Archive for October, 2009

Toronto team that won 1949 ASA headed to Softball Hall of Fame

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

(click logo for original news story)

Sultans of softball
Transcendent 1949 team to receive long overdue acclaim when it enters hall next month

By IAIN COLPITTS, SPECIAL TO SUN MEDIA

When Charlie Justice entered an Arkansas hotel in September 1949, he wasn’t welcomed with open arms. Because he was a black man, the star pitcher for the Tip Top Tailors softball team was told to leave immediately.

“They wouldn’t let Charlie in the hotel,” teammate and left fielder Ray Pulfer said. “So I said to them: ‘That’s not right.’

“Then one of the workers grabbed me by the arm and said: ‘Look here, don’t side with the blacks down here or they’ll have you looking down the barrel of a gun.’ So that really scared me, I kept my mouth shut after that.”

Justice was one of three black players on the Tip Top Tailors, the champions of the 1949 Amateur Softball Association of America. The team finally is getting its due next month when it enters Softball Canada’s Hall of Fame.

Shelley Milley (catcher) and Percy McCracken (pitcher), the other black members of the team, also were discriminated against the minute they set foot in Little Rock.

“When we arrived at the airport, there was a sign to the left that said: ‘Whites’ and a sign to the right that said: ‘Blacks.’ We walked right down the middle,” recalled third baseman and Toronto resident Bill (Babe) Gresko.

“Then, when we got to the hotel, we all walked in together and the manager said: ‘Come on you black boys, get out of here. You don’t belong in here.’ So, we all walked out as a team and they ended up staying in the black section of town. There were three or four other teams that had the same problem.”

The Toronto entry was Canada’s lone team.

The ASA championship was considered the unofficial world championship and the ’49 Tailors were the first team from Canada to win it.

“A lot of teams couldn’t afford to go, so anyone who had the money went,” said Pulfer, now 86 and living in Etobicoke. “So we played a best-of-three series against Peoples (Credit Jewellers). We beat them in the first two games, so that sent us on our way.”

Long before the Blue Jays came to Toronto, fastball was booming.

During the late 1940s, thousands of fans would stroll over to Kew Gardens to watch the best teams compete in the Beaches Fastball League. Tip Top Tailors was one of them.

Justice, Milley and McCracken died long ago, along with all but four teammates.

Pulfer, Gresko, Lenny Gaull (catcher), and Pat McCullough (centre field) are the only survivors from the championship squad.

Over the past few decades, the team has been relatively unheard of in the softball community. Thanks to research done by John Stevens, a St. Marys resident who used to work for the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, their achievements will be recognized.

“The team was in danger of being forgotten,” Stevens said. “People from that era were dying and if we don’t get them in the Hall of Fame, there’s no way they’re going to be remembered.”

Stevens put together the bid for their nomination and in June they were named one of this year’s inductees.

***

Before 1949, nobody in Little Rock had ever heard of Tip Top Tailors. Certainly, they were shocked when the Torontonians were one of only two undefeated teams when they reached the semifinal against Mercedes, Tex., the other team without a loss.

“We were just as good as any other team in that tournament,” said Gresko, 86.

In the championship qualifier against Mercedes on Sept. 21, they scored four times en route to a 4-0 victory.

Justice wouldn’t let the prejudice stop him as he allowed only one hit in the win.

The stage was set for the final. It would be the Tip Top Tailors against the Clearwater (Florida) Bombers and their phenom pitcher, Herb Dudley.

“He was a hell of a pitcher,” Gresko said. “In one game, he struck out 58 men over 21 innings.”

The championship game got under way on Sept. 23 and, 18 innings later, the Tailors had defeated the Bombers 3-1.

To their credit, the Clearwater Bombers didn’t make it easy. They led 1-0 until the seventh and final inning of regulation before Justice drove in the tying run.

He pitched the extra innings for Tip Tops, after Russ Johnston worked the first seven. Justice struck out 13 batters.

Dudley went the entire 18 innings, one of three games he pitched in two days. Art Upper (right field) eventually found a hole in Dudley’s delivery and sealed the game with a two-run single in the 18th.

“We got lucky because one of their games was on a Sunday and Dudley wouldn’t pitch because he was a preacher,” Gresko said.

“They ended up losing and had to beat us twice to win the championship. If they had won that Sunday game, it would’ve just been a single knockout.”

And with that, the Tip Top Tailors were the “world champions” of softball.

***

Elite players were high in demand during this time and Justice, McCracken and Milley all brought enough talent from Michigan to secure them full-time jobs in Canada.

“Charlie and Shelley worked for Tip Tops during that time,” Gresko said. “Percy was working with Levy’s Auto Parts, but we picked him up to play for us in the tournament.”

“Down there the blacks were frowned upon, but up here they were on equal footing,” Pulfer said. “The three of them came over from Detroit. Anyone who came from Detroit lived like kings here in Canada, but back in Detroit they were nothing.”

Bill McBratney played for People’s Credit Jewellers in the Beaches league and recalled Justice’s value.

Justice worked a few days at Tip Tops and was paid quite lucratively on the diamond.

“Charlie was selling suit material for Tip Tops,” McBratney said. “Of course when I say that, I don’t know how much selling he did.”

In Canada, these players were given the chance to shine on the field and escape the prejudice they faced back home.

***

The Tip Tops players didn’t receive the reception they would’ve liked from the Little Rock crowd upon winning the championship.

“The winning team was supposed to have a banquet but we didn’t have one because of the black boys and us being Canadian,” Gresko said.

“We had our party at two o’clock in the morning because the game didn’t finish until after midnight. We went to the black section of town and that’s where we had our party.”

However, it was great returning home, and Pulfer took in every moment of the ceremony when the team arrived back in Toronto.

“They took us down to city hall and they were very nice to us.” Pulfer said. “We stood on the steps of city hall and were given many gifts. It was a lovely reception.”

Even before the team left for Arkansas, they were treated like kings. The championship meant a lot to Toronto and Tip Tops owner Joe Dunkleman, who made sure his boys went down to Little Rock in style.

“They travelled down in a Tip Top Tailors plane,” Stevens said. “It was really a first-class operation. They were all in their suits looking sharp and it was a class act. That wouldn’t happen today.”

***

The sport was at its peak in terms of popularity through the 1940s, but management changes and a lack of sponsorship led to the downfall of the league shortly after Tip Tops won the world championship.

“We used to draw well out there. Maybe a couple thousand every night,” Gresko said as he reminisced about his time spent playing at Kew Gardens. “But 1952 was the turning point when they shut down the league for the season.”

The problem started at the opening of the 1950 season, when executives decided to charge a fee at the gates, something that didn’t sit well with the fans.

Also, imports were no longer allowed into the league, meaning there would be no more Americans with the skills of Justice, McCracken or Milley playing at Kew Gardens.

Dunkleman had seen enough. The team didn’t renew with the league in 1951 and that was the end of the franchise’s legacy.

By 1952, the league didn’t have enough team sponsors to continue and ceased operations for that year.

The league returned in 1953, but it was never the same.

“After that, we started to get a lot of different teams,” McBratney said. “The calibre of those teams wasn’t as strong as they were previous (before 1952), but it was still pretty good ball.”

By the 1970s, the league had expanded outside of the Toronto core as teams such as Scarborough Cable TV, the Oshawa Tony’s and the Richmond Hill Dynes (1972 world champions) made their way over to Kew Gardens.

“Attendance wasn’t like it was back in the days of the original Beaches League,” said Stevens, who played in that league during the 1970s. “We might get 300 people, not 3,000.”

Over time, the numbers dwindled. By 1987, the league had quietly gone extinct.

***

Through his quest to document the team, Stevens uncovered an incredible story.

“After getting to know both Ray and Babe, I discovered a story that could be made into a movie,” Stevens said. “It was a completely different era in the sport, one that has never been duplicated and probably never will be.”

When the team is inducted into the Hall of Fame on Nov. 14 in Ottawa, Stevens is determined the four remaining players will be at the banquet.

“Somehow, I’m going to get the living players up there,” Stevens said. “I’m going to get them up there because they deserve it.”

For Stevens, what started out as a standard nomination procedure has turned into so much more. He has come to know two terrific men and is grateful for the experience.

“Once you get to know these people, you want them to have their last hurrah,” Stevens said. “They’re both exceptional people and they’ve given much more back to the game than they’ve taken from it.”

IOC accepts golf, rugby

Friday, October 9th, 2009

Editor’s Note: While it was mostly a foregone conclusion that rugby and golf would be added to the slate of Olympic sports after the IOC executive committee recommended them several weeks back, it was made official this morning with a vote in Denmark. Left on the outside is softball which will be a significant blow for national governing bodies like ASA, Softball Canada, Softball New Zealand and Softball Australia who derive the bulk of their revenues from governments who tend to fund Olympic sports associations over non-Olympic groups. For the men’s game, the trickle down effect could be disastrous as already scarce funding becomes even more so. Will the quadrennial ISFs become the only international competition for men? Will there be money for events like the Pan Am qualifier or the Pacific International qualifier in the future? Let’s hope.

By Mattias Karen, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COPENHAGEN, Denmark – All those beautiful beaches and Tiger Woods, too!

After more than a century on the sidelines, golf will return to the Olympics at the Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro. Rugby, last played in 1924, is coming back as well.

Both were reinstated for the 2016 and 2020 Games after a vote Friday by the International Olympic Committee.

Each sport received majority support in separate votes after leading athletes and officials from both camps gave presentations, including a taped video message from Woods and other top pros. Woods has indicated he would play in the Olympics if golf were accepted for 2016.

“There are millions of young golfers worldwide who would be proud to represent their country,” Woods said from the Presidents Cup in San Francisco. “It would be an honor for anyone who plays this game to become an Olympian.”

Golf was approved 63-27 with two abstentions. Rugby was voted in 81-8 with one abstention.

Golf will stage a 72-hole stroke-play tournament for men and women, with 60 players in each field. Rugby will organize a four-day seven-a-side tournament – instead of the more traditional 15-a-side game – for 12 men’s and women’s teams.

“It probably never was on my radar as a rugby athlete and now coach to ever be involved in the Olympics, so this is a special moment to be sure,” Canadian sevens coach Morgan Williams, a former 15-a-side national team captain and sevens player, said in a statement from Victoria. “I think we will see a lot of new athletes all of a sudden be aware of rugby and make themselves available because of the Olympic aspect.”

The Canadian men, however, will have to work on their ranking to crack the top 12.

Padraig Harrington and Michelle Wie addressed the IOC in person before the vote. Wie talked about starting to play golf when she was four but never being able to dream of an Olympic medal until now.

“I can dream about doing something that neither Tiger nor Ernie (Els) have ever done, and that is to make the final putt to win an Olympic gold medal,” Wie said. “If this dream comes true, somewhere in the world there will be another four-year-old who sees me on that podium and perhaps starts her own Olympic dream.”

Rugby officials touted their sport as a modern game that can attract young fans and new sponsors.

“The sevens format is made for television, made for sponsors, and most importantly loved for fans and players alike,” said bid leader Mike Miller, the secretary-general of the International Rugby Board.

Golf gave a commitment to the IOC that it would not stage any major championships on the Olympic dates. The Rugby Sevens World Cup will be cancelled if the sport is added to the Olympics.

They are the first new sports added since triathlon and taekwondo joined the program for the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

The vote was a reversal of the IOC’s decision four years ago to reject golf and rugby for the 2012 Olympics, and brings the number of summer Olympic sports back to 28. There have been two openings on the program since baseball and softball were dropped in 2005 for the 2012 London Games.

Rugby and golf both made their Olympic debuts at the second modern games in Paris in 1900. Golf was played again only at the 1904 St. Louis Games, while 15-a-side rugby featured three more times, making its last appearance in the 1924 Paris Olympics.

Their status for the 2020 Olympics will be reviewed by the IOC in 2017.

Friday’s vote also was a victory for Jacques Rogge, the IOC president who was re-elected to a final four-year term hours earlier. The 67-year-old Belgian, the president since 2001, was the only candidate.

“Time will show your decision (on the new sports) was very wise,” Rogge said.

Golf and rugby were put forward by the executive board in August under Rogge’s guidance, at the expense of five other sports that were cut – baseball, softball, squash, karate and roller sports.

The selection process angered some IOC members, who wanted all seven sports put to a vote by the entire assembly. Senior Canadian member Dick Pound complained before the vote that the members were never told why the two sports were selected over the other five.

“It is not fair to the other five sports,” Pound said. “Because you decided the way you did, it is not a transparent process.”

The new selection system was put in place after the IOC failed to agree on which two sports should be added to the 2012 program, leaving the London Games with 26 sports instead of the usual 28. A similar failure this time would have been a blow to Rogge and the executive board.

1970 Roma’s Inn softball champions heading to Bay County Sports Hall of Fame

Thursday, October 8th, 2009


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1970 Roma’s Inn softball team that won the Class B fastpitch state championship.

By Lee Thompson

There was a time when fastpitch softball ruled.

And Roma’s Inn was king.

The 1970 Roma’s Inn team brought together a bunch of ballplayers in their prime, loving life and living for the game. And they lived it to its fullest while winning the Class B men’s fastpitch state championship.

“Those were the good old days — you don’t forget those days,” said Bob Stewart, an outfielder during Roma’s title run. “The camaraderie with all the guys… you can’t beat it.”

That unique squad gets a chance to reunite this month with its induction into the Bay County Sports Hall of Fame. The local team is part of the 19th induction class, which will be honored Oct. 25 at the DoubleTree hotel and conference center.
Roma’s Inn was built to win, and it delivered. The Bay City-based squad captured invitational titles in Lansing and Owosso in the summer of 1970 as a prelude to the Class B state tourney — and that’s exactly how manager Leo Urban planned it all along.
“When I first decided to form this team, I went over to Ray Fick’s house, knocked on the door and handed him a brand new first baseman’s glove,” Urban said. “Then I did the same thing with Bob Townsend. And they played with me ever since.”
First baseman Fick and shortstop Townsend would form the heart of the squad, joining Stewart to give Roma’s Inn three former professional baseball players. But the entire team was loaded with longtime ballplayers, including infielders Don Goss and Don Warner, outfielders Roger Zacharko, Dick Jozwiak, Bob Hartwig and Don Kruger, catchers Jim Weller and Tom Pritchard and pitchers Urban, Dave Seidenstucker and Jim Roekle.

And the experience showed.

“We were very fundamentally sound because so many of us played baseball,” said Stewart, who went on to play for five state championship teams. “If the ball was in the air, somebody made the play. And once you got the ball, everybody knew what to do. We were very good at the fundamentals, and that’s the way you’ve got to be to win a state championship.”
Roma’s had to earn the title. After posting a fourth-place finish in the Tri-County League – which featured high-powered teams from Flint, Saginaw, Midland and Oscoda’s Wurtsmith Air Force Base – Roma’s made its way through best-of-three series to claim district and regional crowns.

The Bay City squad downed Carling Black Label of Saginaw in the district and Ned’s Tires of Midland in the regional to qualify for the eight-team Class B state final in Scottville over Labor Day weekend. With three straight wins, Roma’s reached the title game unbeaten in the double-elimination event.

And when Townsend blasted a home run and Urban fired a one-hit shutout in a 4-0 win over Alpena’s Smith Funeral Home — the Class A runner-up from 1969 — Roma’s ruled the day.

“There were probably teams much more favored to win than us,” Stewart said. “But when you get on a roll and win some big ballgames, it’s amazing what you can do.”

Townsend hit two home runs in the state tournament and Weller added a three-run blast in the third game. Seidenstucker, Rickle and Urban shared the pitching duties throughout the tourney as Roma’s Inn brought home a grand prize for super sponsor Sal Gulino.

The state championship trophy stood as a highlight from the heyday of fastpitch softball. The game once thrived in the area as Urban governed 70 teams as president of the Bay County Softball Organization in the ‘70s.

And it took total commitment from the players, who were off virtually every weekend to compete in tournaments in Ludington, Petoskey or Traverse City.

“If there were nine guys on the field, eight were going through a divorce,” said Urban, now 73. “Softball was blood and guts for all of us back then. It was a helluva game, and it was in my blood.”

Four members — Townsend, Stewart, Zacharko and Urban — went on to play for the Arrow TV team that captured the Class A state title in 1978 and earned induction in the Hall of Fame in 2004. Some would leave for powerhouse teams like Midland McArdle Pontiac or the Saginaw Bolters, but all would forever share the bond that was built with Roma’s Inn.

“It’s an era I’ll never forget,” said Urban.

New Seattle Fastpitch Website

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Cap tip to JR Williamson of Yakima WA for this link.

Click here
to view new website for Seattle Fastpitch.

Kudos to webmaster Kevin Whitehouse.

West Coast Fastpitch Assoc Schedule for 2010

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

The following dates have been confirmed for WCFA’s tournament schedule:

March 27-28, Stockton, Louis Park
April 18-18, Tulare
May 1-2, Sonora, Standard Park
May 15-16, Fresno, Regional Park
June 5-6, Sonora, Standard Park
June 19-20, Stockton, Louis Park
July 10-11, Sonora, Standard Park
July 24-25, Reno

Entry Fee will be $450.00 per event, payable prior to each event. $25 per team will taken out and put into an award package that will be given out at one of the July events. The association is also seeking donations which will enhance the award package. We are asking your team to committ to these tournaments two (2) weeks prior to each event to secure proper number of fields and officials and to be able to get a schedule out to you as soon as possible. More details will follow after the first of the year. If you ideas or suggestions to help the association please contact me.

There will be several rule changes and I will notify you of the changes at a later date.

Please keep me informed as to who is running the team and the proper e-mail address to use to send out the schedules as this is the most cost effective way to communicate.

Bob Chapel

Gregg Leather Appointed ISC Commissioner

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

The ISC is pleased to announce the appointment of Gregg Leather as an ISC Regional Commissioner in the US East Region. Gregg replaces Mike Cutro who recently resigned.

Gregg has been the manager of the NY Gremlins team the past several seasons and in 2009 moved his team up from the ISC II Tournament of Champions into the ISC World Tournament where they finished with an impressive 4-3 record in Quad Cities.

Gregg’s background is in the modified ranks and has his sights set on bringing more modified teams into the ISC for both the ToC and the World
Tournament.

Gregg, 43, is married to JoAnn and the father of a daughter 14 and son, age 9. He is employed by New York Police Department (NYPD) and based in their Manhattan headquarters. Gregg and his family reside in Staten Island.

Please join us in welcoming Gregg Leather – nysoftball (at) aol.com

Ken

Silverhawks Invitational Men’s ASA Open Tournament – May 22-23, 2010

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009


(click logo to enlarge)

Hosted by the Bakersfield Silverhawks

Date: May 22-23, 2010
Where: Bakersfield, CA
Patriots Park Complex
Entry Fee: $400
Format: Round Robin Single Elimination
With a 4 Game Guarantee
Prizes: $500 for Tournament Champion

For more information, please contact:

Chris McGehee: (661) 330-7114 or garageworks@bak.rr.com
Bobby McCormick: (661) 549-3987 or mccormickservices10@yahoo.com

Jamaica Names Squad for Nassau Bahamas Tournament

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009


(click logo for original news story)

JAMAICA NAME 13 FOR ENGLISH-SPEAKING CARIBBEAN MEN’S SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT
BY GERALD REID Observer writer

THE Jamaica Amateur Softball Association (JASA) has named 13 players who will represent Jamaica at the inaugural staging of the English-speaking Caribbean Men’s Softball Tournament (CEAST) from October 29 to November 2 in Nassau, Bahamas.

Head coach Uel Gordon, who also plays, says this is the first time they will be holding such a tournament in this region.

Gordon said that the tournament is opened to all the countries in the English-speaking region, but so far only four countries have confirmed their participation.

The countries so far confirmed are Jamaica, Cayman Islands Belize and host the Bahamas.
According to coach, the Spanish-speaking countries in this region have their own tournaments and championships as baseball and softball are their national sports.

Gordon added that the tournament will be a good test for Jamaica as they need a lot of competitions and exposure so that when invited to bigger overseas tournaments they are more experienced and can compete effectively.

He said the Bahamas are one of the strongest softball-playing countries in this region and can field more than one team at invitational tournaments. The last time Jamaican men participated in a tournament was in January of this year at the Fast-Pitch Tournament in Orlando, Florida.

Coach/player Gordon said the men’s team has been in training since January of this year and over the last three months they have stepped up their practice session from Mondays to Thursday and on Saturdays at Up Park Camp.

“We are, however, hoping that countries such as the United States Virgin Island, Turks and Caicos Islands, Bermuda, Trinidad and Tobago, St Kitts and others will confirm their participation in order stage a good tournament,” Gordon said.

Belize is not from the English-speaking Caribbean region but usually compete in sports in this region.

Meanwhile, the players selected for the Caribbean Tournament are Troy McCaw, Oneil Donaldson, Anif Gordon, Uel Gordon, Delano Davis, Jason D’Oyle, O’Shea Gordon, Tredeau Francis, Bryan Sutherland, Ameal Douglas from Invaders Club, Martin Redwood and Quaver Stewart from the Mighty Cubs and Neil Henry from the Latinos.

Meanwhile, Jamaica’s women’s last international competition was between July and August of this year where they participated in the Seventh Pan-American Women’s Softball Qualifier for the XIV Central American and Caribbean (CAC) Games to be held next year.

Copyright© 2000-2001 Jamaica Observer. All Rights Reserved

Umpire earns national award

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

From The Daily Gleaner, Frederickton

Fredericton’s Bob Stanton continues to rack up the honours when it comes to softball officating.

Stanton, who is the director of officating for the International Softball Federation, was recently presented with the Fox 40 Kitch MacPherson Award of Excellence.

The Award, named in honour of the former Hamilton, Ont. basketball official, was presented to Stanton as the Sports Official Canada and Fox 40 International Inc. annual national officating conference in Mississauga, Ont.

Stanton, a 27-year veteran official and technical administrator, has worked at a multitude of provincial and national championships beginning with the 1985 Canada Summer Games in Saint John and the 1999 and 2007 Pan American Games, the world junior men’s championship in 2008 and was umpire in chief at the 2009 Bejing Olympic Games and World Youth Cup in Prague.

He was named Softball Canada’s Umpire of the Year in 1998 and 2008 and was inducted into the Softball New Brunswick Hall of Fame in 2008. He was appointed to the ISF post last year as well.

Meanwhile, a number of Region 3 individuals among the recipients of recognition awards presented by Softball New Brunswick recently.

Rick Russell of Fredericton was named official of the year while Brent Evans of Fredericton was presented the Paul Dawson Volunteer Award. Oromocto’s Barry Adams was named the most dedicated official of the year. Dairy Queen was presented with the Corporate Award.

Given the President’s Shield were Wayne Brown and Sandra Allan. Brown was formerly involved with the ISF while Allan achieved her Level IV umpires’ certificate and umpired at two Canadian championships during the past summer schedule.

Bailey was one of The King’s men

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Cap tip to Dave Blackburn for spotting this one.

From my hometown newspaper, the Long Beach Press Telegram



Mark Bailey impressed Eddie Feigner with his speed and his between-the-legs throws. (Brittany Murray / Staff Photographer)

HALL OF FAME: Long Beach native recalls his time with 4-man softball squad.
By Bob Keisser, Staff Writer

Mark Bailey impressed Eddie Feigner with his speed and his between-the-legs throws. (Brittany Murray / Staff Photographer)
Ask most people how many players you need for a baseball and softball team, and the answer will be nine.

But Mark Bailey knows you can get away with four.

For five years, Bailey was the shortstop on the King and His Court softball team, the legendary squad headlined by Eddie Feigner, arguably the greatest fast-pitch softball player ever.

This was no ordinary team. It was a show squad that traveled the country and played exhibitions against other teams, the difference being that the court played with just four players – Feigner, a catcher, first baseman and shortstop.

Starting in 1965, Bailey was the King’s shortstop, which meant he also played third base, left field and a little center field, on those rare occasions an opponent would make contact with Feigner’s array of pitches.

“I had a tryout for him in 1965,” said Bailey, a Long Beach native who will be inducted into the Long Beach Baseball and Softball Hall of Fame next Saturday (Oct. 10) at Blair Field. “He had heard of me and his shortstop had just retired, and he needed someone who could also pitch.

“When he saw I could do a few things, some of that between-the-legs stuff, and cover a lot of ground, he signed me. He liked that he could use me in more than one spot.”

The tours were more than a grind. Bailey estimated that the team would play 200 dates a year and the calendar often featured weeks of eight or nine games, including the occasional tripleheader.

“We once played five games in three days in four states,” Bailey said. “It was serious travel. Thing is, I was a good ballplayer but when you start playing with just four guys, you really improve. You get to a point where you play so much that you don’t even notice.”

Bailey noted with a laugh that first baseman Al Jackson was the oldest guy on the team, so his coverage area could also include right field. “Sometimes I wished I was the old guy,” he said.

Many of the games were against town teams, but this being at a time when fast-pitch softball had a national footprint, they’d also face teams that were powers in either Amateur Softball Assn. or International Softball Congress leagues. “We did play the defending world champs several times, and some of those games were pretty intense,” he said.

“We all had our things. Catcher Jim Herrick was the team comedian and I was fast, always running. When Eddie set his mind on it, there was no pitcher like him. He could make the ball curve and fade and put it anywhere within 360 degrees, and there was the behind the back and between his leg tricks, too.”

Bailey is as Long Beach as they come. He was born here and went to McKinley Elementary, Hamilton Middle School, Jordan High School, Long Beach City College and Long Beach State, and he was a teacher at Washington Middle School for 35 years.

He started playing baseball and softball when he was a fourth grader and played baseball at Jordan and Long Beach City College before putting his emphasis on softball.

He played on several of the legendary open-class softball teams in the Southland, including the Anaheim Bobcats, Lakewood Jets and briefly with the Long Beach Nitehawks. Bailey, whose nephew is former UCLA and Dallas Cowboys quarterback Troy Aikman, went back to an ISC World Series with the Nitehawks and won several ASA titles with the Jets. He was a member of the 1974 Jets team that won a ISC world title, too.

“I tell people about those days and they have no idea how big it was,” he said. “The Nitehawks were the team because they went to the ISC World Series every year and they were so popular here, but the ASA was the Big Dog. More teams, bigger tournaments.”

Few teams were bigger than the King and his Court, and with players like Bailey, they weren’t exactly playing short-handed.

bob.keisser@presstelegram.com

(Click photo below to enlarge)


(Photo: Inaugural plaque for Long Beach Baseball and Softball Hall of Fame, circa 2004. (Photo by Maddy Flanagan, click to enlarge)

Editor’s note: Must be the week for stories about the King and his Court, this one coming on the heels of a story earlier this week in New Jersey paper, clear across the country on Rich Hoppe. The story above appeared in my hometown newspaper, the Press Telegram (a paper I delivered at age 12), profiling a player that I watched for a number of years. Though the story focuses on his four years with the King and his court, Mark Bailey will be remembered in Long Beach for the years he played on other teams, including two of the powerhouse squads of his day, the Lakewood Jets and the Long Beach Nitehawks. Bailey was in the twilight of his career as I was starting to play in tournaments around town, but even then remained one of the better known and liked ballplayers around.

Our congratulations to Mark on his pending induction into the Long Beach Baseball and Softball Hall of Fame. He will join other Long Beach greats, including former Long Beach Nitehawk shortstop Nick Hopkins and Nitehawk skipper the late Red Meairs, on the softball side and MLB Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn on the baseball side.

Click here to view our prior story about the Long Beach Baseball and Softball Hall of Fame, inaugural inductions, 2004.