Al Kaline, Detroit Tigers legend, dies at age 85
He was not on the list.
Al Kaline, who in a long and unique Detroit Tigers lifetime
grew from youthful batting champion to Hall of Famer to distinguished elder
statesman, died Monday afternoon at his home in Bloomfield Hills. He was 85.
A cause of death was not immediately available. John Morad,
a close friend of the family, confirmed the news to the Free Press after
speaking with Kaline's younger son, Mike.
Kaline is survived by another son, Mark, and his wife, Madge
Louise Hamilton.
In 22 seasons with the Tigers, most of them as a marvelous
right fielder, Kaline played in more games and hit more homers than anyone else
in club history, and he compiled a batting résumé second only to Ty Cobb’s.
But while Cobb was widely reviled for his bitterness and
meanness, Kaline was eminently respected for his on-field elegance and
off-field graciousness.
Thus, Kaline has a strong claim as the most distinguished
Tiger of them all.
Albert William Kaline was born in a working poor section of
Baltimore on Dec. 19, 1934. His father was a broom maker. His mother scrubbed
floors. When Kaline received a reported $35,000 signing bonus from the Tigers
in 1953, he paid off the mortgage on his parents’ home and paid for an eye
operation for his mother.
“They’d always helped me,” he said. “They knew I wanted to
be a major leaguer, and they did everything they could to give me time for
baseball. I never had to take a paper route or work in a drugstore or anything.
“I just played ball.”
Kaline signed with the Tigers the morning after he graduated
from high school — and made his major-league debut a week later. He would never
play in the minors. He would never wear any uniform but Detroit’s.
Hall of Fame glove, bat
Kaline was 39 when he played his final game, in 1974. Days
before his career ended, he had reached one of baseball’s most cherished
plateaus when he recorded his 3,000th hit. But he finished with 399 home runs,
and on the final day of his career he left the season-ending game with several
innings remaining and thus lost a few at-bats in which he could have bid for
the 400th homer.
But statistics never captured how special Kaline was. Like
the Yankees’ Joe DiMaggio and the Cardinals’ Stan Musial, he embodied the
beauty of the game and became a living monument of how gracefully it could be
played.
Hall of Fame voters didn’t seem bothered that Kaline didn’t
hit 400 homers. In his first year of eligibility, he was elected with 88% of
the vote by baseball writers — well above the 75% required for induction. Yet
the humble Kaline said he was “shocked” when he learned he had been elected.
After the Hall of Fame’s initial class in 1936, only nine others before Kaline
were elected in their first year on the ballot, a list of diamond luminaries
that included Musial, Ted Williams, Willie Mays, Mickey Mantle and Jackie
Robinson but not DiMaggio, Cy Young, Hank Greenberg or Yogi Berra.
Kaline is one of the few dozen players in baseball history
to get 3,000 hits. Like his contemporary, Pittsburgh right fielder Roberto
Clemente, Kaline is a member of the 3,000-hit club who is remembered nearly as
much for his defense as for his offense — perhaps just as much. In one game as
a rookie, Kaline threw out a Chicago White Sox runner for three consecutive
innings — at home, third and second. The Sporting News said of a robbery he
made in 1956 at Yankee Stadium: “No one who saw it will forget how Kaline shot
above the right field scoreboard in the stadium to make a great one-handed
catch on Mickey Mantle.”
Kaline is one of six Tigers with a statue behind the
left-center field fence at Comerica Park. And despite his 3,007 hits and those
club-record 399 homers, that statue shows him not with a bat in hand, but
making a leaping, one-handed catch like the one he made on Mantle.
Yet without his defensive superiority, Kaline likely would
have made the Hall of Fame on his hitting. Every eligible player who has gotten
3,000 hits has entered the Hall except for Rafael Palmeiro, whose candidacy was
short-circuited by a positive test for steroids soon after his milestone base
hit in 2005. Kaline won the American League batting title as a 20-year-old in
1955, and although he never won another batting title, he never stopped
hitting.
In Kaline’s final season, ace Baltimore pitcher Jim Palmer
said of him: “I like to watch him hit. I like to watch him hit even against us.
He’s got good rhythm, a picture swing. Other hitters could learn a lot just by
watching him. The thing about Kaline is that he’ll not only hit your mistakes,
he’ll hit your good pitches, too.”
Palmer recalled how in his first big-league start, in 1965,
he struck out Kaline looking on three pitches the first time he faced him. The
second time up, Palmer said, he threw Kaline a fastball, curve and change-up.
Kaline hit the change-up for a two-run homer.
After one year out of baseball following his retirement,
Kaline joined the Tigers’ television team in 1976 as the analyst for
play-by-play man George Kell, a former Tigers third baseman. Kell, also a Hall
of Famer, and Kaline, after a rough learning curve, provided engaging, incisive
commentary on Tigers telecasts for the next two decades. When Kell retired from
broadcasting, Kaline worked on the air with play-by-play men Ernie Harwell and
then Frank Beckmann into 2001.
Before the 2002 season, new club president Dave Dombrowski
appointed Kaline a special assistant. He was a frequent inhabitant of the field
and clubhouse throughout his 70s and 80s. After owner Mike Ilitch fired
Dombrowski during the 2015 season, Kaline remained in the front office as a
special assistant for the new general manager, Al Avila.
Short on a homer, long on humility
By never playing in the minors and wearing a Tigers uniform
for every game, Kaline is in a very small group of players who performed for
one team and one team only throughout his pro career. Another was a Hall of
Fame contemporary, left-handed pitcher Sandy Koufax of the Dodgers. They faced
each other twice, in All-Star Games in the 1960s, with Kaline singling and
fouling out.
Baseball’s rules of the 1950s kept Kaline and Koufax out of
the minors at the start of their careers. Back then, there wasn’t an amateur
draft — the vehicle that gives one club exclusive signing rights to an amateur
player. To keep down the bidding wars on amateur players in those predraft
days, baseball mandated that any player signed for more than $4,000 would have
to spend two years in the majors before he could be sent to the minors for
seasoning.
The Tigers thought Kaline was well worth that possible
inconvenience. When he came out of high school in Baltimore in 1953, the Tigers
spread the word they had signed him for $35,000, a figure repeated countless
times over the decades. However, in interviews for a 2010 book, “Al Kaline: A
Biography of a Tigers Icon,” Kaline told author Jim Hawkins: “It was a $15,000
bonus, plus two years’ salary of $6,000 each, which was the major-league
minimum at the time.”
Still, for a bonus worth $140,000 today, Kaline basically went
straight from high school graduation to the Tigers. He was 18 years and six
months old when he played his first game for them on June 25, 1953.
By the time Kaline became eligible to go to the minors in
1955, he was on the way to that season’s batting title. He was 20 years old
when he finished that season with a .340 average, 21 points higher than anyone
else in the league and 12 days younger than Tigers legend Ty Cobb was when he
won the 1907 title. At 20 years and 280 days, Kaline remains the youngest
batting champion in American League history.
Kaline’s highest finish in a batting race after that was
second, which he achieved three times. He also twice placed third in the late
1960s. He never led the league in homers or runs batted in, and he never won
its most valuable player award (he twice finished second and once third in the
MVP voting).
But Kaline hit .300 or better in nine seasons, and he
finished with a .297 lifetime average. In 10 seasons he won a Gold Glove as one
of the three best defensive outfielders in the American League. In his later
years, he played often at first base as well as in the outfield. In his final
season, he served exclusively in a role that the AL had instituted the year
before — designated hitter.
Kaline won the respect of the Boston outfielder who is
widely regarded as the greatest hitter in history. This became evident one day
as Kaline sat in the media dining room at Fenway Park before doing the telecast
of a Tigers-Red Sox game. Into the room swooped Ted Williams. He knew his
entrance would require him to fend off the Boston press with which he long
feuded. But he had an important mission, as he growled at the reporters who
approached him. “I just came in here to say hello to Al Kaline,” he said.
Boston wasn’t filled with such kindness for Kaline in 1967.
In that season, he was selected an All-Star for the 13th straight year. But in
the same season, he had a right to wonder whether he would be among the handful
of all-time great players who never reached the World Series.
For the first several years of his career, Kaline and the
rest of the American League basically were blocked from the World Series by a
New York Yankees dynasty. Not only were those the days before the draft caused
talent to be more equally distributed, they were the days before the major
leagues were split into divisions. There were thus no postseason playoffs
within the leagues; the teams that finished first in the American and National
leagues advanced directly into the World Series.
In Kaline’s first 12 seasons, the Yankees won 10 pennants.
Then the Yankees’ dynasty abruptly collapsed, and a few years later, in 1967,
the Tigers made their first down-to-the-wire run at the pennant in Kaline’s
career. They were eliminated when they lost their final game of the season.
Boston — not Detroit — won its first pennant since the mid-1940s.
But the next year, 1968, the Tigers were not to be stopped,
and they didn’t even need a huge season from Kaline. The team had a narrow
first-place lead in the AL in late May when Kaline suffered a broken left
forearm. When he returned five weeks later, the Tigers were well on their way
to the pennant. They won it by 12 games with a 103-59 record. The MVP of the
Tigers and the AL was right-hander Denny McLain, who became the first (and
still only) pitcher to win 30 games in a season since the 1930s.
Typical of Kaline’s humility, he questioned whether he even
deserved to be in the starting lineup for the World Series. He said he didn’t
see how manager Mayo Smith could bench Mickey Stanley or Jim Northrup, who had
gotten most of Kaline’s at-bats when he was injured. After his return July 1,
they kept playing and Kaline logged only 191 at-bats. For the season, he
started and finished only 58 games in right field. According to a Joe Falls
exclusive in the Free Press the day after the pennant clincher, an emotional
Kaline said, “I don’t deserve to play in the World Series.”
But with four outfielders for three starting spots, Smith
came up with a daring solution for the World Series against St. Louis: He moved
Stanley from center field to shortstop to replace light-hitting Ray Oyler, even
though Stanley had played only nine games there in the big leagues. Kaline
returned to right field for the World Series, and he batted .379 with eight
RBIs. His 11 hits in the Series included two homers, two doubles and perhaps
the biggest hit of the Series and of his career.
The Tigers were within a few innings of elimination when
Kaline batted with the bases loaded and one out in the seventh inning of Game 5
at Tiger Stadium. He delivered a two-run single that turned a one-run deficit
into a one-run lead. The Tigers never trailed again in the Series. They won
Game 5, then went to St. Louis and beat the Cardinals in Games 6 and 7. At 33,
Kaline had played on his first and only pennant winner and world champion.
In the following season, 1969, baseball expanded and went to
divisional play. In 1972, Kaline played on a first-place finisher for the
second and last time. Kaline, at age 37, got into one of the hottest hitting
stretches of his career in the final days of the season and helped the Tigers
edge Boston by a half-game for the East Division title. Over his last 10 games,
eight of which the Tigers won, Kaline batted .512 (21-for-41) with four homers,
eight RBIs and 15 runs scored.
If the Tigers had beaten Oakland in the playoffs, Kaline
would have been back in the World Series. But in the winner-take-all final game
of the playoff series, Oakland sneaked out of Tiger Stadium with a 2-1 victory.
The potential tying run in the decisive Game 5 reached first base in the
seventh, eighth and ninth innings against Vida Blue: Aurelio Rodriguez made the
third out in the seventh, Kaline made the second out and Duke Sims the third
out in the eighth, and Tony Taylor made the game’s final out.
Kaline’s 3,000th hit represented a major circle closing. It
came in his hometown of Baltimore on Sept. 24, 1974. He had 2,999 hits when the
game began. He grounded out in his first at-bat. In his second, he hit an
opposite-field double down the right field line off left-hander Dave McNally
for No. 3,000. “He hit a fastball that went right across the plate,” McNally
said. “I got an autographed ball from him that day.”
Ten days later, on the final day of his career, Kaline’s
humility surfaced again and perhaps cost him a chance at his 400th homer. There
are a few accepted ways for a star to take his final bow: leave the field for a
defensive replacement in the late innings or take a late-game at-bat. Either
way, the crowd can give the departing stalwart one last resounding ovation.
Kaline chose neither route in his finale, which was played
against Baltimore on a Wednesday afternoon in early October in front of a mere
4,671 at Tiger Stadium. He couldn’t take a final trot in from his defensive
position because he was the DH, as he was every time he played that season. So
his final appearance would come in the batter’s box.
Kaline had hits in 13 of his previous 15 games but he hadn’t
homered since Sept. 18 off Boston’s Reggie Cleveland, his 13th of the season.
In his first two times up that day against the Orioles and
left-hander Mike Cuellar, Kaline struck out looking and flied to left. His next
turn at-bat came with two out and one on in the fifth inning. Instead, he
allowed manager Ralph Houk to send up Ben Oglivie to hit for him against
right-hander Wayne Garland.
The small gathering of fans was thus denied the chance to
salute Kaline and to see him take a few more at-bats in pursuit of the 400th
homer. According to one report, “the crowd booed thunderously.”
Afterward, Kaline explained that he had injured his left
shoulder over the weekend, realized that he lacked the strength to hit a home
run and asked Houk to remove him from the game. “I was sitting there in the
clubhouse and I could hear them booing,” Kaline said. “I really felt sorry for
Ben. It wasn’t his fault.”
Houk said: “With a hitter as great as he is, you don’t send
him back out there when he says he’s had enough. I think I owed Al that much.”
Kaline’s early exit was so stunning, the fans’ reaction so
overwhelming and the media’s coverage so negative toward the Tigers that Kaline
still faced questions about it on the January 1980 day that he was elected to
the Hall of Fame.
“That was one of my most embarrassing moments,” Kaline said
years later. “But you have to understand that I didn’t realize at the time the
fans came out to see me in my last time at-bat.”
Kaline made his permanent home in metro Detroit from early in his Tigers
career. But in his later role as assistant to the president, he often went with
the Tigers on their trips to Baltimore. In one such homecoming instance, he
showed that he was anything but a front-runner. He joined the Tigers on their
trip to Baltimore early in the 2003 season when they had a 4-25 record and
already were being called one of the worst teams ever, which it turned out they
were.
'The best I ever played against'
When Kaline was 8, he was diagnosed with osteomyelitis and
2inches of bone were removed from his left foot. Despite a permanent deformity
and constant pain throughout his life — “it’s like a toothache in the foot,” he
once explained — Kaline quickly developed into a skilled athlete in a
baseball-playing extended family.
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