The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Local News

July 26, 2009

Brad Belk: The year the Joplin Miners won the pennant ... and got a chance to see Stan the Man

For more than five decades, minor league baseball was a way of life for many in Joplin.

The era that seems to still resonate with “horsehide aficionados” is the one involving the Joplin Miners. For many years the Miners were affiliated with the most successful franchise in professional baseball: the New York Yankees.

The 1941 season was a memorable year for the Miners as they finished in first place in the Western Association. That association was made up of eight regional teams: Joplin Miners, Springfield Cardinals, Topeka (Kan.) Owls, Hutchinson (Kan.) Pirates, Fort Smith (Ark.) Giants, Muskogee (Okla.) Reds, Salina (Kan.) Millers and the St. Joseph Ponies. By midseason, the St. Joseph team, which was affiliated with the St. Louis Browns, relocated to Carthage. The year was also noteworthy because local fans got a glimpse of a player who possessed considerable talent.

The Miners’ season opened April 30 in Springfield at White City Park. The outcome was gloomier than the cold spring weather as the Miners were trounced 13 to 1 by the Cardinals. The Cardinals had a new cleanup hitter named Stanley Musial. He also seemed to have a live arm gunning down a Joplin runner at second base.

The Springfield Cardinals continued their winning ways, and by mid-July had a substantial lead in the Western Association. The Joplin Miners were comfortably in second place but failed to have a player such as Musial on their team.

Missouri State University professor James Giglio chronicled Musial’s short stint with the Springfield Cardinals in his book, “Musial: From Stash to Stan the Man.”

According to Giglio, “fans were fascinated with his exceptional hitting, resulting in line drives that pounded the Coca-Cola or 7-Up signs in right field; with his fielding, which included somersaults and other acrobatics on the outfield grass; and with his daring base running, characterized by his savvy delays between bases before advancing on ground balls.”

By mid-July the Miners and the six other teams in the Western Association received a gift when Musial was called up to play Double A ball for the Rochester Red Wings of the International League. Management made a wise decision, for in his first game Musial hit a home run, a double and two singles. Apparently the guy could hit in any league.

Musial’s final statistics as a Springfield Cardinal were impressive: batting .379 with 26 homers and 94 runs batted in.

The beautiful thing about baseball is the ever-tedious season is full of peaks and valleys.

Never giving up, the Miners continued to claw their way back, continually chipping away at the Cardinal lead. Time was running out, though.

The Miners’ season hinged on a doubleheader with the Springfield Cardinals. The question everyone was asking in Joplin: Could their team sweep the remaining two games at Miners Park? The largest crowd of the season came to cheer on the home team in hopes of seeing history unfold. Nearly 4,000 fans saw the Miners win the first game easily, 7-0. The final game was a nail-biter. After two hours and three minutes, the scoreboard read Joplin Miners 6, Springfield Cardinals 4. The Joplin Miners had won the pennant!

Joplin baseball fans were ecstatic and rightly so, since a Joplin team had not won a championship since the 1920s.

The Miners’ offense was led by outfielders Russell Burns, Al Lyons and George Leyrer. Miners left fielder Burns closed the regular season with a .312 batting average while driving in 103 runs. Lyons, who played right field, hit .304. Fast-of-foot centerfielder Leyrer led the league with 56 stolen bases.

The Miners were also blessed with some outstanding arms. Pitchers Marvin Brown, Bill Davis and Jesse Hamm combined to win 50 games with only 17 losses. In addition, all three of them averaged more than 100 strikeouts.

The Joplin Miners added to their regular season first-place finish with another triumph by winning the Western Association playoff. Joplin shut out the Fort Smith Giants 2-0. The final victory was lucrative for the winning team, as $600 was placed into the Miners’ organization and players’ pockets.

No one will ever know if the Miners would have been victorious with Stan Musial playing the full season in Springfield. However, reflecting back, Joplin baseball fans were the real beneficiaries as they witnessed a championship as well as one of the greatest players to ever play baseball.

Porter Wittich, in his Joplin Globe column “The Globe Trotter,” recalled a conversation he had with Fort Smith players and manager Herchel Bobo during the playoffs. When asked who was the best player during the season, Wittich wrote: “Everybody admitted he (Musial) looked like the best player in the league this season.”

Regardless of where he played, Stan the Man would always be ranked as the best player in the league.

Text Only
Local News
  • 021012 water main1_72.jpg Water company cites reconnections

    The May 22 tornado has caused a dramatic drop in water usage for the Missouri American Water Co., but things are starting to turn around — one reconnection at a time.

    February 10, 2012 1 Photo

  • Survivor of ’78 Connor collapse dead at age 64

    A big story in the history of Joplin was the 1978 collapse of the Connor Hotel at Fourth and Main streets. Alfred Summers, the man at the heart of that story, died at 6:41 a.m. Friday at St. John’s Mercy Hospital in Joplin after an illness. He was 64.

    February 10, 2012

  • County asks for dismissal of sheriff’s suit

    The Jasper County Commission is the final authority in budget allocations, including those from the county’s Law Enforcement Sales Tax fund, county lawyers have argued in a motion recently filed in Jasper County Circuit Court.

    February 10, 2012

  • Winter weather back in forecast

    The arctic front that passed over Missouri on Friday will bring cold temperatures to the region tonight.

    February 10, 2012

  • Weather service upgrading radar at Springfield station

    The National Weather Service radar station at Springfield will be out of service for about two weeks to permit the installation of dual-polarization technology.

    February 10, 2012

  • MSSU, PSU to conduct financial-aid events

    Missouri Southern State University in Joplin and Pittsburg (Kan.) State University each will conduct events Sunday to help high school seniors with completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid.

    February 10, 2012

  • Authorities term deaths of teens murder-suicide

    Authorities say a teenage woman apparently shot her estranged boyfriend several times before turning the gun on herself and taking her own life.

    February 10, 2012

  • Mike Pound: One man in America wants his robo call

    I like to think I have pretty thick skin. If I didn’t, all the emails I get with the subject lines that read “Hey moron” would bother me. But they don’t, so I do.

    February 10, 2012

  • Proposed Kan. abortion ban blocked by abortion foe

    An influential anti-abortion legislator is blocking the push for a ban on abortion in the Kansas Constitution, highlighting a split among abortion opponents over tactics and frustrating the group advocating the “personhood” proposal Friday.

    February 10, 2012

  • Kansas House GOP issues tax plan

    House Republican leaders are proposing a plan to cut Kansas income taxes, removing one key objection to an earlier proposal from Gov. Sam Brownback.

    February 10, 2012

Sports
Facebook
Poll

Joplin City Manager Mark Rohr wants the city to distribute weather radios to all Joplin homes that don’t have one. That’s 11,000 radios. Do you think that’s a good use of $300,440?

Yes.
No.
     View Results
Opinion
Business
Twitter Updates
Follow us on twitter
Follow me on Twitter
NDN Video
Obama Scraps Birth Control Mandate US Airmen's Killer Sentenced to Life in Germany Navy Names Ship for Gabrielle Giffords Raw Video: Deadly Blasts in Syria Romney Slams President Obama at CPAC Gingrich: Pres. Obama 'waging War on Religion' 5 Killed in Wrong-way Crash on I-10 in La. Uzbek Man Pleads Guilty in Plot to Kill Obama Denver's Largest-Ever Drug Bust Nets Dozens Marines: No Punishment for Nazi-like Flag Vets Look to Translate Military Skills Into Jobs Raw Video: School Bus Burst Into Flames LA School Reopens Amid Sex Abuse Scandal $25B Settlement Reached Over Foreclosure Abuses Pentagon: Allow Women Closer to Front Lines LA School in Sex Abuse Scandal Reopens Raw Video: Italy's Mount Etna Bursts Into Life Greeks March; Angry Despite Debt Deal Air Force Airlines: Leaders Get Polished Service Ga Girl Fights Off Kidnapper at Walmart
House Ads