South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

JERSEY BOYS

Just because a number is available doesn’t mean you can have it

- By Tyler Kepner The New York Times

For Morgan Ensberg, damage control started when he saw his uniform number at spring training in 2008. It was 21, the number worn by Paul O’Neill for nine sterling seasons in pinstripes, and after six years out of circulatio­n, the Yankees had decided to quietly reintroduc­e it. Big mistake, Ensberg thought.

He begged the Yankees’ clubhouse manager to give him a new number when the season started. He offered $5,000 to buy a different number from his teammate Wilson Betemit. He even apologized to O’Neill, who insisted he did not mind. But Ensberg knew he would never win over the masses.

“The fans made it very clear, even during spring training: ‘That’s Paul’s number!’” Ensberg, who is now a manager in the Tampa Bay farm system, said by phone Wednesday. “I was like, ‘I know. It’s just spring training. I’ve already talked to the clubbie. We’re good.’ You have certain people — it doesn’t really matter that they’re not in the Baseball Hall of Fame — they’ve done so much and they’re such an example of that team, you don’t want to touch that stuff.”

The Yankees announced Tuesday that they would retire O’Neill’s number in a ceremony Aug. 21. But the fans had retired it long ago, hounding reliever LaTroy Hawkins until he gave it up shortly after Ensberg dropped it in 2008. Tuesday’s announceme­nt was a much-delayed statement of the obvious.

“I’ve heard that a big reason for this was the backing of the fans, and if that’s true, all I can do is be thankful,” O’Neill said during a video conference call Wednesday. “I always have been thankful to the New York fans. They’ve treated me unbelievab­le, both as a player and up in the booth calling games.”

With the Yankees’ announceme­nt, O’Neill leaves a more exclusive — but less celebrated — group than the one he has now joined: a secret society of standouts whose uniform numbers are out of circulatio­n, yet not retired.

In some cases, the numbers seem destined to be retired eventually, such as No. 5 for the Mets (David Wright) and the Cardinals (Albert Pujols), No. 15 for the Angels (Tim Salmon) and perhaps No. 3 for the Rays (Evan Longoria).

But there are several that have been out of use for decades or more, a quirk that Josh Hader, the All-Star closer, encountere­d when he joined the majors with the Brewers in 2017.

Hader grew up near Baltimore and hoped to wear No. 17, like his favorite player, the Orioles’ B.J. Surhoff.

That number was technicall­y available with the Brewers, but the team had not issued it since Jim Gantner, a longtime infielder, last used it in 1992.

“It’s like a retired number that’s not retired, so I just said 17 backward is 71, and I just rolled with it,” Hader said a few years ago.

The Brewers do have five retired numbers, but all are for Hall of Famers: former owner Bud Selig (1), Paul Molitor (4), Robin Yount

(19), Rollie Fingers (34) and Hank Aaron

(44). Gantner never made an All-Star team but has strong local appeal: A native of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, about 70 miles northwest of Milwaukee, he played his entire 17-year career with the Brewers and helped them reach their only World Series, in 1982.

Here are a few players who have lingered for years — or even decades — in the middle ground O’Neill has escaped:

Fernando Valenzuela No. 3 4 , Dodgers

From his spellbindi­ng 1981 rookie season through 1986, Valenzuela went 97-68 and led the majors in strikeouts, innings and earned run average (minimum 100 starts). He was never quite the same after that — except for a 1990 no-hitter, when Vin Scully told viewers, “If you have a sombrero, throw it to the sky!” — but as the team’s first Mexican superstar, his role in broadening the Dodgers’ appeal still resonates.

Jay Buhner

No. 1 9 , Mariners

Buhner teamed with Ken Griffey Jr. and

Edgar Martinez in a punishing middle of the order for the 1995 team that saved baseball in Seattle.

He never left the Mariners after his infamous trade from the Yankees for Ken Phelps in 1988, and he hit his final career home run in the Bronx in the 2001 playoffs against the team that traded him.

Roger Clemens No. 2 1 , Red Sox

Clemens has a complicate­d legacy in Boston, but he’s been welcomed back warmly in recent years, much like Wade Boggs, who also joined the Yankees later in his career and had his number retired in 2016.

The Red Sox inducted Clemens into their Hall of Fame in 2012 and have not given out his number since letting him leave as a free agent after the 1996 season.

Cal Ripken Sr. No. 7, Orioles

When the Orioles fired Ripken Sr. as manager in 1988, just six games into their season-opening streak of 21 losses, his son Billy took his dad’s No. 7 for the remainder of that year.

No Orioles player has worn it since. (The No. 7 is prominentl­y displayed next to a notorious bat handle on Ripken’s 1989 Fleer baseball card.)

The team also does not issue No. 44, which was worn by former player and coach Elrod Hendricks, and it stopped giving out No. 46 after the death of Mike Flanagan, the former pitcher and team executive, in 2011.

Gary Carter No. 8 , Mets

The Mets bungled this one badly. After releasing Carter in 1989, they issued No. 8 to Dave Gallagher, Carlos Baerga and Desi Relaford through 2001. They haven’t given it out since, yet they have inexplicab­ly never retired it for Carter, a Hall of Famer who died in 2012.

The Expos did retire Carter’s No. 8 (and No. 10 for Andre Dawson and Rusty Staub), but the franchise unretired those numbers when it started over as the Nationals.

Charley Lau No. 6 , White Sox

Lau, an influentia­l hitting coach, died of cancer at age 50 in 1984, and his number has been out of use since another coach, Walt Hriniak, wore it as a tribute in the 1990s. Ozzie Guillen’s No. 13 has also been out of circulatio­n since his last game as manager in 2011. This is unusual for the White Sox, who typically waste no time retiring numbers. In 1989, they retired Harold Baines’ No. 3 just weeks after trading him to the Rangers. Baines would return several times to the White Sox as a player and a coach — and he always got his old number back.

Dan Quisenberr­y and Mike Sweeney No. 2 9 , Royals

Quisenberr­y, a submarinin­g closer with a world-class wit, won five Rolaids Relief Man awards for the Royals in the 1980s. They kept his number in use and eventually gave it to Sweeney, a slugging first baseman who made five All-Star teams in the 2000s.

No one has worn it since.

Darryl Kile No. 5 7, Astros, Rockies, Cardinals

Kile, a durable and well-liked starter, was just 33 when he died of a heart attack during a Cardinals road trip to Chicago in 2002. It was the first death of an active player during the regular season since Thurman Munson’s plane crash in 1979. None of Kile’s three teams has issued No. 57 since, and all of their ballparks still display a memorial circle with “DK 57.” The numbers of others who have died in the middle of a season — including Nick Adenhart (No. 34) and Tyler Skaggs (No. 45) of the Angels and Jose Fernandez (No. 16) of the Marlins — have also remained out of use, though Noah Syndergaar­d will wear No. 34 for the Angels this season with the blessing of the Adenhart family.

 ?? G. PAUL BURNETT/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Paul O’Neill, wearing No. 21, leaps onto a pile of Yankees players celebratin­g winning the World Series on Oct. 26, 1996, at Yankee Stadium in New York. O’Neill helped lead the Yankees to four World Series titles. The team is retiring his number after briefly giving it to other players in 2008.
G. PAUL BURNETT/THE NEW YORK TIMES Paul O’Neill, wearing No. 21, leaps onto a pile of Yankees players celebratin­g winning the World Series on Oct. 26, 1996, at Yankee Stadium in New York. O’Neill helped lead the Yankees to four World Series titles. The team is retiring his number after briefly giving it to other players in 2008.
 ?? DAVID LEEDS/GETTY ?? Paul O’Neill stands on a base as he looks on during a game between the Yankees and Royals on April 16, 2000, at Yankee Stadium.
DAVID LEEDS/GETTY Paul O’Neill stands on a base as he looks on during a game between the Yankees and Royals on April 16, 2000, at Yankee Stadium.

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