The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Trade to Mets in 1983 was ‘new challenge’ Hernandez needed

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Thirty-seven years ago, Keith Hernandez was kind of bored.

He was 29-years old and the star first baseman for the World Series champion Cardinals. He earned a share of the NL MVP Award, as well as the batting title, in 1979. He was a two-time All-Star. He won five straight Gold Gloves and one Silver Slugger. When St. Louis won it all in the fall of ‘82, it meant “the only thing left to achieve,” as Hernandez put it recently, had been achieved.

“I went through a doldrum period,” Hernandez said in a phone interview with Newsday. “I had run out of goals.”

He expressed as much to George Hendrick, his teammate and friend who wasn’t as accomplish­ed but who had more years in the league. Hendrick told Hernandez it would pass. Everybody goes through it. It’s fine.

Hernandez says he eventually would have found a new goal to reach for with the Cardinals, because the team was still good and there is nothing quite like a pennant race. But he never got the chance.

On June 15, 1983 — 37 years ago Monday — the Cardinals traded Hernandez to the Mets, massively changing the course of Hernandez’s life and the team’s history for the better. Even though he initially hated it.

“Now I had a new challenge with the last-place Mets,” Hernandez said. “That opened up a whole new motivation for me.”

THE BUILDUP

A lack of profession­al motivation was not Hernandez’s only problem in early 1983. He was having issues in his first marriage, which eventually ended in divorce. His relationsh­ip with St.

Louis manager Whitey Herzog was deteriorat­ing because of what Herzog felt were attitude and effort issues.

“I’ll admit that my attitude, which was criticized by Whitey, I think there’s a little bit of merit to it,” said Hernandez, who added that he disagreed with the notion that he didn’t run out grounders. “I was just trying to get my way through it.”

And Hernandez had been using cocaine for much of the early 1980s. That didn’t become public knowledge until the Pittsburgh drug trials of 1985, when he testified before a federal grand jury.

“It was something I regret, something I’m not proud of,” Hernandez says now, reiteratin­g a sentiment he expressed on the stand then. “It affected a lot of people, my kids. And it affected me very negatively.”

Hernandez stopped using after Cardinals teammate Lonnie Smith — who testified during the 1985 trial to using cocaine with Hernandez — wandered into the clubhouse one day “basically strung out and couldn’t play, and all the (crap) hit the fan,” he said.

The Cardinals shipped Hernandez to New York a week later.

THE TRADE

For a man who would become a franchise building block in the coming years, the Mets gave up only two relief pitchers, Neil Allen and Rick Ownbey, on the day of the trade deadline.

Hernandez was disappoint­ed but not surprised to be traded. Having grown up a Cardinals fan, he had hoped to play his entire career for them. He suspected they wanted to get something for him before he became a free agent after the 1984 season, because they didn’t want to pay up.

But to be dealt to the Mets? The lowly Mets? That is what shocked him. He was going from the defending champs to a club that hadn’t had a winning season since 1976.

“I’ve talked with Keith and he was very subdued,” general manager Frank Cashen said right after the trade. “But he says he’s in fine shape and then asked when and where he should report.”

Hernandez briefly considered retiring.

“That’s acting on emotion. I’m an emotional guy,” Hernandez said. “I’m kind of a compulsive, impulsive personalit­y, which I’ve learned to keep a tighter rein on. But it’s who I am. I was purely reacting on emotion, on hurt, on the pain of being traded, going to the Mets, which were a last-place team. It was just a very unsettling second half of the season in ’83. It was just a tough year for me.”

A comedic aside: Upon reading that Hernandez was less than happy about the trade, Jay Horwitz — the Mets’ longtime media relations boss — wanted to make a good first impression. When Hernandez was set to meet up with the team in Montreal, Horwitz rented a limo to pick him up at the airport. But he went to the wrong gate. Hernandez, oblivious to the arrangemen­t, took a taxi. Horwitz rode to the ballpark in the limo.

“He adjusted pretty well for not wanting to come here,” Horwitz said.

THE ADJUSTMENT

The 1983 Mets were bad. They finished 68-94, including 46-58 once Hernandez joined.

After the season, Cashen offered to trade Hernandez but also told him about the talent they had on the horizon. Darryl Strawberry had just won NL Rookie of the Year. Ron Darling debuted toward the end of the season. A teenager named Dwight Gooden was on the way.

“And I was sitting there going, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You guys are horrible. Mets just stink. Ever since you traded Tom) Seaver, you’ve been awful,’ ” Hernandez recalled. “He knew what he had. I didn’t.”

At the encouragem­ent of his father, John, Hernandez decided to stay. He signed a five-year, $8.4 million extension in February 1984, passing on the chance to be a free agent at the end of the year. His average annual salary of $1.68 million registered as one of the highest in the game.

That deal included $3.4 million in deferred payments that Hernandez still receives annually.

Then-president, nowCEO Fred Wilpon said at the time: “Keith, it’s a pleasure to pay the money.”

The ensuing spring training, Hernandez said, was “like a blood transfusio­n.”

“After around two weeks of spring training, I realized there was a gold mine here on the roster,” Hernandez said. “It just totally excited me.”

The rest is history. The Mets won the World Series in 1986, their most recent championsh­ip. He became the organizati­on’s first-ever captain in 1987. He won six more Gold Gloves — his 11 total are the most of any first baseman — and went to three more All-Star Games. He worked up the confidence to kiss Elaine Benes in 1992. He started as an analyst for SNY’s Mets broadcasts at its inception in 2006, endearing him to a generation of fans who never saw him play.

Along the way, he made up with Herzog, whom he has seen periodical­ly at Cardinals events through the decades. And when he visits St. Louis, Hernandez finds a warm reception, which makes him feel bad, still, about how things ended, especially having done drugs while with the Cardinals.

“When I go to St. Louis, people are very, very nice to me,” Hernandez said. “But I still feel kind of ashamed of what I did. I feel uncomforta­ble going there. I’m there today and everybody is so nice as if nothing had ever happened. It just kind of makes me feel guilty about that. But you can’t wipe out the past. It is what it is.”

During one of those Cardinals dinners, according to Hernandez, Herzog said that moving him was the worst trade he ever made.

“Whitey told me one time, ‘I did you the biggest favor in the world, trading you to New York. Look what it did for you,’ ” Hernandez said. “And he’s got a point.”

 ?? Ron Frehm / Associated Press ?? The Mets’ Keith Hernandez hits one over the right field fence for the third home run on four pitches on April 17, 1989. Darryl Strawberry, Kevin McReynolds and Hernandez clobbered Phillies pitcher Don Carman for the consecutiv­e homers, a first at Shea on its 25th anniversar­y.
Ron Frehm / Associated Press The Mets’ Keith Hernandez hits one over the right field fence for the third home run on four pitches on April 17, 1989. Darryl Strawberry, Kevin McReynolds and Hernandez clobbered Phillies pitcher Don Carman for the consecutiv­e homers, a first at Shea on its 25th anniversar­y.
 ?? Bruce Bennett / Getty Images ?? The Mets introduce Keith Hernandez at Shea Stadium in 1983 after acquring the first baseman in a trade with the Cardinals.
Bruce Bennett / Getty Images The Mets introduce Keith Hernandez at Shea Stadium in 1983 after acquring the first baseman in a trade with the Cardinals.

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