s retirement in 1897.
Ruth
actually thought he broke the record when he smashed homer number 132. Due to incomplete record keeping Connor was
then only credited with 131. Subsequent
research shows that the real total was 138.
By
the time Connor retired after
spending his last seasons with the Philadelphia
Phillies and St. Louis Browns,
he had racked up an impressive record:
233 triples (still No. 3 on the all time list after all of these years),
244 stolen bases, National League batting crown in 1885 with a .371 average, in
the top ten for batting average 10 times, led the league in doubles ten times
and triples 7, batted in 1,321 runs, and had a career average of .317.
Connor was finally elected to the Baseball Hall of fame in 1976. |
After
his retirement from the majors, Connor returned to his Waterbury where he managed minor league teams and
basked in the admiration of his home
town. He lived to see Ruth break his
career home run record. He died in
Waterbury in 1931 at the age of 73.
In
1976 the great left handed hitter was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans’ Committee—a fitting tribute for the onetime Home Run King.
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