Baseball and Pine Tar Bats
George Brett who was named to the Hall of Fame was the star of one
of the ?hairiest? occurrences in the history of baseball. Ingredients?
Some pine tar, a home run, and the rule book.
The ?Pine Tar? game was difficult for most involved, but Brett
remembers the incident in fondly. When Brett had made a run at a .400
batting average in 1980 and helped Kansas City to the American League
pennant, he suffered from hemorrhoids during the World Series against
the Philadelphia Phillis. There were no shortage of reminders for him
over the next few years of his amazing career.
Brent remembers, ?Every time I got in the on-deck circle, every time I
went someplace, everybody always had to make the wisecrack about
hemorrhoids.? Thankfully, that ill repute was obliterated when he hit
the pine tar home run three years later.
?Ever since July 24, 1983, now I?m the pine-tar guy. What would you
rather be remembered as? So, in all honesty, it was the greatest thing
that ever happened in my career.?
The debate began on July 24, 1983, in Yankee Stadium, when Brett hit a
two-out, two-run homer off Goose Gossage in the ninth inning that gave
the Royals a 5-4 lead. The two had previously played against one
another in the intense post-season rivalry between Brett?s Royals and
Gossage?s Yankees three years prior. Brett had hit a home run into
Yankee Stadium?s upper-deck off Goose in Game Three of the 1980
American League Championship Series to seal a three-game sweep of the
Yankees. Although in this game, the stakes weren?t as high, the drama
that unfolded became legend.
Brett?s homer came with teammate U.L. Washington on first base with
two outs, and gave the Royals an obvious 5-4 lead. Just after crossing
the plate and entering the dugout, Brett saw Yankee manager Billy
Martin approach home plate umpire Tim McClelland. Soon, McClelland
called for Brett's bat from the his team?s dugout and conferred with
his umpiring crew at home plate. Brett watched inquisitively from the
bench while Martin looked on. Moments later, McClelland threw his arm
in the air and signaled that Brett was dismissed from the game due to
his extreme use of pine tar on his bat, canceling the home run and
ending the game.
Click Here
To View Schedules &
Purchase Baseball Tickets
|
Brett jumped up from his position in the dugout in a fit of anger
and had to be subdued by everyone around him including his teammates
and umpire crew chief Joe Brinkman. McClelland had cited rule
1.10(b) ? ?a bat may not be covered by such a substance more than 18
inches from the tip of the handle.? He stated that Brett?s bad had
pine tar approximately 19 to 20 inches from the tip of the handle
and had measured this against home plate, which is 17 inches across
including a one-inch border.
Even though Brett and his team manager Dick Howser protested
profusely, the ruling stood. Brett was tossed out of the game and
the home run had been rejected which gave the Yankees a 4-3 win.
Martin had realized Brett was breaking the rule earlier in the
season when the Yankee?s third baseman Graig Nettles pointed it out
to him. Nettles noticed the tar on Brett?s bat in Kansas City.
Martin had stated that he didn?t want to call Brett on it if he made
an out, but when he made the home run, Martin reported it. Martin
had helped his team escape the home run and win the game. Or so they
thought.
Consequently, the Royals disputed the baseball game, while the event
earned national attention. Eventually A.L. President Lee MacPhail
(himself a future Hall-of-Famer) overturned McClelland's decision
and re-instated Brett's winning home run. Recognizing that Brett had
pine tar too high on the bat, McPhail said that it was the league's
belief that "games should be won and lost on the playing field - not
through technicalities of the rules." MacPhail stated that a
distinction should be made between using an altered bat which makes
the ball go farther, and using a bat which had excessive pine tar
aiding in grip. Since he didn?t wear batting gloves, Brett had the
sticky substance high on his bat because he would regularly tap his
hands on the pine tar spot to help secure his grip.
The Yankees were clearly upset by MacPhail?s ruling, and the
resulting loss, which put them into a tie for first place. ?A rule
is a rule is a rule,? Yankees? outfielder Lou Piniella said, a
belief shared by all his teammates.
MacPhail ordered the game to continue on August 18 (a scheduled off
day for each team), at the point following Brett's home run with the
Royals leading 5-4. Martin continued to protest MacPhail?s decision.
When the game was resume, before Yankee?s pitcher George Frazier
could even throw the pitch to batter Hal McRae, Martin challenged
that Brett hadn?t even touched all the bases when he hit the
original home run nearly a month prior. The Yankees argued that the
current umpiring crew couldn?t be sure if Brett had circled the
bases legally since they were not the same umpires officiating the
original game. Despite this stall tactic by Martin, crew chief Davey
Phillips was ready. Phillips produced a signed affidavit from the
four members of Brinkman?s crew, stating that Brett and the
baserunner ahead of him (Washington) had indeed touched all the
bases in the original game.
The issue was dismissed, but not before Martin was ejected from the
game due to excessive arguing with the umpires. After the Royals?
third out of the top of the frame, the bottom of the ninth inning
was recorded without incident, and the Royals won 5-4. The
completion of the game had taken 12 minutes and 16 pitches to
complete, with Dan Quisenberry securing the save in a game that saw
Yankee?s feature pitcher Ron Guidry in center field and rookie
outfielder/first baseman Don Mattingly (a left hander!) at second
base. As it turns out, Brett wasn?t even at the game conclusion,
avoiding the drama that his home run had started. He was on a plane
at Newark Airport with other team officials who didn?t make the trip
to Yankee Stadium. The Royals were scheduled to be in Baltimore for
a series which began the next day.
The ?Pine Tar Bat? has become a famed reminder of that unusual game
and the controversy caused by it.
Click Here
To View Schedules &
Purchase Baseball Tickets
|
More Great Baseball Articles:
Major League Baseball Rules - Rule 21: Misconduct
Baseball and Pine Tar Bats
Baseball During The War Time
The Origins of Baseball (Part I)
The Origins of Baseball (Part II)
The Origins of Baseball (Part III)
The Best Baseball Team Ever
Chicago Cubs Baseball Team
Chicago Cubs Information
Other Articles
Ticket Retriever offers some terrific information on a variety of
subjects in our
articles section.