I spent a very pleasant hour or so visiting, and while I was there a gentleman named "Red" stopped by. His hair, by now, was more "white" than "red", so I didn't recognize him at first. He reminded me that he used to own a restaurant in downtown Selma called the Selma Deli. Since we were only getting $1.50 a day for meals, his Selma Deli was one of the few places we could afford. And if we won, we got a discount. I thought about asking him why he would allow white boys like myself to eat there, but wouldn't allow black folks. Maybe I'm wrong, but I thought I saw a big change in this man, maybe even a little tear in the corner of his eye. It was almost as if he couldn't believe he was ever part of that era either. I decided, eventually, to leave it alone. After all, Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King would eventually help to change all of that.
Next stop was the ball park. Finally, it was there. Bloch Park. Actually, the field is now called Terry Leach Field. Terry pitched with the Minnesota Twins, who won a World Championship, and
he is one of Selma's claims to fame. Selma was also the site of a famous Civil War battle. I stood there looking at the park and wondering--"was this really happening to me"?.
Last time I was here was in 1957, and it was almost the way I had pictured it would be. What a strange park! Only 340 feet to centerfield, 350 to left and 370 or so to left center. It was a Class D ball park for sure. I remember the night we hit town after breaking camp in Sanford, Florida. Center field seemed so short that I bragged to my teammates that I could throw it over the fence. Eventually I tried, and came pretty close. Then, again, in forty years we tend to remember ourselves as bigger and stronger than we might have actually been.
I took a few pictures. I had a little chat with the stadium's operations guy before deciding to head for my next meeting in Montgomery by way of downtown Selma. The one thing that is missing at Bloch Park nowadays, is symbolic. I remember bleacher sections in left center and right center where you could ALMOST see the game. That's where the "colored" people sat, and I remember thinking: "Why would these folks come out to see us white boys play ball, when we won't even let THEM play"? Thank God, some things have changed for the better.
I aimed the camera and took a shot or two of the bridge where Martin Luther King led the "freedom march" from Selma to Montgomery in the early 60's. As I looked up, a guy was trotting over toward me from across the street. "What part of Illinois are you from"?, he asked after seeing the license plates on my rental car. "That's just a rental car", I replied. 'I'm actually from West Palm Beach, Florida and I came here because I played ball in this town back in 1957'.
He asked me what club I played for, and when I told him it was the Selma Cloverleafs, you wouldn't believe his excited reaction. "I was the visiting team's bat boy", he told me and then proceeded to rattle story after story about Selma, the teams we played, the handful of guys who went on to the big show, what it was like in those days and how different things are today. This was more than I could have imagined. A guy who was thirteen years old back in '57 and was a batboy at Bloch Park, chatting about the Selma Cloverleafs after 40 years! What were the odds on that? Manzel Driscoll is his name, and he even remembered what a hotshot shortstop I was and he said he was disappointed when the ball club wanted to send me off to the Nebraska State League to a place named Hastings. He thought, even at the age of 13, that I had the right stuff to become a big league ball player. Of course, time has proven us both to be wrong.
I refused the Giants' offer to go to Hastings. I don't know what made me do it, but I asked my manager, Buddy Kerr (himself a good field, no hit shortstop for the NY Giants) for my release. He tried to talk me out of it, but I wouldn't listen. He told me that as far as he was concerned I could play for his ball club. But, HE didn't run the farm system. Carl Hubbell did. I should add that the Giants owed me $250, the second half of my HUGE $500 signing bonus. The hitch was that I had to stick with the club 30 days. They told me I was going to Hastings on Day 29. It couldn't be that the Giants wanted me to go to Nebraska to save $250, could it? I didn't realize it at the time, but getting released (even though I had asked for it) was "Strike One" .
"Strike Two" came the next year when I signed with the Chicago White Sox and they sent me to the Duluth-Superior White Sox of the Class C Northern League. it seemed like it was 25 degrees every night in places like Duluth, Winnipeg, St.Cloud, Eau Claire, Minot, Grand Forks, Aberdeen, and Fargo-Moorhead. I had the misfortune of having an old home run hitter named Joe Hauser for a manager. He told me the curve ball and a guy named Jimmy Fox were the reasons he never made the "show". Joe could certainly hit the fast ball. Being an infielder, I threw batting practice a lot and when Joe came up in BP to give the old timers a thrill, if I ever threw anything with a wrinkle on it he would come out to the mound and tell me I'd be on the next train to Kokomo if I threw anything other than fast balls. By the way, I'm convinced that Joe didn't know what 6-4-3 meant and as an infielder that was my stock in trade. On the other hand, I didn't hit much of any kind of pitch, my legs used to lock up in the cold, I didn't hit my hat size, and they released me. It was "strike TWO and yer out" in those days.
I've tried my whole life, I guess, to make up for not going to Nebraska and sticking with the Giants. In fact, when the chance came up to get into radio at KHAS in Hastings a couple of years later, I decided that God must have wanted me to go there. I did, and I've been in radio and television ever since. At least I can still get into ball games for free with my media credentials. But, I will NEVER forget there was a time when I had the chance to live out a dream to be a big league ball player, and maybe I blew it.
What an incredible day it had turned out to be in Selma, and the day wasn't quite over
yet. A little over an hour, and Montgomery would be waiting with just as many memories. They had a team there called the Montgomery Rebels back in 1957, and that's where I remember playing my first professional game. Patterson Field is one of the best minor league parks you'll ever see. It's been home to everything from Class D to AAA. The difference between Bloch Park in Selma and Patterson Field in Montgomery is the difference between a roadside Stuckey's and the Taj Mahal. I took a bunch of pictures there, and again let my imagination wander back to 1957.
As I looked around, I thought of my first game as a pro ball player at Patterson Field. I was the leadoff hitter for the Selma Cloverleafs, and my knees were knocking. When the public address announcer introduced a high school band to play the national anthem, they started to play "Dixie", and a bunch of "Johnny Rebs" were wandering around the field and the stands waving Confederate flags. I guess, for me, that took the edge off. I thought to myself, "these people are still fighting the Civil War" and it loosened me right up. I got a base hit that night and played a real good game at short. As my eyes wandered around Patterson Field, I thought to myself--"it's been forty years and...I'll be damned, the ball park's still there".
There's a lot I've left out of this little treatise. You've been patient to read THIS much. However, it's a trip I will truly never forget. I thought about it again recently when I saw black players embracing white players in Birmingham Barons' uniforms at our recent Sunshine Classic Tournament in Florida. Just to see those young guys all playing the same game is reason enough to believe that some things have changed for the better. My trip was not just an NABA recruiting trip. It gave me a chance to relive some of my youth, and to reflect on the great sociological changes that many of us have lived through, but all too seldom think about.
With all of the changes, though, there is one constant. Baseball is still a great game---the best of them all--no matter how much greedy ball players and even greedier owners try to screw it up.
I've never forgotten that old ball park in Selma, wonderful old Rickwood Field, and
Patterson Field. In one whirwind week, I got to see places only tucked away in the recesses of my mind. I've gotten to see how America has changed for the better in 40 years, even though we still have a long way to go. Thanks to the NABA, I've had the chance to bring my love for the game to many others. Hopefully, my love and reverence for the game will rub off on them and last a lifetime, just as it has for me.
When I finally got back home to Florida, my wife greeted me with: "How was the trip, honey"? I never hesitated in reponding. "It was really unbelievable....and guess what, honey? The ball park's still there".
Excerpts from the article "The Ball Park's Still There"
WINTER 1997/I998
NABA BASEBALL TODAY MAGAZINE