Flea Clifton

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Herman Earl "Flea" Clifton (December 12, 1909 - December 22, 1997), was a Major League Baseball infilder who played four seasons with the Detroit Tigers from 1934-1937.

Born in the west end of Cincinnati, Ohio, Clifton had a difficult childhood. His father died in World War I when he was eight, and his mother was killed when he was 15 (strangled by a family friend with Flea's school tie). His stepfather then kicked him out, and Clifron lived for the next year behind a garage in Ludlow, Kentucky.

Clifton played semi-pro baseball in Cincinnati before signing with the Detroit Tigers. Clifton spent the 1929 seaason playing in Raleigh, North Carolina. Clifton met Hank Greenberg when they both played together in Raleigh. The two remained friends and teammates both in the minor leagues and with the Tigers. Clifton appeared in the 1998 documentary about Greenberg, "The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg."

In his autobiography, Greenberg recalled Clifton as a "tough little guy" who used a gray bat made of Cuban wood that he soaked in water every night, supposedly "to keep it from cracking or chipping." Greenberg also joked about Clifton's unusual diet: "On the road, he used to eat nothing but dougnuts and bananas. He said they were cheap and filling and stretched his meal money. Fles was the only ballplayer who could show a profit on $1-a-day meal money." (Hank Greenberg, "Hank Greenberg: The Story of My Life" (1989), pp. 23-24.)

In 1932, Clifton played for the Beaumont, Texas team that won the Texas League championship. His teammates in Beaumont that year included Greenberg, Schoolboy Rowe, Pete Fox, and Elden Auker -- all of whom would play together on Detroit's 1934-1935 Detroit pennant teams.

Clifton later recalled that he frequently got into "fracases" with other players and ended up being hit by pitches more than anyone else. When Clifton claimed not to understand why he got hit so much, a teammate told him: "Then repeat after me: 'I give the pitcher hell, I give the catcher hell, I give the infielders hell, so their control's not so good when you come to the plate.'" (Richard Bak, "Cobb Would Have Caught It," p. 242) Clifton decided to keep his mouth shut after that and was only hit by a pitch once in his major league career.

Clifton made it to the major leagues in 1934. Clifton went 1-for-16 for the 1934 Tigers, for an .063 batting average. In 1935, he played in 45 games and improved his batting average to .245 with 9 RBIs.

In the 1935 World Series, Clifton became the Tigers' starting third baseman when Hank Greenberg broke his wrist in Game 2. The Tigers' regular third baseman Marv Owen moved to first base and Clifton stepped in at third base. Clifton had played only 43 games during the regular season, with a .255 batting average, and went 0 for 16 with 4 strikeouts in the Series. Clifton later said, "I never hit the ball harder than I did in the '35 Series, but I couldn't buy a base hit." (Richard Bak, "Cobb Would Have Hit It," p. 250)

Clifton saw limited action with the Tigers in 1936 and 1937 and played his last major league game on July 1, 1937.

In his major league career, Clifton played in 87 games, scoring 27 runs, and collecting 39 hits and 13 RBIs, with a career batting average of .200.

After leaving the Tigers, Clifton played in the minor leagues in Toledo, Syracuse, and Minneapolis. Clifton played in 150 games for the Minneapolis Millers in 1943, batting .282 and collecting 56 RBIs. [1]

Clifton left baseball in 1944 and worked as an insurance agent.[2] Clifton was born and died in Cincinnati, Ohio

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Baseball-Reference.com
  • Hank Greenberg, "Hank Greenberg: The Story of My Life" (1989)
  • Richard Bak, "Cobb Would Have Caught It: The Golden Age of Baseball in Detroit" (Wayne State Univ. Press 1991), Chapter 12, "Flea Clifton"