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Jim Bunning

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Don't mess with Jim, Part 2: When crazy isn't funny

Bunning It has long been the official stance here at Finger Food that ex-big league pitcher and soon-to-be ex-senator, Jim Bunning, was (indeed) crazy. We don’t mean that in a clinical sense, because to make such a diagnosis would require an advanced degree, and really… who has the time?

No, Bunning, the first man to pitch a perfect game for the Phillies, toss a no-hitter and win 100 games in both leagues, is simply batbleep crazy. Generally, batbleep crazy folks are the kind we like. After all, these are people who are not only extremely entertaining and sometimes have savant-like talents, but also they are harmless.

Remember when Chad Ochocinco was Chad Johnson? The dude went down to the courthouse, filled out all the paper work, hired a lawyer, went to court and legally had his name changed. In fact, we loved it. America loved it and accepted it very quickly. Rarely will an announcer accidentally drop a “Chad Johnson” when addressing Ochocinco the way they kept calling Muhammad Ali, Cassius Clay and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Lew Alcindor. There is no grand statement involved when a man who wears the uniform number, 85, changes his last name to Ochocinco because it’s just crazy.

Batbleep crazy.

And because of this most folks wouldn’t vote for Ochocinco for county dog catcher if he were to run. You can’t have a guy as crazy as a loon holding an office. Look, there are plenty of precedents but that doesn’t make it right. Just look at what the people in the Commonwealth of Kentucky did by electing ol’ right-hander Jim Bunning to congress.

Maybe the good folks of Kentucky simply have a warped sense of humor?  That has to be the case… right? Why else would Bunning be elected to anything aside from a well-heeled player representative for the Major League Baseball Players Association? In fact, Bunning was instrumental in the early days of MLBPA when he advocated player strikes and work stoppages. The truth is the MLBPA might not have been what it was if it were not for the hard work of guys like Bunning.

It’s also true that Bunning likely turned to politics because he couldn’t hack it in baseball. Oh sure, Bunning is pretty good at revisionist history about his playing career like we all are. In his day ballplayers were tougher, smarter and the game was better… just ask him, he’ll tell you.

See, Bunning is one of those old ballplayers who walked uphill for 10 miles in a driving snow storm just to be able to pitch in a ballgame. In an interview with Politico.com about Washington’s ace pitcher Stephen Strasburg, Bunning could not resist taking shots at the kid who struggled throw a couple of arm injuries in his first pro season. The news on Friday was that Strasburg will need Tommy John Surgery, but before he had even an inkling of the facts, Bunning, the old MLBPA leader, ripped a current member of the union.

“Five hundred twenty starts, I never refused the ball,” Bunning told Politico.com. “What a joke!”

It was 519 starts, but that’s probably just an oversight from a senator who has made a career of whitewashing his real record. To hear the stories from the old days, Bunning was equal parts crazy and jerk. My favorite story comes from the book Temporary Insanity, written by former Phillie Jay Johnstone. To set it up, here is a story I wrote for our pal Mike Meech over at The Fightins:

On my way to the press box lavatory, I literally ran into Jay Johnstone. No one was hurt, but the first thought that popped into my head when nearly trampling the Dodgers’ broadcaster was, “Hey, I read your book when I was a kid.”

The book was called Temporary Insanity and it wasn’t too bad for jock-lit. There were plenty of good stories about all the crazy things baseball players like to do in their free time, including some of the finer details about Johnstone’s time as a Phillies farmhand where he spent most of his energy terrorizing his manager Jim Bunning.

Bunning, of course, is currently the senior Republican senator from the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and based on a conversation I had with him in 2003, he still has not let go of the mental anguish Johnstone caused him. Maybe that’s why he was screwing the unemployed of his state, but I digress.

My favorite story from the book was when Johnstone caught wind that Bunning had been trying to nail him for any team rule infraction he could. So just to steam his manager even more than already necessary, Johnstone spread the word that he was organizing a wild, beer-drinking and card-playing night in his room at the team hotel. As it was told, Johnstone wanted everyone to spread word that the party would be a bona fide rager to end all ragers and to make sure that the manager found out, too. Don’t invite the dude, but just make sure Bunning knew all about it was the plan.

Bunning, as planned, got wind of the party and thinking he was finally going to get his chance to burn Johnstone once and for all, the manager showed up at the room after curfew only to find Johnstone sitting on his bed and reading a book.

Oh yes, the wild rager turned out to be nothing but a rouse. Johnstone set it up so that Bunning would show up only to catch him reading a book.

Classic.

More exasperating for Bunning was when Johnstone looked up from his book at the angry figure in the doorway and said something like, “Hiya, skip! You’re out kind of late, aren’t you?”

As the story goes, Bunning stormed out of there chapped that he couldn’t finally stick it to Johnstone. However, later the future senator got the last laugh. During that conversation with Bunning in 2003, I asked him about Johnstone and he told me that when the Phillies’ brass called him about the best player on his team he immediately told them about the guy who had been a veritable bee in his bonnet. As a result of that, the Phillies called up Johnstone from the minors and he went on to be a valuable left-handed bat for the team.

“I was finally rid of him,” the senator said.

Oh yes, a win-win for all.

It doesn't sound the least bit unreasonable to surmise that because Bunning couldn't hack it as a minor-league manager or control Jay Johnstone, he went on to be a U.S. Senator.

Bunning was in Philadelphia on Thursday to fete Roy Halladay for throwing the second perfect game in team history with all the pomp and circumstance reserved for the last time the team had a ceremony for Halladay for throwing the second perfect game in team history. That one was in June, I think, only Bunning couldn’t be there.

This time, Bunning turned up and told the team’s official web site about how great Halladay’s perfect game was as it related to his perfect game in 1964.

That was the year when Bunning was the ace pitcher for the team that experienced the worst late-season collapse in baseball history.

“After [Halladay's] eight years in the American League there has been no loss in effectiveness,” Bunning noted. “I had the same kind of experience, I had nine years in the American League before I got here. Now, I had a no-hitter in the American League first, but he's come close an awful lot of times.

“I watched the tape of that game and he ran a lot of 3-2 counts. I had just two when I had a perfect game, and truth be told, I faced much weaker competition. But the focus it took to battle through was amazing.”

In other words, Halladay was pretty perfect, but not as perfect as Bunning.

Sheesh!

If that was all the craziness we got from the senator, it wouldn’t be anything to bat an eye at. However, the reporter Bunning spoke to was doing some stringer work for MLB.com and has been unemployed since December of 2008 because of cutbacks at his former newspaper. As the tale was told, the writer was introduced to the senator as an old newspaper writer who was unemployed because of the state of the economy.

Bunning’s response to this information?

“I can’t wait until they are all gone,” the senator said about newspapers.

Oh yes he did!

Bunning_1964 Bunning, of course, is the same guy who held up unemployment benefits to guys like this reporter last February. In a stance that was a head-scratcher to members of both political parties, Bunning did everything he could to deny folks unemployment benefits.


Here’s what we wrote in February:

On the floor Thursday night, he breached Senate protocol when he shouted out: “Tough s—” as Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley pleaded with him to drop his objection.

Or this gem from the ol’ ballplayer himself:

I want to assure the people that have, heh, watched this thing until quarter of twelve — and I have missed the Kentucky-South Carolina game that started at 9 o’clock, and it’s the only redeeming chance we had to beat South Carolina, since they’re the only team that has beat Kentucky this year — all of these things that we have talked about and all the provisions that have been discussed, the unemployment benefits, all these things. If we’d have taken the longer version of the job bill…we wouldn’t have spent three hours plus telling everybody in the United States of America that Senator Bunning doesn’t give a damn about the people that are on unemployment.

So the fact that there was an unemployment rate pushing toward 11 percent in Kentucky is of less importance than the regular-season matchup between Kentucky and South Carolina to Bunning. He also can’t wait for newspapers to go out of business.

He says he's getting a plaque from his friends for "dealing" with newspapers for 60 years, too.

Yeah...

 

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These are the good old days

Bowa Just last Saturday Jim Bunning, the baseball Hall-of-Famer turned soon-to-be-former U.S. Senator, talked about being one of two Phillies pitchers to throw a perfect games during the Phillies annual alumni weekend where the highlight was Darren Daulton’s induction into the club’s Wall of Fame.

Otherwise, when the Phillies host a reunion the public events always seem to come off rather tame. After all, aside from honoring Freddy Schmidt because he just so happened to play 29 games for the Phillies in 1947 and has remained alive long enough to be the fourth-oldest living Phillie.

Hey, maybe if we’re lucky we’ll all get to be old someday, too. Just like Freddy Schmidt.

Nevertheless, the alumni weekend only reinforced the notion that we are in the midst of one of the two golden ages of Phillies baseball. There were the years from 1976 to 1983 when the Phillies went to the playoffs six times and the World Series twice, and now. So no matter how popular Dutch and John Kruk were, or how often we get to hear from Mitch Williams and Ricky Bottalico, it’s not as if we’re celebrating some transcendent victory that will never be forgotten. In fact, it’s just the opposite.

‘Personality clashes’

No, apparently it’s when ex-Phillies get together as members of the coaching staff for another team where true chaos ensues. At least that’s the way it looked in Pittsburgh last weekend with ex-Phillies coaches Joe Kerrigan and Gary Varsho. While the Phillies trotted out the oddest trio of Hall-of Famers out there in Bunning, Steve Carlton and Mike Schmidt [1](they were not introduced in order of craziness, but then again that’s debatable), Kerrigan and Varsho were being relieved of their duties on the coaching staff with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Even though the Pirates will finish with a losing season for the 18th year in a row, ex-Phillies catcher and Pirates manager John Russell could no longer work with Kerrigan or Varsho with published reports coming out of Pittsburgh indicated there were “personality clashes and differences of philosophy.”

According to a report from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:

According to multiple accounts Sunday, Russell's call was motivated by a perceived lack of loyalty, though Russell declined to discuss any specifics. Several players and others inside the team described scenes on recent road trips to Texas, Oakland and St. Louis where Kerrigan and Varsho either were openly critical of Russell or having mini-meetings with some coaches or players away from Russell.

Russell tends to be the patient, unmoved type, but that apparently changed in St. Louis. Management began discussing the firings as early as Wednesday, and action was taken early Sunday morning.

“It was a very gut-wrenching decision,” Russell said, seated in his office with Huntington standing at his side. “There are some issues I've been working through for quite some time now that could not be resolved in a way I felt would be for the betterment of this organization. I respect both men greatly. I lost two friends today. That's tough to deal with. But my main focus is this team, and I felt moving forward that this was the time to do this. With two months left in the season, I wanted to accomplish something this year moving into next year.”

Now if this were an isolated incident maybe it would be a surprise, but, well… you know.

Both Kerrigan and Varsho worked together on the Phillies staff under manager Larry Bowa, who, incidentally, is in Philadelphia on Tuesday night working as the third-base coach of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Should it come as a surprise that two of Bowa’s coaches were fired for being, “backstabbers?”

Where there is smoke…

Varsho was Bowa’s bench coach from 2001 to 2004 and even managed the last two games of the ’04 season after Bowa was fired. Along with Mick Billmeyer, Varsho was the lone holdover from the underachieving Bowa Era to the wildly successful Charlie Manuel regime. However, Varsho lasted just a season with Manuel before being let go for similar circumstances that occurred in Pittsburgh. The whispers indicate that Varsho was maneuvering behind the scenes to take credit for the Phillies success and undermining Manuel in the process.

Meanwhile, there have been few instances where Kerrigan did not leave under cloudy circumstances. In 2004 he announced he would resign from his job as the team’s pitching coach rather than have the indignity of not having his contract renewed. It certainly was no surprise that even Kerrigan saw the writing on the wall following a tumultuous two-year run where he nearly came to blows with pitcher Brett Myers in 2003 and was punched in the face by reliever Tim Worrell hours before a game in 2004.

Funny story: during a spring training game between the Phillies and Pirates in Clearwater in 2009, Kerrigan went to the mound to talk to a pitcher only to be heckled from the dugout by Myers who shouted, “Don’t listen to him, you won’t learn [bleep]!”

Even in one of his first press conferences as a Phillie, Pedro Martinez took a shot at Kerrigan for no other reason than to do it. Why not? For years Kerrigan claimed to have taught Pedro his hall-of-fame changeup from his days with the Expos and Red Sox though according to the pitcher, he didn’t so much as speak to the coach for years.

“I was never part of any back-and-forth with anybody. I never have,” Pedro said last summer. “The person who I probably got into an argument with one time was Joe Kerrigan and that was in the best year I ever had.”

Imagine that… a guy on the way to a Hall-of-Fame career with three Cy Young Awards who went 41-10 with a 1.90 ERA in his two best seasons in Boston got into a tiff with Kerrigan? Say it isn’t so. Hey, the guy really knows pitching and as far as analysts go, he's baseball geek to the highest order. That's a compliment. But knowing that Pedro argued with him and knowing this years after the fact and it’s no wonder there was nearly a fight with Myers. After all, if Pedro Martinez wasn’t good enough during his days in Boston, it would take a pitching coach with riot gear or a strong jaw to preside over the 2003 and 2004 Phillies.

Bowa the mentor?

No one only ever accused Bowa of being the nurturing type. However, Jimmy Rollins is quick to give the former irascible manager some credit for helping his development, and Alex Rodriguez worked closely with Bowa when they were both with the Mariners and the Yankees.

A guy can do a lot worse than J-Roll and A-Rod.

And maybe that’s where Bowa’s post-playing legacy lays? The fact is there are very few people on the planet who know as much about baseball as Bowa, and he very well could be the finest third-base coach in the game.

But in two relatively short stints as a manager, Bowa was a failure partially because of the atmosphere of chaos he fostered. Say what you will about the chemistry in the clubhouse and how it relates to winning. No, the players don’t need to like each other, but they should trust and respect one another. Since a particular pitching coach nearly got his lights knocked out by two different pitchers, it’s safe to assume that chaos reigned under Bowa.

He has been in a good role working in the shadows cast by manager Joe Torre and bench coach Don Mattingly since their days together with the Yankees. Bowa can work with infielders, coach third and be the bad cop in certain situations. For instance, in a recent interview with T.J. Simers of the LA Times, Bowa tried to light a fire under underachieving outfielder Matt Kemp and the struggling Dodgers.

Oh yes, Bowa still wants to win. Nothing has changed there. But at the same time, Torre doesn’t have to look over his shoulder and wonder if Bowa is selling him out. The thing that appears to make Bowa different from Kerrigan and Varsho is that he just wants to win the World Series every year and doesn’t care who gets the credit.

Check out this bit from Simers’ story:

On Friday night after Andre Ethier had been thrown out at home plate by a few feet, Bowa returned to the dugout screaming and throwing things.

"No one said anything, but it was like they were all looking at me and saying, 'What's Bowa mad at?'

"It cost us a run," snapped Bowa...

There is the reason why Bowa has had a job in baseball every year going back to the 1960s. The guy loves the game more than anyone else. Loves it so much it’s downright painful.

JoeNo tickets left

It used to be that Bowa’s old teammates from the first golden age used to be needed in order to get a big crowd for a ballgame in Philly. Winning has a way of making the sideshows unimportant.

Still, the Phillies alumni weekends are always good for some unintentional comedy. For instance, amidst guys like Schmidt, Carlton and Bunning, a player like Doug Clemens or Keith Hughes trots out onto the field to be introduced before the game. Looking back at the records, Hughes played in exactly 37 games for the Phillies – 93 over the course of four seasons with Baltimore, New York and Cincinnati.

No one needs to see old ballplayers like Keith Hughes or even Jim Bunning to trot out onto the field from a historically moribund franchise to realize that these are the good ol’ days. Right here, right now.

That’s the thing isn’t it? By winning the World Series the Phillies have made alumni weekends useless. Sure, it’s neat to see Mike Lieberthal and Dick Allen around the ballpark again, but really, if there is anything that the Phils prove with their old players is that they weren’t very good for a long, long, long time.

Besides, it used to be that the team needed to summon Schmidt from the golf course in Florida and Carlton from his underground bunker near the Four Corners region of Colorado in order to get folks to come out to the ballpark. That little glimpse at members of the team’s only championship used to put fannies in the seats before folks realized that a contending ballclub was far more interesting than a trip down amnesia lane.

Hey, there’s Greg Luzinski! Didn’t I just see him out in right field eating ribs?


[1] Apropos of nothing, is there another franchise that has a weirder collection of Hall of Famers than the Phillies? Now that Robin Roberts has passed on and one of the true gentleman is no longer walking the earth, the Phillies players enshrined in Cooperstown are a couple of sandwiches short of a picnic. This has nothing to do with politics or the “elders of Zion,” but really, what gives with those guys?

Plus, why is Jim Bunning in the Hall of Fame to begin with? He never pitched in the World Series and was the ace pitcher on a team responsible for one of the greatest late-season collapses in sports history… hey, winning matters. That’s why they keep score. If Bunning is a Hall of Famer, then so too are Jim Kaat, Tommy John, Jack Morris, Luis Tiant and Bert Blyleven.

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Don't mess around with Jim

Jim_bunning It’s always fun to see what type of things go “viral” on the Internets from day to day. Often, one little piece of code, dressed as a link, can be consumed, chewed up and passed by before the traditional media even gets a whiff of it. Clearly that makes things so much more fun.

So consider the bit of text/video making the rounds today on ex-Phillies pitcher and baseball Hall-of-Famer, Jim Bunning, who these days is known for holding the position as senator from the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

Not to delve too deeply into the issue, but the old pitcher and retiring senator is single-handily holding up the extension of unemployment benefits to more than a million Americans that were to start next week. Surely the senator is concerned about deficit spending, but the head-scratcher is that no one on either side of the aisle seems to understand what he’s up to or how to decipher this, from Politico:

On the floor Thursday night, he breached Senate protocol when he shouted out: “Tough s—” as Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley pleaded with him to drop his objection.

Or this gem from the ol’ ballplayer himself:

I want to assure the people that have, heh, watched this thing until quarter of twelve — and I have missed the Kentucky-South Carolina game that started at 9 o’clock, and it’s the only redeeming chance we had to beat South Carolina, since they’re the only team that has beat Kentucky this year — all of these things that we have talked about and all the provisions that have been discussed, the unemployment benefits, all these things. If we’d have taken the longer version of the job bill…we wouldn’t have spent three hours plus telling everybody in the United States of America that Senator Bunning doesn’t give a damn about the people that are on unemployment.

Look… he’s says it right here:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9noyufiMS0&w=425&h=344]

So the fact that there is an unemployment rate pushing toward 11 percent in Kentucky is of less importance than the regular-season matchup between Kentucky and South Carolina. Be that as it might, Bunning's last stand reminded me of a funny story I wrote about him as well as a conversation I had with the senator during the last home opener at The Vet in 2003.

Here’s what I dug up from my archives and sent along to Meech over at The Fightins:

On my way to the press box lavatory, I literally ran into Jay Johnstone. No one was hurt, but the first thought that popped into my head when nearly trampling the Dodgers’ broadcaster was, “Hey, I read your book when I was a kid.”

The book was called Temporary Insanity and it wasn’t too bad for jock-lit. There were plenty of good stories about all the crazy things baseball players like to do in their free time, including some of the finer details about Johnstone’s time as a Phillies farmhand where he spent most of his energy terrorizing his manager Jim Bunning.

Bunning, of course, is currently the senior Republican senator from the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and based on a conversation I had with him in 2003, he still has not let go of the mental anguish Johnstone caused him.

My favorite story from the book was when Johnstone caught wind that Bunning had been trying to nail him for any team rule infraction he could. So just to steam his manager even more than already necessary, Johnstone spread the word that he was organizing a wild, beer-drinking and card-playing night in his room at the team hotel. Bunning, as planned, got wind of the party and thinking he was finally going to get his chance to burn Johnstone once and for all, the manager showed up at the room after curfew only to find Johnstone sitting on his bed and reading a book.

Funny, right? More exasperating for Bunning was when Johnstone looked up from his book at the angry figure in the doorway and said something like, “Hiya, skip! You’re out kind of late, aren’t you?”

As the story goes, Bunning stormed out of there chapped that he couldn’t finally stick it to Johnstone. However, later the future senator got the last laugh. During that conversation with Bunning in 2003, I asked him about Johnstone and he told me that when the Phillies’ brass called him about the best player on his team he immediately told them about the guy who had been a bee in his bonnet. As a result of that, the Phillies called up Johnstone from the minors and he went on to be a valuable left-handed bat for the team.

“I was finally rid of him,” the senator said.

Oh yes, a win-win for all.

It doesn't sound the least bit unreasonable to surmise that because Bunning couldn't hack it as a minor-league manager or control Jay Johnstone, he went on to be a U.S. Senator.

Yeah...

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