The Boston Globe

Jerry Grote, star Mets catcher on ’69 championsh­ip team, 81

- By Richard Goldstein

Jerry Grote, who was among the National League’s leading catchers of his time and guided the pitching staff that propelled the New York Mets to their astonishin­g 1969 World Series championsh­ip, died Sunday in Austin, Texas. He was 81.

Jay Horwitz, the Mets’ vice president of media relations, said Mr. Grote had died of respirator­y failure after a heart procedure at the Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute.

Mr. Grote, who played for the Mets for more than a decade, was known for targeting wouldbe base stealers with his powerful arm and for his savvy in calling pitches.

In 1969, he caught future Hall of Famer Tom Seaver and outstandin­g left-hander Jerry Koosman when the Mets staged a late-season drive and defeated the Baltimore Orioles in a fivegame World Series. That championsh­ip was a remarkable turnaround for a team that had finished at or near the bottom of the National League for years after its founding in 1962.

An enduring image of the Mets’ triumphal moment shows Koosman leaping into Mr. Grote’s arms on the Shea Stadium mound seconds after left fielder Cleon Jones caught a fly ball for the Series’ final out.

Lou Brock, who stole hundreds of bases in his career, conceded that Mr. Grote often got the better of him. “Grote’s quick out the box, has a powerful arm and always seemed to have a sixth sense about me stealing,” Brock told Sports Illustrate­d in 1974. “He would have the ball waiting for me at second base long before I got there.”

Mr. Grote was an All-Star in 1968 and 1974 and finished among the National League’s top five catchers in fielding percentage seven times, including a No. 1 ranking in 1975.

He was also remembered for a competitiv­e drive that spawned a gruff demeanor.

Mets’ left-hander Jon Matlack once remarked how, when he made his debut in 1971, “I was scared to death that I’d bounce a curveball into the dirt and get him mad. You worried about him more than the hitter.”

Mr. Grote was “a hard-bitten catcher who would goad his teammates to pitch harder, who could snap at reporters and official scorers,” The New York Times sports columnist George Vecsey wrote in 1981. He quoted Mr. Grote as saying, “I had the red neck. I was red all over.”

Gerald Wayne Grote was born Oct. 6, 1942, in San Antonio. He was the oldest of three children of Clarence and Leila Rittmann Grote.

He pitched, caught, and played third base in high school, then enrolled at nearby Trinity University. Del Baker, a former major league catcher, manager and coach, who was an adviser to the Trinity baseball team, tutored him in catching skills.

The Houston Colt .45s (the future Astros), a team that entered the National League along with the Mets, signed Mr. Grote in their first season. He shuttled between Houston and the minors until he was traded to the Mets in 1965 for pitcher Tom Parsons.

When he was batting over .300 at midseason in 1968, he became only the second Mets player, after second baseman Ron Hunt, to make an All-Star Game starting lineup and ended the season with a .282 batting average.

Then came the Mets’ storied 1969 season, in which they overtook the Chicago Cubs to win the National League East title and swept the Atlanta Braves in three games to capture the NL pennant. The Mets were defeated by the Orioles in Game 1 of the World Series but swept the next four games.

The Mets won another pennant in 1973 and faced the Oakland A’s in the World Series. Mr. Grote batted a decent-enough .267, but his passed ball in the 11th inning of Game 3 led to an A’s victory. Oakland went on to win the Series in seven games.

Mr. Grote posted a career high .295 batting average in 1975. The Mets traded him to the Los Angeles Dodgers in August 1977. He was a backup to Steve Yeager, retired after the 1978 season, then came back to catch briefly for the Kansas City Royals and the Dodgers in 1981.

Playing in the major leagues for 16 seasons, Mr. Grote had a .252 career batting average with 1,092 hits, 39 home runs, and 404 runs batted in.

After he left the majors, he managed in the minor leagues and raised steers on his Texas ranch.

He leaves his third wife, Cheryl Grote, and her three children, Laurel, Joseph, and Jacob Luedecke; three children from his first marriage, Sandy Deloney, Jeff Grote, and Jennifer Jackson; and six grandchild­ren and three step-grandchild­ren, according to Horwitz, the Mets spokespers­on.

Mr. Grote thrived on the enthusiasm of Mets fans and, in his contentiou­s way, contrasted their support with his put-down of the fans in Houston.

“One of the advantages of playing for New York is that the big crowds at Shea Stadium help you tremendous­ly,” he said in a 1971 interview with Sports Illustrate­d. “They make you want to give 115 percent all the time. In Houston, nobody seems to applaud unless the hands on the scoreboard start to clap. Once those hands stop, so do all the others. Real enthusiasm.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE ?? Mr. Grote (right) embraced pitcher Jerry Koosman as Ed Charles (left) joined the celebratio­n after the Mets won the World Series at New York’s Shea Stadium on Oct. 16, 1969.
ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE Mr. Grote (right) embraced pitcher Jerry Koosman as Ed Charles (left) joined the celebratio­n after the Mets won the World Series at New York’s Shea Stadium on Oct. 16, 1969.

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