Toronto Star

Gibson struck fear into hitters

Cardinals legend was one of baseball’s most intimidati­ng pitchers

- RICHARD GOLDSTEIN

Bob Gibson, the St. Louis Cardinals’ Hall of Fame right-hander who became one of baseball’s most dominating pitchers, winning 251 games in 17 seasons with an intimidati­ng fastball and an attitude to match, died Friday in Omaha, Neb. He was 84.

The cause was pancreatic cancer, the Cardinals said. Gibson announced in July 2019 that he had the disease.

Through the summers of the 1960s and early ’70s, Gibson proved a relentless force, and he was at his best in the World Series.

He won both the National League’s Most Valuable Player Award and the Cy Young Award, as the league’s best pitcher, in 1968, when he won 22 games, struck out 268 batters, pitched 13 shutouts and posted an earned run average of 1.12, the lowest in more than 50 years (and a record that remains unmatched). The next year, even though MLB lowered the pitchers’ mounds to give batters a break, Gibson won 20 games and struck out 269.

He won at least 20 games five times and struck out 3,117 batters, relying on two kinds of fastballs and a slider that he threw at about three-quarters speed. He threw 56 career shutouts and captured a second Cy Young Award in1970. He was an eight-time all-star, won a Gold Glove award for fielding nine times and pitched a no-hitter against the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1971.

Pitching for three pennantwin­ning Cardinal teams, Gibson won seven World Series games in a row, losing only in his first and last Series starts. His physique was not especially imposing — he was 6-foot-1 and 190 pounds or so — but he holds the records for most strikeouts in a World Series game, 17, and in a single World Series, 35, both against the Detroit Tigers in 1968.

He was voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1981, his first year of eligibilit­y.

Gibson disdained conversati­ons with opposing players, even at all-star games. He bristled at reporters’ questions he considered silly. And he was feared for his high, inside fastballs that set batters up for pitches on the outside corner.

“Bob wasn’t just unfriendly when he pitched,” Joe Torre, a Cardinals teammate who later hired Gibson as a coach when he managed the New York Mets, the Atlanta Braves and the Cardinals, told sports writer Roger Kahn in an article for the New York Times shortly before Gibson’s induction into the Hall of Fame. “I’d say it was more like hateful.”

“My thing was winning,” Gibson said in his autobiogra­phy, “Stranger to the Game,” written with Lonnie Wheeler and published in 1994. “I didn’t see how being pleasant or amiable had anything to do with winning, so I wasn’t pleasant on the mound and I wasn’t amiable off it.”

“For my money, the most intimidati­ng, arrogant pitcher ever to kick up dirt on a mound is Bob Gibson,” Tim McCarver, the Cardinals’ catcher and a longtime broadcaste­r, recalled in his 1987 memoir, “Oh, Baby, I Love It!” (written with Ray Robinson).

“If you ever saw Gibson work,” McCarver wrote, “you’d never forget his style: his cap pulled down low over his eyes, the ball gripped — almost mashed — behind his right hip, the eyes smoldering at each batter almost accusingly.”

Pack Robert Gibson was born Nov. 9, 1935, in Omaha, the youngest of seven children, and grew up in a housing project there. His father, Pack Gibson, died a few months before his birth; his mother, Victoria, worked in a laundry. His brother Josh, a graduate of Creighton University in Omaha, became his mentor and introduced him to recreation­al programs he oversaw. Bob Gibson became an all-city basketball player in high school and played several positions on a team that won a city title.

His favourite sport was basketball, and he became the first Black athlete to play basketball and baseball at Creighton. He averaged more than 20 points a game for his collegiate basketball career and pitched, caught and played several other positions for the baseball team.

After graduating from Creighton, Gibson signed with the Cardinals’ minor league organizati­on in 1957.

He pitched in the American Associatio­n and South Atlantic League that year, played basketball for the Harlem Globetrott­ers in the off-season, then focused solely on baseball. He made his debut with the Cardinals in 1959 and began to emerge as a leading pitcher two years later under the tutelage of manager Johnny Keane, who had managed him in the minor leagues.

Gibson helped pitch the Cardinals to the National League pennant in 1964, when they surged past the collapsing Philadelph­ia Phillies, and he beat the New York Yankees in Game 7 of the World Series, pitching on two days’ rest. It was his second victory in the Series, and he was named MVP.

He missed two months of the 1967 regular season after a line drive off the bat of the Pirates’ Roberto Clemente broke his leg, but he beat the “impossible dream” Boston Red Sox three times in the World Series, including a victory in Game 7, and won MVP honours again.

Gibson faced the racial segregatio­n of the South as a minor leaguer in Columbus, Ga., and then with the Cardinals when their Black players were barred from the team’s spring training hotel in St. Petersburg, Fla.

When Gibson was in his prime on Cardinal teams that also featured Black stars like Lou Brock, Curt Flood and Orlando Cepeda, his reputation as an intimidati­ng if not surly presence may have been influenced by racial issues.

“I pitched in a period of civil unrest, of black power and clenched fists and burning buildings and assassinat­ions and riots in the street,” Gibson recalled in his memoir. “There was a country full of angry black people in those days, and by extension — and by my demeanor on the mound — I was perceived as one of them. There was some truth to that, but it had little, if anything, to do with the way I worked a batter. I didn’t see a hitter’s color. I saw his stance, his strike zone, his bat speed, his power and his weaknesses.”

Gibson tore cartilage in his knee in 1973, but the next year he became the second pitcher, after Walter Johnson, to strike out at least 3,000 batters in a career. (Several other pitchers have reached that mark since then.)

Gibson retired after the 1975 season with a record of 251-174 and an earned run average of 2.91. He also hit 24 regular-season home runs, plus two in the World Series.

In addition to coaching with Torre after he retired as a player, Gibson became a broadcaste­r for national and Cardinal outlets and pursued commercial ventures in Omaha, where he owned a restaurant and was board chair of a bank that largely served Omaha’s Black residents.

Gibson’s survivors include his wife, Wendy (Nelson) Gibson, and their son, Christophe­r. He had two daughters, Renee and Annette, from his marriage to Charline Johnson, which ended in divorce.

Gibson was concerned that his demeanour might have overshadow­ed his brilliance in the eyes of some. But he conceded that his reputation for toughness was well deserved.

“I never hit batters for the sake of hitting them,” he said. “In my day, pitching tight was a fundamenta­l element of strategy. It was a matter of doing what was necessary to get the batter out; and if that made me mean, then what the hell, I guess I was mean.”

“My thing was winning. I didn’t see how being pleasant or amiable had anything to do with winning, so I wasn’t pleasant on the mound and I wasn’t amiable off it.” BOB GIBSON

 ?? FOCUS ON SPORT GETTY IMAGES ?? St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Bob Gibson won at least 20 games five times and struck out 3,117 batters over 17 seasons.
FOCUS ON SPORT GETTY IMAGES St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Bob Gibson won at least 20 games five times and struck out 3,117 batters over 17 seasons.

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