[巨人] Happy 80th birthday, Willie; You're still a legend
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Happy 80th birthday, Willie; You're still a legend
By Chris Haft / MLB.com | 05/06/11 12:00 AM ET
SAN FRANCISCO -- Willie Mays, the "Say Hey Kid," turns 80 today. But his
excellence remains timeless.
Mays established himself as baseball's consummate five-tool player during his
22-year Major League career, the bulk of which he spent with the San
Francisco Giants.
Anybody who competed against Mays or regularly saw him play comprehended the
breadth of his greatness long ago. Yet he remains relevant today as a paragon
for present and future players to try to match. Not that this is sure to
happen. Appreciation of Mays might have increased through the years, because
nobody has come close to duplicating his multifaceted skills (12 consecutive
Gold Glove Awards ... first to hit 30 homers and steal 30 bases in a season
twice) or his flair (the basket catch ... running bases looking over his
shoulder ... Say Hey!).
"If there ever were a baseball god, it would be him," said former National
League president Bill White, a Major League first baseman for 13 seasons.
"Nobody could play like he could. Nobody."
"I've answered the question a million times -- 'Who's the best player you
ever saw?' Hands down, it's Willie," said venerable Los Angeles Dodgers
broadcaster Vin Scully.
"I thought Willie had more to do with the outcome of a game than any player
I've ever seen," said Ron Fairly, a player and broadcaster in the Majors for
more than 50 years. "It was tough to play a game against the Giants without
mentioning Mays' name. If he went 0-for-4, that was a story. Or he did
something in center field to save the game. If he got one hit, it probably
had something to do with the result of the game. And if he got two or more
hits, there's no telling what he did."
"He personified what a complete player was," said left-hander Jim O'Toole,
whose 1958-66 stint with the Cincinnati Reds overlapped the era when the
National League held a virtual monopoly on baseball's superstars, including
Hank Aaron, Ernie Banks, Frank Robinson and Roberto Clemente. "He was the
most stylish. Just to watch him glide around the bases, running full blast
and seeming to know where the ball was all the time. Everything they say
about Willie is true. He's the best."
If anything, Mays transcended the aforementioned five tools: the abilitites
to hit, hit for power, run, field and throw. His contemporaries insist that
he possessed a sixth tool in uncommon abundance -- a combination of instinct
and intelligence that nobody has rivaled before, during or since his days
with the Giants and New York Mets from 1951-73.
Hall of Fame teammates such as Juan Marichal and Tom Seaver marvel at their
one-on-one pregame meetings with Mays, who would discuss in considerable
detail how they'd pitch each hitter so he could properly position himself in
center field. Opponents dreaded when he'd reach second base, because he could
quickly break the code for the catcher's signs to the pitcher.
"He tried to hide his intelligence on the field so he'd have that advantage,"
said St. Louis Cardinals broadcaster and former third baseman-outfielder Mike
Shannon. "Some players might not think he was that smart. He was three times
as smart. He knew what the opposition was going to do before they knew it."
"The fact that he knew the game so well gets by a lot of people. He was the
best player and the smartest," White said. "He used to tell me how to play
the hitters at first base from out in center field. He knew the hitters; he
knew opposing pitchers; he knew his own players' weaknesses and strengths."
Anecdotes and memories of Mays' singular gifts abound.
Here's what White meant about Mays' awarness of his teammates' traits. The
Giants were playing in St. Louis and their second baseman, who might have
been Cap Peterson, was known to struggle with infield flies. Sure enough,
Dick Groat hit a popup that befuddled the second baseman. In rushed Mays to
snare the ball.
"Willie caught it right on the edge of the infield grass between first and
second," White said. "I've never seen an outfielder catch the ball on the
edge of the infield grass. Willie reached under the guy after he misjudged
the ball and caught it."
Mays was full of such surprises. Retired manager Roger Craig, who pitched for
five NL teams between 1955 and 1966, described Mays' knack for stealing bases
thusly: "If you didn't pay attention to him, he could walk to third base."
Or he wouldn't touch third base at all.
Shannon related that during a Cardinals game in San Francisco, a Giant hit a
drive that landed deep in the outfield with Mays on second base. Noticing
that every umpire was following the ball, Mays skirted third base, shortening
his trip home by about 20 feet, and scored with ridiculous ease. Ken Boyer,
playing third for St. Louis, demanded an appeal, but of course the umpires
ruled Mays safe.
"Willie was in the dugout, laughing his butt off," Shannon said.
Larry Dierker, the former pitcher, manager and broadcaster with the Houston
Astros, reeled off a string of Maysian feats:
‧ Watching Mays score from second base on a bunt that was allowed to roll up
the third-base line too long. Dierker explained that Houston's third baseman
was too preoccupied with wondering whether the ball would roll foul. "He went
back to track the ball up the line, and Willie just flew past him," Dierker
said.
‧ Seeing Mays bunt for a double on a similar play. "The third baseman came
in and waited for the ball to go foul, but Willie kept running," Dierker
said. "Everybody started yelling, but by the time he threw to second base,
Willie was safe."
‧ Witnessing Mays' mastery in the 1968 All-Star Game in Houston, when he
scored the game's lone run. Mays, who frequently batted leadoff in All-Star
Games, singled against Luis Tiant. Taking a daring lead from first base, Mays
drew a wild pickoff attempt from Tiant. Continuing to unnerve Tiant, Mays
advanced to third on a wild pitch. He came across on a double-play grounder.
"Just by jumping and juking and being Willie Mays, he made that happen," an
admiring Dierker said.
Mays retained his magic even toward the end of his career with the Mets, whom
he joined after a May 1972 trade. Seaver recalled Mays being on second base
when a single was hit to left- or right-center field.
"Willie rounds third and starts to pull up," Seaver recalled. "I thought,
'He's going to get thrown out!' But after he slowed down that two and a half,
three steps, he turned it on."
Result: Mays timed his dash toward home plate so he and the throw home would
arrive simultaneously. The ball flew past the catcher and went to the
backstop, enabling the hitter to reach third base.
"It's the kind of thing you just don't believe when you see it," Seaver said.
As impressive as Mays' raw statistics were -- an array of numbers including a
.302 career batting average, 660 home runs and 338 stolen bases -- they could
have been gaudier, had he been a selfish player. Tommy Davis, the two-time NL
batting champion who played 17 years in the Majors, was certain that Mays was
capable of recording the only 50-homer, 50-steal season ever.
"Willie could have done it if he wanted to," Davis said.
But the only statistic that ever consumed Mays was his team's win total. The
sincerity of his effort reflected this.
"He played the game for success," said Lon Simmons, the Giants' Hall of Fame
broadcaster who witnessed Mays' entire San Francisco tenure (1958-72). "He
didn't play the game to try to keep from making a mistake. He made a play to
try to get the best result."
This is demonstrated by Mays' most famous catch, his grab of Vic Wertz's
drive in deep center field at New York's Polo Grounds in Game 1 of the 1954
World Series against Cleveland. Newsreels show, and Mays has maintained, that
his throw which prevented Al Rosen from advancing from first base into
scoring position was at least as important as the catch.
"He was thinking a lot farther along than catching the ball," Simmons said of
Mays. "He knew he had to get himself back into position to get that throw
off."
"Mays played center field like a shortstop," Scully said. "In other words, on
a base hit to left-center, right-center, straightaway -- Mays had not even
the shadow of a doubt that the ball would get away from him. He would field
it like a shortstop -- on the dead run, coming up throwing. I always marveled
at that."
For these reasons, generations of young fans grew up believing that Mays
could do no wrong. So did his peers.
"If you ask me who's the best ballplayer I've ever seen, I'd say it was
Willie Mays, and I'll say that to my dying day," Davis said.
Chris Haft is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the
approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
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