SI Vault
 
AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST
Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
April 07, 1975

American League West

View CoverRead All Articles View This Issue
Print This PRINT E-mail This EMAIL Most Popular MOST POPULAR SHARE SHARE

The fundamental difference between this season and last, the Oakland A's stoutly maintain, is that this time they will be obliged to play hard all the way to win their division. "We have a funny type of ball club," understates Manager Alvin Dark. "We really only played for 3� months last year. When we got ahead by nine games, we played about .500 ball in August and September. This year it will take a little more a little longer."

The A's must shoulder the extra work load because of the unexpected loss of Jim Hunter, New York's newest millionaire. Hunter's defection, like that of former Manager Dick Williams before him, was yet another blow to the fragile dignity of a team that has won three consecutive world championships but appears to much of the baseball public as a roistering street gang. The A's pine for respect, but just when they seem likely to achieve it there will be a clubhouse fight or, as in the Hunter caper, some egregious indiscretion by their eccentric owner, Charles O. Finley.

Without Hunter, the A's may not be as good as they were a year ago, but they will not be all that much worse, either. Lost in the Hunter hullabaloo, for example, was the acquisition of Billy Williams, who in 16 years as a Chicago Cub amassed 2,510 hits, 392 home runs and a career batting average of .296. "This is not just some guy you pick up," the A's Reggie Jackson says, "this is a Hall of Famer." At 36, Williams will be restricted mostly to designated hitting, which should prove a boon both to the offense and the defense, since fielding, either in the outfield or at first base, has never been his strong suit.

There will be other changes. Claudell Washington, the 20-year-old who hit .285 in 73 regular-season games and .571 in the World Series, will be tried in left field. Joe Rudi, the best leftfielder in baseball, will be shifted to first base, a position for which he has little affection. "It took me eight years to win a Golden Glove as an outfielder," he says testily. "Now they move me to a new position."

Last year's first baseman, Gene Tenace, will return to catching, sharing duties behind the plate with last year's catcher, Ray Fosse. A promising rookie, Phil Garner, will be the second baseman, replacing World Series hero Dick Green, who apparently has packed it in for certain after many tentative retirements. Campy Campaneris and Captain Sal Bando will again do their stuff at short and third, and Billy North in center and Jackson in right will complete an impressive outfield.

Pitching will be a bother, though, since Ken Holtzman (19-17), Vida Blue (17-15), Glenn Abbott (5-7) and Dave Hamilton (7-4) must necessarily pick up the slack left by Hunter's defection. Of these, only Abbott is a righthander, which will give the A's an unusually unbalanced starting rotation unless John (Blue Moon) Odom emerges from the bullpen and the ignominy of last year's 1-5 record. With Rollie Fingers and Paul Lindblad at the ready, the A's have ample relief.

To hear Texas Ranger Manager Billy Martin talk, the A's with or without Hunter are no match for his youthful pretenders. "I thought we should be the team to beat even before Oakland lost Catfish," says Billy. "Now I definitely think we should be favored."

Skeptics are ill-advised to write off Martin's forecasts. Last season he boasted that his woeful tailenders would rise up to battle the A's to the wire, which is nearly what they did, finishing eight games above .500 and five games behind the division leaders. However, disbelievers may feel the Rangers played over their heads. For example, is Jeff Burroughs, who hit 25 home runs, batted .301, drove in 118 runs and won the league's Most Valuable Player award, really that good? Can Rookie of the Year Mike Hargrove, who hit .323, do it again? And has the veteran pitcher, Ferguson Jenkins (25-12), got another 20 wins left in his right arm? Yes, says Billy, to all.

Still, Martin does have problems. Aside from the redoubtable Steve Foucault, the bullpen is sparsely populated, and the Rangers are sorely in need of lefthanders, both as starters and relievers. Jim Umbarger, less than a year off the Arizona State campus, and Mike Kekich, formerly of the Dodgers, Yanks and Indians, may prove to be the southpaws they need. Kekich is at least grateful for the chance to prove himself on the field. " Billy Martin," says he, "is probably the only manager in baseball right now who is willing to look at me as a pitcher rather than as some kind of wife-swapping freak."

The two new Chicago White Sox pitchers, Reliever Cecil Upshaw and Starter-Reliever Roger Nelson, presumably will bolster a staff as short in numbers as it is long on durability. The busiest Chisox have been Fireman of the Year Terry Forster (24 saves, seven wins), Wilbur Wood (20-19), Jim Kaat (21-13) and Stan Bahnsen (12-15), all of whom, as Manager Chuck Tanner ruefully notes, were productive in both the won and the lost columns. These laborers were helped from mid-season on by Bart Johnson (10-4), who is a positive thinker of the Silva Mind Control school. "The mind is a computer," Johnson instructs. "You can program yourself for anything. I programmed myself for strikes."

Continue Story
1 2 3