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This Date in Pirates History: March 1

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Five former Pittsburgh Pirates born on this date including the first player in major league history to accomplish two very rare feats. We start off with one of my favorite players growing up, second baseman Johnny Ray, who was born on this date in 1957. He was originally a 12th round draft pick of the Astros in 1979, coming to the Pirates in the August 31,1981 trade that sent Phil Garner to Houston. Ray immediately took over the 2B job and played every game during his first full season in the majors in 1982. He led the league in games played and hit .281 with 63 RBI’s, 79 runs scored and he stole 16 bases, which led to a second place finish in the NL Rookie of the Year voting. Ray led the league with 38 doubles in 1983, winning the Silver Slugger award, then followed that up with his second doubles crown, again hitting 38 while also posting a career high .312 batting average.

During Johnny’s five full seasons in Pittsburgh, he played at least 151 games each year, hit 30 or more doubles every season and scored at least 67 runs. In 1986 he topped the .300 batting mark for the second time and drove in 78 runs, his high while with the Pirates. During the 1987 season he was traded to the Angels for the last month of the schedule. The Pirates received back Miguel Garcia, a pitched who played briefly in the majors for parts of three seasons with the Pirates. They also got a power hitting minor leaguer named Bill Merrifield, who played three AAA games after the trade. They ended up cutting ties with him before the start of the 1988 season and he played just one more year in the minors before retiring. Ray would go to California and make his only all-star appearance, hitting .306 with 83 RBI’s in 1988. He played two more years for the Angels before finishing his career in the Japan Central League.

Other for Pirates players born on this date include:

Nick Strincevich (1915) pitcher for the Pirates in 1941-42 and then again from 1944-48. He began his minor league career in 1935 after he was signed by the Yankees and he did not make his major league debut until 1940 when the Boston Bees(Braves) took him in the rule 5 draft the previous fall. The Pirates acquired him the following May in an even swap for Hall of Famer Lloyd Waner, who was on the downside of his career. Nick spent most of his first three seasons with the Pirates in the minors, pitching a total of 19 major league games before getting his big break in 1944. That season he went 14-7 3.08 in 26 starts and 14 relief appearances. He would win 16 games the following year, setting a career high with 228.1 innings pitched. He still posted a decent 3.58 ERA in 1946 but the Pirates were a bad team and his record suffered, going 10-15 in 176 IP. He would throw three shutouts that 1946 season, two more than he threw the rest of his big league career. Nick was used out of the pen in 1947 and the first month of the 1948 season before the Pirates sold him to the Phillies, where he finished his major league career later that year. He pitched two more years in the minors before retiring from baseball.

Lefty Webb (1885) pitcher for the 1910 Pirates. He pitched three seasons in the minors prior to being drafted by the Pirates on September 1, 1909 in the rule 5 draft. The 1910 season was his only year in the majors and he was used sparingly throughout the season. He made three starts and four relief appearances, pitching a total of 27 innings. He had a 2-1 5.67 record. Webb also pitched ten games in the minors that season and he played another four years in the minors before retiring. Webb won 20 games in 1908 for the Newark Newks of the Ohio State League.

Henry Yaik (1864) catcher/outfielder for the 1888 Alleghenys. He had two seasons of minor league experience before making his major league debut with Pittsburgh on October 3,1888. By October 4th his major league career was over. He caught one game, played left field in the other and made three errors in each game. Yaik went 2-6 at the plate with a walk and a run batted in. He returned to the minors the next season and played pro ball as late as 1895 although there are no records of him playing in the minors from 1891 until 1894. Henry in 1890 was the catcher for Cy Young during his only minor league season.

Paul Hines (1855) outfielder for the 1890 Alleghenys. He didn’t have much of a career with Pittsburgh, hitting just .182 in 31 games but Hines accomplish two feats that are very rare in baseball history and he was the first to accomplish both of them. He began his career in 1872 at the age of 17, playing in the National Association, the first recognized major league. In 1878 he not only became the first player to ever turn an unassisted triple play but he also became the first Triple Crown winner in baseball history.

The triple play has been disputed due to different stories from the players involved. Hines was playing center field and caught a liner with men on 2B and 3B. The runners were off on the play and Hines, who was playing shallow, continued running in on the play and tagged 3B. Under the rules of the time, if the runner from 2B had passed 3B already and not retouched it yet returning to 2B, the fielder could just tag the base to retire both him and the other runner. Hines threw to 2B anyway and that is where the dispute takes place. Some of the players involved said the runner was on his way back to 2B so the throw was necessary while others claimed Hines got to 3B before he came back. It would be hard to imagine that Hines was able to get to 3B from center field and he didn’t either pass the runner coming back and tag him, or if he wasn’t able to tag him, he would’ve still had enough time to keep running to 3B then turn and make the throw to get the runner going back to second base. Because of the dispute between those involved, some sources list Neal Ball of the Cleveland Naps in 1909 as the first player to turn an unassisted triple play but Hines seems to be the rightful owner of that distinction.

In 1878 home runs were not a common occurrence and RBI’s weren’t even an official stat so when he won the triple crown in 1878 no one knew about it. There was also a problem with his stats that kept him from ever knowing he won the batting crown that year. The player who finished behind him batting, Abner Dalrymple(first batter in Pirates NL history) was awarded the title because stats accumulated in tie games weren’t counted in the overall stats back then. It wasn’t until many years later that research uncovered the error and Hines was awarded the batting title. Hines also won the 1879 batting title without knowing due to Cap Anson being credited with hits from a few games twice that put his average higher than Paul’s at the time.

Hines finished his career with a .302 batting average and 2133 hits in 1658 games. His career game totals were cut short due to smaller schedules back in the day, he started in the majors at age 17 but his team didn’t play a 100 game schedule until his 13th season in the majors. With a full schedule, he would’ve likely been a Hall of Famer by now had he played the same amount of seasons(20) he ended up playing.

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John Dreker
John Dreker
John started working at Pirates Prospects in 2009, but his connection to the Pittsburgh Pirates started exactly 100 years earlier when Dots Miller debuted for the 1909 World Series champions. John was born in Kearny, NJ, two blocks from the house where Dots Miller grew up. From that hometown hero connection came a love of Pirates history, as well as the sport of baseball. When he didn't make it as a lefty pitcher with an 80+ MPH fastball and a slider that needed work, John turned to covering the game, eventually focusing in on the prospects side, where his interest was pushed by the big league team being below .500 for so long. John has covered the minors in some form since the 2002 season, and leads the draft and international coverage on Pirates Prospects. He writes daily on Pittsburgh Baseball History, when he's not covering the entire system daily throughout the entire year on Pirates Prospects.

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