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This year has been a terrible year in many ways for just about everybody. It’s been no exception for baseball fans. This year had so far seen the loss of five Hall of Famers; Al Kaline, Lou Brock, Bob Gibson, Tom Seaver, and Whitey Ford. This Sunday, a sixth has been added to that list, Joe Morgan. Morgan
A great ball player and he was pretty good in the broadcast booth as well. As kids we used to mimic the little arm flap thing he did at the plate.
One of the early base-stealing stars, and as you note, part of the best fielding team in baseball at the time. The only major league games I’ve ever attended were the the Reds during that era. I stopped watching baseball when they started trading away that team after the second Series win. Just couldn’t understand why they would do such a thing.
I think the Reds were anticipating free agency by their stars. Cincinnati has always had some problems because it’s such a small market compared to places like New York and Los Angeles.
That being said, the 75-76 Reds were really something to see and Morgan was one of the reasons. How he could generate all that power from a 150 pound frame, I could never understand. He and shortstop David Concepcion covered a lot of ground
Sports legends, rock legends, acting legends . . . it’s tough when they pass away. I might watch Goldfinger tonight because the actress who played the gold-painted girl passed away . . .
Rest in peace Joe Morgan.
The “elbow flap” had to be one of the oddest batting stances ever.
I never got to see him play. I remember him as an announcer primarily. He was a little too opinionated for me but I know he was a great all around player.
Over in our baseball group this is what I wrote this morning:
Well, damnit all to Hell.
“Little” Joe Morgan was an inspiration to all of us vertically challenged young boys in the 1970s.
What can be said of Joe can’t be said of a lot of other folks, but he made the people around him better. He made Rose better. He made Bench better. He made them all better. (He made Sparky Anderson a genius.)
Sit with me now… in the red seats at old Riverfront Stadium… hear the deep, clear bass of Paul Sommerkamp reverberate off the concrete… “Now batting… number eight… the second baseman… Joe… Morgan…”
Marty Brenneman: There’s a drive! Way back!
Joe Nuxhall: Get up! Get up!
Marty: Home Run, Joe Morgan! And the Reds jump out on top, 1-0!
“There’s no other second baseman ever in the history of this game that ever did the things he could do” -Sparky Anderson.
I shed more than one tear his morning.
What a great ball player. This has been a devastating year for baseball. I too loved Joe Morgan. He’s possibly the best second baseman of my lifetime. And at Five foot seven, I could relate to that! We were the same height, and you don’t see many hall of fames at that height. In addition I thought he was a great broadcaster too. What a wonderful man. Eternal rest grant on to him Lord, and perpetual light shine upon his face.
Very nice EJ.
I also went through an “elbow-flap” phase, and I wasn’t even a Reds fan. Funny how certain things capture kids’ imaginations. Probably because he was a little guy, he appealed to us even more.
I’d never watched one of those Hall of Fame bio videos like the one linked here. If they’re all like that one, I don’t think I’m missing much. It’s like it was auto-created by a computer based on a complex algorithm with access to his stats, a database of highlights, and a dictionary of baseball terms, voiced by one of those computer-assembled programs that does the weather forecast on local your radio station.
Yup. He was one of my childhood sports heroes, too. My dad and I listened to the Reds with Nuxhall and Brennaman every night there was a game. Joe Morgan was a great player.
Interesting stat:
Joe Morgan had four seasons with at least 50 stolen bases, 50 extra base hits, and 100 walks.
All other players in Major League history combined have zero.
He was affectionately known as “The Pumper” in my house growing up.
HA!
I was at that game. It was indeed a bright silver lining inside a dense, years-long dark cloud.
Edit: The game I attended was as @tigerlily described – a game-winning home run in game 162, not a single in game 164: