The Sentinel-Record

LEFTY GROVE: A baseball immortal comes to the Valley

- Bill Jenkinson, of Willow Grove, Pa., was one of the historians involved with the research and developmen­t of the Hot Springs Baseball Trail, along with Mike Dugan, Mark Blaeuer, Don Duren and Tim Reid. All of the baseball historians contribute­d to this a

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the third in a series of articles about the birth of Major League Baseball spring training in Hot Springs by baseball historian Bill Jenkinson, in conjunctio­n with the inaugural Hot Springs Baseball Weekend Friday and Saturday, when Lefty Grove will be one of the final two additions to the Historic Hot Springs Baseball Trail. SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL-RECORD

When baseball historians think about a flame-throwing, fiercely competitiv­e pitcher, they do not picture anyone from the modern era. In their mind’s eye, they see Robert Moses “Lefty” Grove. Although largely forgotten by contempora­ry fans, for those who know best, Lefty Grove is the embodiment of the one pitcher whom nobody wanted to face.

“Groves” (as his name was originally spelled) was born as the seventh of eight children on March 6, 1900, in the coal-mining town of Lonaconing, Md., situated in the western panhandle of that state. Like many boys from that background, young Lefty grew up playing baseball as the primary release from his, otherwise, hardscrabb­le existence. He also matured with an attitude that said, “Don’t mess with me.” By the time he reached adulthood, no one did.

Grove came from good stock. Both parents traced their lineage back to ancestors who fought in the Revolution­ary War. His father worked in the mines for 54 years, but, miraculous­ly, lived in good health until age 92. At age 18, Grove himself survived the worldwide influenza pandemic, but his hair began to prematurel­y turn gray as a result. He also survived a host of physically punishing jobs, including a short spell down in those mines. It is believed that his early work experience­s motivated Grove to pitch with savage intensity to escape a life in the darkness and coal dust.

By age 19, Grove had grown into a 6-foot-3-inch athletic demon who could throw a baseball like a bolt of lightning. He was very slender, but notoriousl­y powerful, nonetheles­s. After pitching for local teams for a few years, Grove turned pro in 1920, performing briefly for Martinsbur­g, W. Va. His talent was so unmistakab­le that the Internatio­nal League Baltimore Orioles soon signed him to a contract. They were just ahead of a host of hungry Major League clubs.

Although not a Big League franchise at that time, the Orioles were one of the premier baseball clubs in the nation. As of 1920, they were owned and managed by former Major League pitcher/infielder Jack Dunn, who had discovered Babe Ruth six years earlier. Both native-born Marylander­s, Lefty Grove and The Babe were destined to become, arguably, the greatest man-to-man rivals in baseball history.

At age 20, Lefty Grove could throw his fastball roughly as fast as his boyhood idol, Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators. Although we don’t have scientific­ally establishe­d speeds from that era, it is likely that those two old-timers were among the few fastest-throwing starting pitchers in the history of the game. However, just like Johnson, Grove had trouble with control early in his career. Yet,

he was still able to win 111 games between 1920 and 1924. Lefty steadily overcame his control issues, and became the most overpoweri­ng pitcher in the Minor Leagues. He stayed in the Minors for five seasons because Dunn and Connie Mack had forged an agreement about his future.

Mack was the legendary owner/manager of the vastly successful Athletics, but he was never a wealthy man. He was severely handicappe­d by the so-called Blue Laws in Pennsylvan­ia, which prohibited his team from playing on Sundays. That meant an approximat­e loss of 40 percent of his revenues each season. Connie would routinely build championsh­ip-caliber teams, but then sell his key players once they became establishe­d starts. As of the early

1920s, Mack and his A’s were in another rebuilding cycle.

Accordingl­y, Jack and Connie informally agreed that Lefty Grove would continue to pitch for Baltimore until the Athletics were ready to contend with the lordly New York Yankees. As of 1925, Mack was developing future superstars Al Simmons, Mickey Cochrane, and Jimmie Foxx on the Athletics’ roster. That’s when he finally called on Lefty Grove to join him.

In that first season together, Philadelph­ia was pretty good

(88 and 64, second place), but their new left-handed pitcher was only so-so (10 and 12). For some reason, Grove relapsed briefly into wildness, and led the American League by issuing 131 bases-on balls. However, the problem was permanentl­y corrected by 1927, and Lefty never struggled with his command thereafter. That year he finished with a 20 and 13 record while the Athletics challenged the legendary ’27 Yanks (aka Murderer’s Row) by finishing with a strong

93 and 61 second-place finish. Both the man and the team were close to greatness.

Even then, Grove was feared by the batters he faced. From that very first Big League season in

1925, he led the Majors in strikeouts, and did so through the

1931 campaign. He rarely threw breaking balls at that stage of his career. He didn’t have to. His fastball was virtually unhittable. Grove threw his “heater” in two different ways. Sometimes, it appeared to actually rise through the strike zone. Just as often, it sunk as it neared the plate, apparently as a forerunner to the modern “split-fingered fastball.” Back then, they hadn’t yet applied that specific name to that particular pitch.

Just as importantl­y, Lefty’s demeanor on the mound was literally terrifying. Grove actually cultivated his image of wildness and reckless disregard for the safety of opposing hitters. In truth, he never hit more than six batters in a season, but, to those who faced him, it seemed like their lives were always in the balance. Grove liked it that way.

There is a counterpoi­nt, however, to all these entertaini­ng references to Grove’s combative nature. Lefty was a decent and honorable man. It is said that his boyhood buddies remained his friends throughout his entire life. To them, he was just “Bobby,” that tough but likable kid from the coal region. It was only on the baseball diamond that Bobby became a beast.

By 1929, Grove had been a 20game winner for three consecutiv­e years, and his Philadelph­ia Athletics had dethroned the Yankees as baseball’s greatest team. In fact, the A’s won three straight American League pennants along with consecutiv­e World Series (1929 and 1930). They lost a bitterly fought seven-game Series to the St. Louis Cardinals in

1931, but that was not the fault of Lefty Grove. He pitched so magnificen­tly throughout the entire campaign that his performanc­e is sometimes regarded by historians as the greatest single season by a pitcher in MLB history.

Grove accrued the mind-numbing record of 31 wins and 4 losses while leading the league in ERA (2.06), complete games (27), and strikeouts (175). Along the way, he even managed to record five saves. Lefty was so transcende­nt that he won 16 consecutiv­e games during one stretch. It was also at this time that the Lefty Grove/Babe Ruth epic rivalry reached its apex.

Ruth and Walter Johnson had also competed dramatical­ly, but the Big Train had retired after the

1927 season. More to this point, Johnson was a classic gentleman. Although a tremendous competitor in his own right, Johnson seemed to like everyone. He treated Babe Ruth with warmth and respect. That was simply not the way that Lefty Grove did business. Grove once acknowledg­ed that if a teammate hit a hard ball through the middle when he was pitching batting practice, he would deliberate­ly hit him with the next pitch, usually in the back. He was that ornery.

So, when Grove came into the American League in 1925, he had already made up his mind to never give an inch to baseball’s reigning monarch. In fact, when the two future rivals first met during a late-season exhibition game back on Oct. 1, 1923 in Baltimore, Grove struck out Ruth. Two days later at the Polo Grounds, Grove struck him out again and added further insult by plugging The Babe with a pitched ball. Ruth was not pleased, but Lefty didn’t care. He gave deference to no one, not even the game’s most popular player.

When they eventually faced each other for the first time in an official Big League game, Babe collected two singles, thereby slightly bettering the rookie upstart. Yet, in that same outing, Grove struck out Ruth once more, thereby initiating a backand-forth rivalry that would last for 10 years. It was always primal force against brute strength. Each took turns vanquishin­g the other until neither could ultimately claim mastery. Our national pastime never shined brighter than when those two giants collided.

At Yankee Stadium on Sept.

11, 1928, Lefty Grove took the mound with a 14-game winning streak. Grove led most of the way, but weakened in the eighth inning. Facing The Babe with a man on base in a tie game, Lefty unleashed one of his blistering fastballs. As always, Ruth swung from his heels. Bat met ball with a resounding crack. The battered sphere then sped like a rocket until it crashed violently into the 40th row of the right center field bleachers. The Yanks won the game, Grove’s streak was over, and the Yanks soon clinched the pennant.

Three years later, it was Lefty’s turn to outshine The Bambino. On May 25, 1931, at Shibe Park, Ruth went 0 for 5 in the first game of an important doublehead­er. Most galling for Babe, Grove struck him out in both the seventh and ninth innings, thereby ensuring his team’s defeat. Ruth had to watch the A’s pull away on the road to their third straight American League triumph.

When it was all over and Babe and Lefty had faced each other for the last time, the final statistics were intriguing. In

135 official at-bats versus Lefty Grove, Babe Ruth had struck out the rather embarrassi­ng total of 42 times. Contrarily, Ruth had batted a highly respectabl­e

.311 and slugged at the productive rate of .526. He had also launched nine home runs. All in all, after all the fanfare and adrenaline, it had been a draw. If I could travel through time to watch only one head-to-head matchup in baseball history, this would be the one.

Sadly, Connie Mack ran out of money again soon after his 19291931 dynasty declined. Although Lefty Grove was still fantastic in

1932 and 1933, winning 25 and 24 games respective­ly, Mack essentiall­y sold Grove to the wealthier Boston Red Sox prior to the 1934 season. It should have been a wondrous deal for the Sox, but bad karma intervened. Lefty developed a sore arm, and posted a disappoint­ing 8 and 8 record, along with a dismal 6.50 ERA. That’s when the Hot Springs connection happened.

In early 1935, in order to salvage his waning career, Robert Grove came to the Valley of the Vapors for the first time. In his definitive biography (“Lefty Grove: American Original,”

2000), author/historian Jim Kaplan wrote this:

“Grove spent three weeks in Hot Springs, Arkansas, before spring training. Every day he had breakfast at 10 and played thirty-six holes of golf, carrying his bag. If it rained, he used the rowing machine.”

The visit worked. Grove roared back to life with an impressive 20 and 12 record and an excellent (for the 1930s) 2.70 ERA. Lefty Grove had found magic in the Ouachita Mountains.

Grove performed well again in 1936 and 1937, winning 17 games in both seasons. In the process, he logged over 515 innings. That was great stuff for a 37-year-old hurler. By then, Lefty could still throw a mean fastball, but he had evolved into more of a craftsman. He now often threw a sharp-breaking curveball along with a changeup and forkball (aka screwball). All seemed well in the life of the aging veteran. Then adversity struck again. Although starting effectivel­y in 1938, Grove suffered a “dead arm” in midseason. Was his extraordin­ary career at an end? What to do?

Before the next season, Lefty Grove simply returned to Hot Springs along with a few of his teammates. The Boston Globe featured a photo of him sitting in a thermal bath in its Feb. 10 edition. On Feb. 21, the Globe reported that the group was doing well, training every day from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for the past two weeks. Their regimen included workouts, golf, and the full course of hot baths. Was Lefty Grove able to recapture the old magic in the Valley of the Vapors? Yes. At the age of 39, Grove turned in an absolutely stellar season. His record of 15 and 4 speaks for itself, and he also turned in a superlativ­e league-leading ERA of 2.54.

Lefty credited much of his

1939 success to his preseason work at Hot Springs and returned to the Valley in February

1940. During that visit, Grove provided posterity with a powerful example of that classic interactio­n of hot baths and cardiovasc­ular training. On one of his golf outings, Lefty sped through all 18 holes in a mere 80 minutes, power-walking all the way.

Yet, no athlete can go on forever, and, by 1940, Lefty’s fastball was mostly a memory. At age 40, he was getting by on guile and guts. He started just one game a week, but still managed to post a winning 7 and 6 record. He played long enough to achieve his cherished goal of winning

300 games. That occurred on July 25, 1941. He finished with a 7 and 7 record that year and retired at the end of the season.

Lefty Grove’s career ERA was

3.06. Although there are some pitchers who finished with lower numbers, almost all of them performed in the Dead Ball Era. Lefty did most of his work in the

1930s which is a decade long-recognized for its elevated offense. When we adjust Grove’s ERA for the time in which he played, he is tied for the third-lowest among all starting pitchers. Essentiall­y, he and Johnson (recognized as baseball’s greatest right-handed pitcher) finished even.

Not surprising­ly, Grove mellowed with age. He would never be regarded as soft-spoken or passive, but, after he stopped competing, he was able to relax and enjoy his accomplish­ments. He died peacefully at his daughter’s home in Ohio on May 22,

1975. Grove came home to Lonaconing for his funeral as the entire baseball community mourned his passing. A true American legend was gone.

As far as we know, Lefty Grove visited Hot Springs on three occasions, but those three trips to the Valley tell us much. When he needed help the most, Grove came to central Arkansas. Each time, he left the Valley in significan­tly better condition than when he had arrived. In 1935 and 1939, Grove feared that his Big League career was in jeopardy. He had heard about the success of other pitchers who had trained in the Spa City, and decided to try his luck. Of course, there were other factors involved in Grove’s twin recoveries (most notably, Lefty’s own hard work), but isn’t it fascinatin­g to wonder if Grove would have reached that 300 win plateau if he hadn’t come to Hot Springs?

Regardless of the answer to that propositio­n, Lefty Grove left a big imprint on the history and mystique of Hot Springs. The town’s Historical Baseball Trail wouldn’t be complete without a plaque in his honor. Although he might have had a few flaws, Lefty was a good man. He was also, according to the consensus view of baseball historians, the greatest left-handed pitcher in the history of the game.

 ?? Submitted photo ?? COOLING OFF: Famed Major League pitcher Robert Moses “Lefty” Grove relaxes on a cooling table during a rehabilita­tion treatment in Hot Springs, sometime around 1939 or 1940. Grove credited the hot mineral waters with reviving his dead arm near the end...
Submitted photo COOLING OFF: Famed Major League pitcher Robert Moses “Lefty” Grove relaxes on a cooling table during a rehabilita­tion treatment in Hot Springs, sometime around 1939 or 1940. Grove credited the hot mineral waters with reviving his dead arm near the end...

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