Tug McGraw

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Tug McGraw
Relief pitcher
Born: August 30, 1944
Died: January 5, 2004 (aged 59)
Batted: Right Threw: Left
MLB debut
April 18, 1965
for the New York Mets
Final game
September 25, 1984
for the Philadelphia Phillies
Career statistics
Saves     180
ERA     3.14
Strikeouts     1109
Teams
Career highlights and awards
  • 47th in career Saves (180)
  • 1969: 8th in NL with 12 Saves
  • 1971: 1st in NL with Won-Loss % (.733)
  • 1972: 2nd in NL with 27 Saves
  • 1973: 2nd in NL with 25 Saves
  • 1975: 6th in NL with 14 Saves
  • 1979: 8th in NL with 16 Saves
  • 1980: 7th in NL with 20 Saves
  • 1981: 7th in NL with 10 Saves
  • Appeared in 1972 & 1975 All-Star Game
  • 1980 NL-Babe Ruth Award

Frank Edwin "Tug" McGraw Jr. (August 30, 1944January 5, 2004) was a colorful Major League Baseball relief pitcher and the father of country music singer Tim McGraw. He was born in Martinez, California and gained sports stardom during the New York Mets World Series victory in 1969 and is remembered for coining the motto "Ya Gotta Believe" during the New York Mets' run for the 1973 World Series. He is also renowned as the star reliever who pitched the final strike for the 1980 World Champion Philadelphia Phillies, which is their only World Series Championship in team history.

Contents

[edit] Pro Career

[edit] New York Mets

Tug graduated from St. Vincent's High School in Vallejo, CA in 1962. Signed out of Poway High School by the New York Mets on June 12, 1964. The Mets initially tried him as a starting pitcher, but he only managed a 2-12 record in 16 starts over two years. However, one of those victories was against the legendary Sandy Koufax and marked the first time the Mets had ever beaten the future Hall of Famer. After spending all of 1968 in the minor leagues with the Jacksonville Suns, he became a full-time reliever in 1969. Relying on a good screwball, he racked up twelve saves for the Miracle Mets as they went on to win the World Series, but he did not pitch in the Fall Classic.

He became one of the more successful closers in baseball during the early 1970s, placing second in the National League in saves in 1972 and 1973. He recorded perhaps his finest overall season in 1972 , when he saved 27 games along with a microscopic 1.70 earned run average and giving up just 71 hits in 106 innings pitched. McGraw would also serve as the winning pitcher of the 1972 All-Star Game, one of two All-Star Games in which he played. During the 1973 season, he coined a popular rallying cry for the Mets, "Ya Gotta Believe!" He said the famous phrase when maybe only he believed the Mets could actually get to the World Series. But soon enough, hearing McGraw say it again and again, seeing him do his magic in the ninth, the Mets themselves came to believe in belief. That year, the Mets won the National League East (after trailing the Chicago Cubs by as many as 9 1/2 games) with only 82 wins, but managed to make the World Series, losing to the Oakland Athletics in seven games in a series many Mets fans felt the team should have won.

Following the 1973 World Series, McGraw continued to serve as the leader of the Mets bullpen, but soon encountered several injuries that would ultimately lead to his trade from New York.

[edit] Philadelphia Phillies

On December 3, 1974, McGraw was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies along with Don Hahn and Dave Schneck in exchange for catcher John Stearns, pitcher Mac Scarce and outfielder Del Unser. At the time of the trade, McGraw was the all-time Mets leader in saves, games pitched, and games finished, and it appeared as though the Mets were unloading damaged goods, as McGraw had developed shoulder trouble during the 1974 season. After the trade, he was diagnosed with a simple cyst and after successful surgery to remove it, recovered completely.

With the Phillies, he continued his role as a reliable relief pitcher. In 1980, he finished fifth in the NL Cy Young Award voting, compiling 20 saves and a 1.46 ERA and helping the Phillies win the NL East. In the playoffs, he appeared in all five games of the National League Championship Series, saving two of them. His finest efforts came in the World Series, striking out ten batters in 7 2/3 innings. He saved the final game by striking out Willie Wilson, clinching the Phillies' first, and so far only, World Series championship.

He spent the next four seasons as a set-up man rather than a closer, and retired after the 1984 season. He compiled 180 saves in his career, tied for eighth-best in Major League history at the time. His final major league game pitched was September 25, 1984.

[edit] Career highlights

  • October 18, 1973: The Mets win the 5th game 2–0 behind the 3-hit pitching of Jerry Koosman and McGraw. Cleon Jones doubles in a run in the second and Don Hahn's triple scores the other run.
  • December 3, 1974: The Mets trade ace reliever and Shea Stadium favorite Tug McGraw to the Phillies in a 6-player swap. Hahn and Dave Schneck go to the Phils while New York receives OF Del Unser, C John Stearns, and P Mac Scarce.
  • April 17, 1976: With the wind blowing out at Wrigley Field, Mike Schmidt leads a Phils' assault with a single, four consecutive home runs, and eight RBIs to overcome a 12–1 deficit after three innings and beat the Cubs in 10 innings, 18–16. The Chicago Cubs had tied in the 9th after the Phils took a 15–13 lead. Schmidt hits one homer off Mike Garman, two off Rick Reuschel, and the last, a 2-run homer, off Rick's brother, Paul Reuschel in the 10th. He's the first National Leaguer in modern times to hit four homers in a row. McGraw, who departs for a pinch hitter after Schmidt's last blow, is the winner, though two more pitchers are needed. The Phils use seven pitchers, including starter Steve Carlton.
  • May 22, 1976: Reggie Smith slams three homers and drives in five runs to give the St. Louis Cardinals a 7–6 win over the Phillies. Smith's 3rd round tripper is a solo shot with two out in the 9th inning off McGraw to give Al Hrabosky the win.
  • August 27, 1977: Dan Driessen and Johnny Bench of the Cincinnati Reds hit back-to-back homers in the 9th inning to give the Reds a 5–4 win over the Phils. McGraw serves up both. Driessen's homer is a line drive that hits the center field wall at Riverfront Stadium and rebounds back over Jerry Martin's head all the way to the infield for an IPHR. Bench follows with one over the left field wall.
  • August 15, 1978: The Phillies drop their 4th in a row, losing to the Dodgers, 5–2. The loss cuts the Phils' lead to two games as the Cubs beat the Reds and Tom Seaver in an afternoon contest. After Reggie Smith had driven in the game-winner the previous two nights, it is Steve Garvey's turn. His triple in the 8th off McGraw, with the bases loaded, breaks a 2–2 tie.
  • August 11, 1979: The Pittsburgh Pirates' Ed Ott hits a grand slam off Phillie reliever McGraw in the 8th inning as the Bucs win 14–11. It is the 4th grand slam that McGraw has yielded this year, setting a new National League mark and tying him for this questionable honor with the Detroit Tigers's Ray Narleski (1959).
  • August 27, 1980: Phillies Steve Carlton (20-7) becomes the first National League pitcher to win 20 games this season, combining with McGraw to beat the Dodgers, 4–3. Carlton will win a National League-high 24 games, while pitching 304 innings, the last MLB pitcher to throw more than 300 innings in a season.
  • October 7, 1980: Phillies stars shine in the NLCS opener. Carlton and McGraw hold the Houston Astros to one run, and Greg Luzinski cracked a 2-run homer as the final score wa 3–1.

[edit] Records and Honors

  • Most saves in the LCS (lifetime) (5).
  • Sets NL record and ties MLB record for most grand slams given up, season (4).
  • He was inducted into the New York Mets Hall of Fame in 1993 and to the Philadelphia Phillies Wall of Fame in 1999.

[edit] Notable Achievements

  • 2-time NL All-Star (1972 & 1975)
  • NL Winning Percentage Leader (1971)
  • Won two World Series with the New York Mets (1969; he did not play in the World Series) and the Philadelphia Phillies (1980)

[edit] Other work

In the 1980s and 1990s, he was a reporter for Action News on WPVI, the American Broadcasting Company affiliate found on channel 6 in Philadelphia, and usually reported on sports or wacky stories.

McGraw could also throw right-handed and would often loosen up before games by playing right-handed catch with his teammates, leaving fans wondering who that right-hander wearing number 45 was.

In 1999 he played himself at a New York Mets reunion on "Everybody Loves Raymond".

[edit] Personal

[edit] Marriage

McGraw had just met Betty D'Agostino in 1966 when their brief relationship resulted in the conception of country music superstar Tim McGraw. For years, Tug refused to acknowledge that this was his son, but eventually he and Tim became close. Tim made one last visit to Tug when Tim was 18 to connect with Tug. Tim figured he would make one last effort if Tug denied him he was never going to contact Tug again. Upon seeing Tim as an 18 year old Tug knew there was no doubt as Tim strongly resembled Tug when Tug was the same age.

Tug was married to the former Phyllis Kline in 1968, with whom he had two children. They divorced in 1988.

[edit] Military Service

Pfc. Frank Edwin McGraw reported to boot camp at Parris Island on September 23, 1965 along with fellow New York Met pitcher Jim Bethke.[1] He would be trained as a reserve rifleman and marksman – skilled in the use of the M-14 rifle and the M-60 machine gun. McGraw would get his real training at Camp LeJeune where he, in his own words, became a “trained killer”.[2] Yet many of the skills which he acquired during his training translated very positively towards his career with the New York Mets and later the Philadelphia Phillies. The Marines taught McGraw discipline, concentration, and confidence; all things that translated seamlessly onto the pitcher’s mound.

But for McGraw, one of the most challenging aspects of being in the military was the internal conflict which it stirred within him. At the same time that he was finishing his Marine training, Tug McGraw’s brother, Hank McGraw was staging anti-war protests at Vallejo Junior College in California, which McGraw also attended.[3] In a March 5, 1967 New York Times article McGraw even admitted that he and his brother would have arguments over the way the Vietnam War was being conducted. But even he, with his six-year reserve commitment to the United States Marine Corps looming large over him would admit that he was a “dove, when it came to the way we’re [the United States] was conducting the war”.[4] Not even vigorous military training could break McGraw’s outspoken spirit.

[edit] Comments

Besides his pitching talents, Tug McGraw was a colorful character off the field. He once famously said: "Ninety percent [of my salary] I'll spend on good times, women, and Irish Whiskey. The other ten percent I'll probably waste." (George Best is credited with an almost identical statement.) When asked in 1974 whether he preferred natural grass or artificial turf, he replied "I don't know, I never smoked AstroTurf", a playful reference to smoking marijuana. In the mid 1970s, McGraw was involved with the creation of the nationally syndicated comic strip "Scroogie." Tug McGraw was the last active major league player to have played under manager Casey Stengel.

[edit] Death

On March 12, 2003, McGraw was working as a spring training instructor for the Phillies when he was hospitalized with a brain tumor. When surgery was performed to remove it, it revealed the tumor was malignant and inoperable. Given three weeks to live by doctors, he managed to survive nine months. During this time, he attended the closing ceremonies of Veterans Stadium, where he recreated the final out of the Phillies' World Series triumph.

[edit] Team rankings

At the time of his death, McGraw was ranked:

  • 24th on the all-time major league list in games pitched (824)
  • 22nd on the all-time major league list in games finished (541)
  • 4th on the all-time Mets list in games saved (86)
  • 4th on the all-time Mets list in games finished (228)
  • 5th on the all-time Mets list in most games pitched (361)
  • 7th on the all-time Mets list in least hits per nine innings (7.78)
  • 10th on the all-time Mets list in most batters struck out per nine innings (7.02)
  • 1st on the all-time Phillies list in games finished (313)
  • 3rd on the all-time Phillies list in games pitched (500)
  • 4th on the all-time Phillies list in saves (94)
  • 8th on the all-time Phillies list in least hits per nine innings (7.89)

[edit] Quotes

• Asked what he would do with the salary he was making as a pitcher, McGraw said:

"Ninety percent I'll spend on good times, women and Irish whiskey. The other ten percent I'll probably waste."

• Asked by a reporter whether he preferred real grass or artificial turf, he replied:

"I don't know - I never smoked AstroTurf!"

• His "Frozen Snowball" theory of pitching:

"Ten million years from now, when the sun burns out and the earth is just a frozen snowball hurling through space, nobody's going to care whether or not I got this guy out."

• Asked why he drove a 1954 Buick:

"I like it because it plays old music."

  • during the 1973 and 1980 pennant races

"Ya gotta believe"

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "McGraw & Bethke Learn the Basics of Military Life", New York Times (1857-current file), Nov 7 1965, Proquest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851-2004), pg. 201
  2. ^ Joseph Durso, "McGraw, the Marine, Turns to a Different Type of War", New York Times (1857-current file), March 5 1967, Proquest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851-2004)
  3. ^ Durso, "McGraw, the Marine."
  4. ^ Durso, "McGraw, the Marine."

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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Preceded by
Willie Stargell
Babe Ruth Award
1980
Succeeded by
Ron Cey
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