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Wow

Discussion in 'Baseball' started by Bonsway, Mar 25, 2009.

  1. Bonsway

    Bonsway Full Access Member

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  2. Dbacks20

    Dbacks20 Moderator

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    WOW is right......
     
  3. TBA

    TBA Full Access Member

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    Ughh

    I don't know if "WOW" does that justice.
     
  4. Braves

    Braves Watauga Pioneers #6

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    Braves Strausberg....my little boy
     
  5. Bonsway

    Bonsway Full Access Member

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    He looks just like you!
     
  6. aguyyouknow

    aguyyouknow Yogi Fan

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    Torrington Twisters

    Braves/DBacks,
    I saw this kid live and in person in the summer of 07 when he was in the NECBL pitching for Torrington. They led our Newport Gulls 2-1 in the bottom of the 9th. The big boy came in to close. He threw 10 fastballs. All 10 were at 96MPH. The first hitter got 3 of them knee high on the black. The next kid got the same thing. He had the third hitter 0-2 and threw him a letter high 96mph pitch to see if he'd bite. Then with 1-2 he went back to painting the black and finished striking out the side. One of the hitters was a Vandy kid and another was from Alabama.

    Aguyyouknow Jr. was in the Gulls dugout (as ballboy) and saw this kid up close and personal. When he saw him warming up and heard the hissing noise his head spun around to find me. The look on his face was priceless! The Gulls GM told him to get a ball signed by Strasberg because he was pretty sure the kid was going "big time." The ball is on his shelf waiting to be worth something.
     
  7. Bonsway

    Bonsway Full Access Member

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    I think I've heard this story before...
     
  8. EastOfRaleigh

    EastOfRaleigh Full Access Member

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    remember?

    a kid named David Clyde back in the 70's / early 80's??. never played in the minors.....straight to the majors from HS I think........and bombed.
     
  9. Stretchlon

    Stretchlon Stars

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    High School Stud

    DAVID CLYDE COULD HAVE been a more sympathetic figure. Instead, he became an example of what can happen to the potential of a young baseball player when the men with the money force unrealistic expectations on his arm.

    Bob Short owned the Texas Rangers in 1973. The team was a flop in the Lone Star State two years after moving from Washington D.C. The Rangers had failed to attract more than 9,000 to a game all season.

    That June, the franchise used its No. 1 overall pick in the amateur draft on Clyde, an 18-year-old Texas phenom with a sizzling fastball and name recognition.

    Clyde was given a $125,000 signing bonus, setting a record for the largest bonus given to a draft pick. The money heaped more pressure on the ill-prepared teen.

    The vast majority of even the most talented youngsters drafted into the major leagues receives some seasoning in the minor leagues before being called up to fulfill their dreams and the hopes of the organization that selected them.

    Clyde was one of a few exceptions.

    Before Clyde, there had been some ballplayers who went directly from high school to the major leagues, but few faced the pressure cooker Clyde did.

    Short saw an opportunity to stir interest in his foundering franchise by throwing Clyde into the Rangers' starting rotation. It worked perfectly.

    The excitement the homegrown prospect generated led to the first sellout ever at Arlington Stadium. Clyde was on the mound in a Rangers uniform June 27, 1973, in front of a crowd of 35,698 only 20 days after pitching Westchester High School to the state finals.

    "The correlation I felt was like going from high school to performing open-heart surgery," Clyde once said. "I felt that's how much better I had to be."

    Clyde was the only high school pitcher taken No. 1 overall in the first 26 years of the draft. He hailed from Houston, not all that far from the ballpark where he was expected to lift the Rangers out of the division cellar.

    In his final high school season, Clyde nearly had been unhittable. He went 18-0, allowing three earned runs in 148 innings. Most people conveniently forgot that those numbers were registered against skinny teen-agers, not seasoned major league hitters. A lot was expected, no matter how unrealistic those expectations were.

    Clyde walked the first two Minnesota batters he faced that day before blowing away Bob Darwin, George Mitterwald and Joe Lis on swinging third strikes to end his first inning in the big leagues. The crowd gave him a standing ovation, and he earned the win in five innings of work.

    Clyde might have become a legend if his story didn't take a downturn from there. His brightest moment in the major leagues was his first. He completed his rookie season with a 4-8 record and a 5.01 earned-run average.

    His professional career lasted nine years, but only five in the big leagues. He compiled an 18-33 record in 84 starts with the Rangers and Cleveland and a 4.63 ERA. When he retired from the Houston Astros' farm system in 1981, he was less than a season of big-league service away from qualifying for a baseball pension.

    Toby Harrah, a 17-year major league veteran, played shortstop for the Rangers when Clyde arrived. Harrah believes it wasn't a very smart idea, but Clyde helped direct himself toward failure by hooking up with veterans who liked to party and weren't interested in protecting a kid from himself.

    "To be honest with you, I don't think he handled it very well," Harrah said.

    "The fact is, he shouldn't have been there, but the Rangers at that time were trying to get people to come to the ballpark. He had a great arm. It was unfortunate that he didn't pitch longer in the big leagues than he did."

    Born:
    April 22, 1955
    In Kansas City, Kan.
    HT: 6-1
    WT: 185
    Bats: Left
    Throws: Left

    David Clyde's Major League Statistics

    Year Team W-L G GS CG ShO IP H

    1973 Rangers 4-8 18 18 0 0 93.1 106
    1974 Rangers 3-9 28 21 4 0 117.0 129
    1975 Rangers 0-1 1 1 0 0 7.0 6
    1978 Indians 8-11 28 25 5 0 153.1 166
    1979 Indians 3-4 9 8 1 0 45.2 50
    Totals 5 years 18-33 84 73 10 0 416.1 457

    Year Team SO ERA

    1973 Rangers 74 5.01
    1974 Rangers 52 4.38
    1975 Rangers 2 2.57
    1978 Indians 83 4.28
    1979 Indians 17 5.91
    Totals 5 years 228 4.63
     
  10. Bonsway

    Bonsway Full Access Member

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    Thanks, Debbie Downer...
     

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