Los Angeles Times

Wendelsted­t leaves a legacy

- Lance Pugmire lance.pugmire@latimes.com Twitter.com/latimes pugmire

The umpire, who dies at 73 of brain cancer, taught his craft to others.

Harry Wendelsted­t, a retired 33-year Major League Baseball umpire who also nurtured new generation­s of the game’s arbiters for more than 30 years, died Friday at a hospital in Daytona Beach, Fla. He was 73 and had brain cancer.

Wendelsted­t, who officiated more than 4,500 games, worked five World Series — two as crew chief — as well as seven National League Championsh­ip Series and four All-star Games.

Former Dodger Manager Tom Lasorda is among those leading the campaign for Wendelsted­t’s election into baseball’s Hall of Fame.

Paul Runge, like Wendelsted­t a former veteran umpire crew chief, said that in addition to being “one of the premier umpires in the game,” Wendelsted­t left a more powerful legacy by devoting his efforts to teaching the craft at his Ormond Beach, Fla.-based Wendelsted­t Umpire School.

The school boasts 14 active major league umpires on its current list of advisors.

Among the students who passed through Wendelsted­t’s school was Runge’s son, Brian, a major league umpire.

“Harry spent his whole life helping and creating umpires,” the elder Runge said. “It’s amazing when you think about the number of people Harry’s school influenced — guys working college, high school, Little League, sand lot games.”

Wendelsted­t was born July 27, 1938, in Baltimore, started umpiring minor league games in 1962 and reached the major league level in 1966.

His biggest mark in Los Angeles came as Dodger pitcher Don Drysdale preserved what became a thenrecord-breaking string of 58 2/3 scoreless innings.

On the night of May 31, 1968, Drysdale was in danger of finishing one inning short of a fifth consecutiv­e shutout when the rival San Francisco Giants loaded the bases in the ninth with no outs and sent catcher Dick Dietz to the plate.

Drysdale threw an inside pitch that hit Dietz on the left elbow, which should have caused a run to score and stopped the big righthande­r’s pursuit of Hall of Famer Walter Johnson’s record 56-plus innings of shutout ball.

But Wendelsted­t called the pitch ball three and wouldn’t let Dietz take first base, the third-year ump ruling that the batter made no attempt to evade the pitch.

Times columnist Jim Murray wrote, “The Giants, to a man, behaved as if Wendelsted­t had just dropped a match into a baby carriage.”

Giants Manager Herman Franks was so upset at Wendelsted­t’s decision to enforce the rule that he told The Times: “It was the worst call I’ve ever seen. If Drysdale breaks the record now, he and Wendelsted­t should share it. Hell, put Wendelsted­t’s name on the trophy first.”

Drysdale’s record was ultimately broken by Dodger pitcher Orel Hershiser in 1988 — when Wendelsted­t was still umpiring.

That year, in the National League Championsh­ip Series, crew chief Wendelsted­t confiscate­d the glove of Dodgers reliever Jay Howell after plate umpire Joe West found it had pine tar on it.

Said West on Friday: “Harry first put on the glove and said, ‘It’s not too bad,’ which caused [Dodger] catcher Rick Dempsey to agree, ‘Yeah, it’s not too bad,’ with Lasorda running around a nervous wreck, knowing his closer was going to get kicked out.”

“I said, ‘Harry, you have that school in Florida … ,’ and the next thing I knew he was kicking Howell out of the game. He took the glove right to Commission­er Bart Giamatti, handed it to him in the front row, like, ‘Here it is, boss.’ “

It was fitting that Wendelsted­t was involved in Drysdale’s record, since the umpire was well known for having a pitching-friendly wide strike zone.

Wendelsted­t, who retired in 1998, tied a record by calling balls and strikes for five no-hitters.

He displayed signature moves, flailing his right arm upward on swinging strikeouts and delivering a socalled “chain saw” move in calling a third strike.

“We were all a little bit more individual­s back then,” Paul Runge said. “Everyone had a style, was more charismati­c.”

“The way Harry handled situations and his consistenc­y is what stood out,” Runge said. “From the first to the ninth inning, every day, it’s hard to be so consistent. It was a job, but he loved going out there.”

Wendelsted­t is survived by his son, Hunter, a major league umpire since 1999, and his daughter, Amy and three grandchild­ren. Funeral services are set for Tuesday.

 ?? Bill Kostroun Associated Press ?? DECISION MAKER Harry Wendelsted­t ejects Dodger Jay Howell, center back, after pine tar was found on his glove in 1988. Tommy Lasorda is at center front.
Bill Kostroun Associated Press DECISION MAKER Harry Wendelsted­t ejects Dodger Jay Howell, center back, after pine tar was found on his glove in 1988. Tommy Lasorda is at center front.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States