Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Mets win in Callaway debut as manager

- By Mike Fitzpatric­k

Mickey Callaway's first game as a manager with the Mets went exactly according to plan in an opening-day win

Rusty Staub was a huge hit on both sides of the border.

Instantly recognizab­le for his fiery orange hair and gregarious personalit­y, the outfielder who charmed baseball fans in the United States and Canada during an All-Star career that spanned 23 major league seasons died Thursday. He was 73.

Staub died after an illness in a hospital in West Palm Beach, Florida, hours before the start of the baseball season, the New York Mets said in a statement. The team learned of his death from friends of Staub who were with him at the hospital, a spokesman added.

Affectiona­tely dubbed “Le Grand Orange,” Staub was a sixtime All-Star and the only player in major league history to have at least 500 hits with four teams. Popular with fans and teammates in two countries, he was most adored in New York and Montreal.

“He could be as tough as hell and as soft as a mushroom,” said Mets teammate and close friend Keith Hernandez, who choked back tears as he spoke about Staub at Citi Field before New York hosted the St. Louis Cardinals.

A savvy, reliable slugger with left-handed power and a discerning eye, Staub played from 1963 to 1985 and finished 284 hits shy of 3,000. He had 3½ great seasons

with the Detroit Tigers and batted .300 for the Texas Rangers in 1980.

He broke into the majors as a teenager with Houston, lasted into his 40s with the Mets as a pinch-hitter deluxe and spent decades doing charity work in the New York area.

“There wasn’t a cause he didn’t champion,” the Mets said.

Staub, who would have turned 74 on Sunday, survived a 2015 heart attack on a flight home from Ireland. Years earlier, the gourmet cook owned and operated a pair of popular restaurant­s in Manhattan that bore his name. He also authored a children’s book titled “Hello, Mr. Met!”

“What a unique personalit­y he was. I never met anyone like him,” former Mets pitcher Ron Darling said. “He was a renaissanc­e kind of man.”

The Mets saluted Staub on the stadium video board before Thursday’s season opener. The number 10 he wore during some of his time with the Mets (he also wore No. 4) was painted in white on the back of the pitcher’s mound.

“Rusty was a superb ambassador for our sport and a generous individual known for community efforts,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement.

Staub was the first star for the expansion Montreal Expos in 1969, embraced by French-Canadian fans at Parc Jarry who appreciate­d that he learned their language.

He made three straight All-Star teams with Montreal and hit a career-high 30 home runs for the lastplace Expos in 1970. Though he spent only three full seasons in Montreal, plus a 38game reunion in 1979, his No. 10 became the first uniform jersey retired by the team in 1993.

Long after the Expos moved to Washington and were renamed the Nationals before the 2005 season, he remains one of the most beloved players in franchise history.

“He gave his heart and soul to the franchise and to the city of Montreal. He immersed himself in the city’s culture as much as any Expo and the fans loved him for it,” Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame director of operations Scott Crawford said in a statement. “We’ll miss Le Grande Orange, but we’ll never forget him.”

Staub was traded to the Mets in 1972 and one year later helped lead them to a surprising National League pennant. Spurred by a nowfamous rallying cry from reliever Tug McGraw — “Ya Gotta Believe!” — the Mets upset heavily favored Cincinnati, with Staub socking three home runs in the first four games of their best-offive NL playoff.

Staub separated his right shoulder when he crashed hard into the outfield wall to make a fantastic catch in the 11th inning of Game 4. He sat out Tom Seaver’s decisive win in Game 5 and missed the World Series opener against Oakland, yet returned to the lineup the following game.

Barely able to make weak, underhand throws during the Series, he still batted .423 with a home run, two doubles and six RBIs as New York lost in seven games. In all, Staub hit .341 with 11 RBIs in his only postseason, a clutch and gritty performanc­e that endeared him to Mets fans forever.

In 1975, he became the first Mets player to drive in 100 runs in a season, setting a club record with 105 that wasn’t broken until 1990.

New York traded Staub to Detroit in December 1975 and he made his final AllStar team with the Tigers in 1976. He had 121 RBIs and finished fifth in AL MVP voting in ‘78, becoming the first major leaguer to play all 162 games in a season at designated hitter.

Staub re-signed with the Mets before the 1981 season and was a player-coach for them in ‘82. Late in his career, often sporting black batting gloves and choking way up on the bat, he became one of baseball’s best pinch-hitters, tying an NL record in 1983 with eight consecutiv­e pinchhits and equaling a major league mark with 25 pinchhit RBIs.

His final season was 1985, one year before the Mets won the World Series. After spending nine seasons with New York, he was inducted into the team’s Hall of Fame in ‘86 and when he was honored at Shea Stadium, smiling ex-teammates such as Hernandez and Darryl Strawberry wore long, orange wigs for the on-field ceremony.

“Rusty was good at everything,” Darling said. “He just had a connectivi­ty to people.”

Staub was known for his uncanny ability to spot opponents tipping pitches, and he kept their specific tendencies written down in a little red book.

Hernandez told an endearing story about asking Staub for the book but being told he hadn’t earned it. When he retired, Staub gave his friend the book as a gift — and Hernandez said he still has it at home.

“It was quite extraordin­ary,” Hernandez said.

Staub worked as an announcer on Mets television broadcasts from 198695. He was inducted into the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame in 2006 and the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 2012.

Only 11 days after his heart attack — Staub was revived by doctors and nurses aboard the flight as it made an unschedule­d return to Ireland — he threw out the first pitch at Citi Field before a Mets playoff victory in 2015.

The next April, he was on hand again to help raise the NL championsh­ip banner.

Born and raised in New Orleans, Daniel Joseph Staub was called Rusty because of his bright red hair. He made his major league debut with the Houston Colt .45s in 1963, eight days after his 19th birthday, and led the NL with 44 doubles in 1967 for the renamed Astros, earning his first AllStar selection.

Playing mostly right field and some first base, too, Staub retired with a .279 career average, 292 home runs and 1,466 RBIs.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Rusty Staub speaks during his induction into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in St. Marys, Ontario, in 2012.
AP FILE Rusty Staub speaks during his induction into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in St. Marys, Ontario, in 2012.
 ?? RON FREHM - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this May 1, 1984, file photo, Rusty Staub, pinch hitting for the New York Mets, watches his sixth inning hit to right field against the Chicago Cubs at Shea Stadium in New York. Staub, who became a huge hit with baseball fans in two countries...
RON FREHM - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this May 1, 1984, file photo, Rusty Staub, pinch hitting for the New York Mets, watches his sixth inning hit to right field against the Chicago Cubs at Shea Stadium in New York. Staub, who became a huge hit with baseball fans in two countries...

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