Showing posts with label Pacific Coast League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pacific Coast League. Show all posts

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Training for the Big Show -- March 6, 2025

San Francisco Examiner, 17-March-1925

Here we see the 1925 San Francisco Seals in Spring Training. Bert Ellison played for the Seals from 1921 to 1927 and managed them from 1923 to 1926. I don't know why he is holding a fish.

He once hit five home runs in a PCL double header.

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Baseball Today -- June 18, 2024

San Francisco Bulletin, 04-June-1924

The Salt Lake City Bees visited the San Francisco Seals for a Pacific Coast League game. Notice that both "baseball" and "today" are written without hyphens. This was a transition that was going on during the 1920s. The Seals won 9-1.

San Francisco Bulletin, 04-June-1924

Sunday, April 28, 2024

Baseball -- Pacific Coast League -- April 28, 2024

Los Angeles Evening Post-Record, 25-April-1924

The Pacific Coast League San Francisco Seals visited the Vernon Tigers at Washington Park in Los Angeles. Vernon is a suburb of Los Angeles, but the Tigers shared the field with the PCL's Los Angeles Angels. "Ladies free except on opening of series, Saturday, Sunday and Holidays."

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Seals on the Air -- March 23, 2024

The Peninsula Times Tribune, 18-March-1949

I remember Don Klein as announcer for Stanford and the 49ers. Despite his rough start as a broadcaster for the PCL San Francisco Seals, he became a well-respected broadcaster. The Seals beat the major league Saint Louis Browns 7-5 in an exhibition game.

Dink Templeton
Fagan of Seals was afraid 'Aunt Maggie' lingo
would offend some of his Hillborough chums

Jack McDonald of the Call-Bulletin gave the Seals' new broadcaster Don Klein a big hand on the voicing of the first baseball telecast Wednesday, and I am happy to report that Klein wasn't doing it because the guy was pretty bad, failing for innings at a time to identify the batters, who certainly couldn't' be identified from what you saw on the screen.

Klein is a nice lad who has been imported from Honolulu to step into about as tough a setup as I can think of -- replacing the crack announcer Jack MacDonald who was the Voice of Baseball to many thousands of Bay Area baseball fans. Jack was summarily fired by Paul Fagan at the end of last season after building up tremendous gobs of goodwill for the Seals over 10 years.

"There it goes right out Aunt Maggie's window -- broken glass all over the place," Jack would holler when someone belted a homer, and the cultured Mr. Fagan would shudder at such colorful language, feeling that some of his Hillsborough chums might be looking down their long noses in disdain.

Jack got his degree from the University of California and naturally couldn't be expected to drip with culture (say that and duck quick, Templeton). I don't know where Mr. Fagan picked up his degrees, but he had made it tough for young Don Klein. It's bad enough to have the sponsor telling you how you have to broadcast. On top of that you expect the club owner to have rules you can't break on the air, such as at Seals Stadium when the wind is blowing a gale you can't mention that, and if it's cold enough to freeze your gullet, that is not a topic to be discussed. But when the club owner also dictates the tone and inflection of the voice, the idioms, similes and nicknames which must not be used, and sets a temperature gauge on the among of excitement allowed, the sportscaster is apt to have a very difficult time keeping his fans from going to sleep or turning him off, because cultured diction is something not one out of a carload of baseball fans gives a damn about.

Pressure on new diamond announcer is 'terrific'

The pressure on Don Klein is terrific and I find myself pulling for him hard but on top that he draws the assignment of telecasting the two games a week along with his regular radio broadcast. The two just do not fit together. When you see the action it's hard to take the entire description necessary for a radio broadcast. Don Leibendorfer, doing his regular public address job, would be just about perfect for television, but Don Klein, even if he is good as the old Walnut Famer on the radio job, certainly can't well fit that to television at the same time.

Bucky Walters of the News quoted the KPIX studio folk as saying the cameras were located down the third base line, which was typical of what was the matter with the telecast. Of course they were really located down the first base line, but it seemed no one handling the assignment knew anything about baseball. Once the ball was hit the camera would invariably be trained on the wrong place to pick up any part of the play. With men on first and second, the batter bunts down the third base line. The camera swings to first. The announcer gives the play at third, calling Dillinger out and protesting all over the lot. The camera never does get over to third base, so it comes as a surprise when, after the first pitch to the next batter the announcer suddenly wakes up and says "they called him safe at third, and the bases are loaded."

It seems to me that a camera behind the plate is an absolute necessity for showing a ball game, so that you could see the pitcher throw, the ball coming up to the plate and the hitter all at once, though Seals Stadium, with its glass backstop, makes that quite a problem to figure out. Certainly if all of the action is taken from the side, a much wider lensed camera is needed. The KPIX camera, when focused on the hitter, only took in the area about halfway to the pitcher's box.

After seeing that first one I can only fell more certain than ever that television will never keep fans away from the ballpark and will create more interest to bring new ones out than anything ever known before. I felt that was after the first ice hockey telecast, and Walter Mails tells me that television increased the SF Shamrocks attendance 50 per cent, even with a losing team.



Tuesday, November 21, 2023

O'Doul the Umbrella Man -- November 21, 2023

Oakland Post-Enquirer, 03-November-1923

Lefty O'Doul was born in San Francisco's Butchertown. He was a left-handed pitcher. He played for the San Francisco Seals, the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox. He didn't have much success in the majors, so when he developed a sore arm, he went back to the PCL and learned to play outfield. He turned out to be a powerful hitter. In 1935, his major league career was over and he managed the San Francisco Seals from 1935 to 1951. He did much to encourage baseball in Japan. The Seals toured the country in 1949.

Thursday, October 26, 2023

Base-Ball To-Day, Sacramento vs. San Francisco -- October 26, 2023

San Francisco Bulletin, 11-October-1923

The Sacramento Senators of the Pacific Coast League visited the San Francisco Seals at Recreation Park.



The Seals won 9-5 and clinched the PCL pennant.

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Ladies' Day, Today 2:15 -- August 22, 2023

San Francisco Examiner, 21-August-1923

The Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast League visited the San Francisco Seals at Seals Stadium. It was Ladies' Day. 

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

Pacific Coast League All-Star Game -- August 8, 2023

San Francisco Examiner, 08-August-1923

The 1948 Pacific Coast League All-Star Game was held at Seals Stadium, home of the San Francisco Seals. The South All-Stars won 6-2. 

Friday, April 28, 2023

San Diego vs Seals -- Bring a Friend! -- April 28, 2023

San Francisco Examiner, 13-April-1948

The San Diego Padres of the Pacific Coast League visited the San Francisco Seals at Seals Stadium. This was the Seals' home opener. 

San Francisco Examiner, 13-April-1948

The game was broadcast on station KYA. Jack MacDonald was the announcer and Rainer Beer was the sponsor. "Hear the Seals' First Home Game of 1948."

San Francisco Examiner, 14-April-1948

Sadly, the Padres won 3-2. 

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

KLX Will Radio Home Game Plays -- April 12, 2023

Oakland Tribune, 08-April-1923

In April, Oakland Tribune radio station KLX began to broadcast Pacific Coast League scores inning by inning. This item announces that the station will broadcast play by play reports for a series between the Oakland Oaks and the San Francisco Seals. This was not a remote broadcast from the ballpark, but announcements from the KLX studio. 

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Pacific Coast League is Integrated -- March 30, 2023

Pomona Progress-Bulletin, 30-March-1923

75 years ago today, San Diego Padres catcher John Ritchey, who was sometimes called Johnny, became the first person of color to play in a Pacific Coast League game. He grounded out and the Padres went on to lose to the Los Angeles Angels, 7-4. He did not make it to the majors, but there is a plaque commemorating his achievement in the park of the current San Diego Padres. 

Chicago Star, 13-March-1948

John Ritchey in 1947, when he played for the Chicago American Giants in the Negro Leagues.

Sunday, March 12, 2023

Come on Out! Cleveland vs Seals -- March 12, 2023

San Francisco Examiner, 14-March-1948

The San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League hosted the Cleveland Indians of the American League in an exhibition game. On a rainy day, the Seals beat the Indians 6-5. Bob Feller was the losing pitcher.

San Francisco Examiner, 15-March-1948


Wednesday, April 6, 2022

With the Baseball Fans on the Pacific Coast -- April 6, 2022


100 years ago, West Coast fans waited anxiously for the start of the various minor league seasons. I am waiting anxiously for the delayed 2022 season to start. 

Professional boxing matches in California were limited to four rounds. "The World's Champ" is Jack Dempsey. William Wrigley, Jr and his family owned the Cubs and bought the Pacific Coast League Los Angeles Angels in 1921. The Wrigley family also owned Catalina Island, where the Cubs went for spring training every year from 1922 to 1951. The Angels were the defending league champions. 

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Oakland vs San Francisco -- June 17, 2018

San Francisco Call, 16-July-1908
The Pacific Coast League San Francisco Seals pled the Oakland Oaks at Valencia Street Park, also known as Recreation Park, on Thursday, 16-July-1908.

The Seals had won the day before by scoring four runs in the fourteenth inning.  At a meeting the same day, the four-team league expanded to Sacramento and Venice in Southern California.

On Thursday, the Seals won in the 11th.

San Francisco Call, 17-July-1908
 

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Schnozz -- November 13, 2013

Ernie Lombardi was born in Oakland and made his professional debut with the Oakland Oaks of the Pacific Coast League.  He was a good catcher and a fantastically powerful hitter.  He was also cursed with the inability to run.  He played for the Dodgers, the Reds, where he caught Johnny Vander Meer's consecutive no-hitters, the Braves and the Giants.  After he left the majors, he went back to the Oakland Oaks, where he helped Casey Stengel lead the Nine Old Men to the Coast League Pennant.

Lombardi had many nicknames, espcially "Schnozz" because of his prodigious nose. 

I remember many stories about his sadness at not being elected to the Hall of Fame.  He died in 1977 and was finally elected in 1986.