Two rather significant members of the sports world left us this past week and deserve to be remembered.
Mickey Lolich
Mickey Lolich was 85 years old when he died this past week. He was a solid-to-very good Major League pitcher and a genuine World Series hero. I have a memory of first hearing about Mickey Lolich in an article in SPORT Magazine sometime in the mid-1960's that concentrated on Lolich being (a) a left-hander, (b) a bit of a flake, and (c) his somewhat, ahem, portly build. (I have been unable to find that article in a cursory search of the inter webs.) I then mostly forgot about him as he pitched in the American League in the days before interleague play and before every baseball game under the sun was available to watch on some television platform or another.
Then came 1968.
That was the season that has come to be known as "The Year of the Pitcher". Bob Gibson led all of MLB with a 1.12 ERA, and the Tigers Denny McLain won 31 games. In a wonder of perfect serendipity, Gibson's Cardinals and McLain's Tigers met in the World Series that year. This was the last season before leagues were split into divisions and the baseball post-season began to feature multiple levels of playoffs. Because of this, some people, like my buddy Jim Haller, refer to 1968 as the last "pure" season, but that is a discussion for another time. The Cardinals were defending World Series champs and had won two of the previous four World Series. The stage was set for a Gibson-McLain Showdown, but then something completely unexpected happened: Mickey Lolich.
While McLain stumbled a bit in the Series, he went 1-2, Lolich picked up the slack. He started and completed three games in that Series. He won all three games and had an ERA of 1.67. Lolich's third win in that Series came in Game 7 on two days rest when the opposing pitcher was none other than BOB F. GIBSON, who had won three World Series games himself in one Series the year before. And how's this for a cherry atop the sundae? Lolich also hit a home run in Game 2 of that Series. It was the only home run in his entire career.
History lesson, kids. Pitchers have won three games in a single World Series only thirteen times in history. It has been done only five times in the so-called Live Ball Era, i.e., after 1920. After Lolich did it in 1968, it wasn't accomplished again until Randy Johnson of the Diamondbacks did it in 2001, and if memory serves, Johnson's third win in that Series came in a relief role.
Lolich had a solid, but not a spectacular career. He pitched for 16 seasons, 13 of them with Tigers. He had a career record of 217-191 with a 3.44 ERA. He won twenty games twice. He had nine seasons with double digit wins totals. In 1971 he led the American League with 45 starts and 29 complete games. He had 195 complete games in his career. He made three All-Star teams and never won a Cy Young Award, although he finished in the Top Five of the voting twice.
Like I said, a really good pitcher, and a Genuine World Series Hero. I hope that he never had to pick up a restaurant check in Detroit right up until the day he died.
Sonny Jurgensen
















