On This Date: Ex-College Hoopers Supplying MLB Headlines on September 21
Extra! Extra! Instead of wishing petty divider-in-chief Plagiarist Biledumb could avoid turning session over to cover girl "Dr." Jill and conduct Cabinet meeting with "a fair share" of intellectual integrity and personal traits more like legendary Corn Pop and witless whisperer's deceased son Beau than hideous con artist/laptop loser Hunter (see Libyan scandal as example), you can read news about memorable major league baseball achievements and moments involving former college basketball players. Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. Nonetheless, numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games, transactions and dates in MLB history.
Former college hoopers Joe Adcock (Louisiana State), George Altman (Tennessee State) and Wayne Gross (Cal Poly Pomona) each hit two homers in a MLB game on this date. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is a September 21 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:
SEPTEMBER 21
Milwaukee Braves 1B Joe Adcock (Louisiana State's top basketball scorer in 1945-46) clobbered two homers against the Chicago Cubs in a 1957 game.
Chicago Cubs rookie RF George Altman (appeared in 1953 and 1954 NAIA Tournament with Tennessee State) smacked two homers against the St. Louis Cardinals in a 1959 contest.
Montreal Expos RHP Ray Burris (two-sport standout in Southwestern Oklahoma State Hall of Fame) yielded only three hits in 10 innings against the Philadelphia Phillies in a 1981 performance.
In his lone MLB appearance, Detroit Tigers RHP Chuck Daniel (School of Ozarks AR hoops letterman in 1951 and 1952) hurled 2 1/3 innings against the Kansas City Athletics in 1957 after relieving Jim Bunning. Daniel yielded a two-run round-tripper to 1951 A.L. home-run leader Gus Zernial.
St. Louis Cardinals 2B Frankie Frisch (Fordham hoops captain) contributed four hits against the Cincinnati Reds in a 1935 outing.
Detroit Tigers 1B Hank Greenberg (enrolled at NYU on hoops scholarship in 1929 but attended college only semester) contributed six RBI in an 8-6 win against the Philadelphia Athletics in opener of 1938 twinbill. The previous year, he collected two homers and five RBI in the lidlifter of a 1937 doubleheader against the Boston Red Sox.
Oakland Athletics 3B Wayne Gross (Cal Poly Pomona assists leader in 1974-75) collected two homers and five RBI in a 9-3 triumph against the Kansas City Royals in 1980.
Chicago White Sox RHP Bart Johnson (averaged 30.5 ppg for Brigham Young's freshman squad in 1967-68) fanned 12 opposing batters in his second straight start, winning all five decisions in final month of 1971 season.
Chicago White Sox 1B Deacon Jones (leading scorer for Ithaca College NY midway through 1953-54) capped a six-run uprising in the bottom of ninth inning with game-winning, pinch-hit single in 7-6 nod over eventual 1962 World Series winner New York Yankees.
Chicago Cubs SS Don Kessinger (three-time All-SEC selection for Mississippi from 1961-62 through 1963-64 while finishing among nation's top 45 scorers each year) smacked two triples against the Montreal Expos in a 1975 game. Nine years earlier, Kessinger amassed four hits against the Cincinnati Reds for second time during month in 1966.
Chicago Cubs CF Hank Leiber (Arizona hooper in 1931) knocked in five runs against the New York Giants in a 1939 outing. The next year, Leiber supplied his fifth consecutive contest with multiple hits.
New York Giants RHP Christy Mathewson (Bucknell hooper at turn of 20th Century), appearing for the third time in four games, notched his 30th victory in 1903.
In his initial MLB start (subbing for ailing Hall of Famer Stan Musial) in 1950, 1B Ed Mickelson (hooper for Missouri in 1944-45 and Oklahoma A&M in 1946-47) stroked a single in his first at-bat off Boston Braves LHP Warren Spahn.
St. Louis Cardinals rookie RF Don Padgett (freshman in 1934 with Lenoir-Rhyne NC excelled in multiple sports) went 4-for-4 against the Brooklyn Robins in nightcap of a 1937 doubleheader.
Philadelphia Athletics rookie RHP Jim Peterson (Penn hoops letterman from 1928-29 through 1930-31) lost his lone MLB complete game (6-5 against Detroit Tigers in nightcap of 1931 twinbill).
Chicago Cubs SS Paul Popovich (averaged 3.3 ppg for West Virginia's 1960 NCAA playoff team) went 3-for-3 against the St. Louis Cardinals, igniting a six-game hitting streak closing out 1969 campaign.
Chicago Cubs RHP Don Prince (Campbell hooper in 1956-57 and 1957-58 when school was junior college) made his lone MLB appearance (one inning against New York Mets in 1962).
Chicago White Sox RHP Johnny Rigney (top hoops center for St. Thomas MN in mid-1930s) toiled 14 innings in a 1-1 tie against the Detroit Tigers in 1941.
Brooklyn Dodgers LHP Preacher Roe (Harding AR hooper in late 1930s) hurled a shutout against the St. Louis Cardinals in the nightcap of a 1949 doubleheader.
New York Yankees 1B Bill "Moose" Skowron (scored 18 points in eight games for Purdue in 1949-50) supplied five hits but they stranded a MLB-mark 20 baserunners in a 13-7 setback against the Boston Red Sox in 1956.