It’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye. (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistics.
This week we’re looking at a couple of tidbits inspired the first season of the New York Mets franchise.
On this date, May 12, in 1962, just shy of 20,000 Mets fans came to the Polo Grounds to take in a Mets’ doubleheader. Just how long ago was 1962? The Mets were hosting the “Milwaukee” Braves in a single-admission doubleheader. At the time, the Mets were 5-17 (ninth place, 13 games out) and the Braves were 13-14 (seventh place, 7 1/2 games out). Braves’ first-game starter Warren Spahn had thrown two complete games (remember those) in his first six starts of the season and would end the campaign with 22 complete games in 34 starts at age 41 (and no one uttered the words “pitch count.”) The promise of an exciting day of baseball might have seem a bit off in the distance, but things would change.
In Game One, the Braves (behind the pitching of Warren Spahn) held a 2-1 lead after seven innings. In the top of the eighth, the Mets made a Craig-for-Craig switch – bringing in righty Craig Anderson in relief of starting righthander Roger Craig (who, incidentally would finish the 1962 season as 10-24, 4.51).
But I digress. Anderson came in an tossed a scoreless eighth and ninth, keeping the Milwaukee margin at 2-1. In the bottom of the ninth, Mets’ 1B Gil Hodges greeted Spahn with an inning-opening single. Spahn then fanned PH Cliff Cook and got PH Gus Bell on a pop out. Next, C Hobie Landrith smacked a two-run homer off Spahn, giving the Mets a walk-off win and Anderson a victory.
Game Two had a bit more action, but a similar outcome. This one was knotted at seven runs apiece after eight frames and each team has used four pitchers to get there. Milwaukee CF Hank Aaron was two-for-two, with a home run, a double. A walk, a sacrifice fly and a stolen base; while Mets’ SS Elio Chacon was three-for-three, with a triple, two runs scored and three RBI. In the top of the ninth, the Mets brought in Vinegar Bend Mizell to pitch and he opened the inning by walking Brave’s SS Roy McMillan. A that point, Casey Stengel brought in Anderson, who dispatched C Del Crandall on a sacrifice bunt, before wild-pinching McMillan to third. Anderson then toughened up and retired LF Tommie Aaron on a groundout (pitcher-to-first) and RF Mack Jones on a groundout (first-to-pitcher) to keep the game knotted at seven. Long story short, the second batter for the Mets in the ninth (1B Gil Hodges, remember his Game One heroics). rapped a walk-off home run for a doubleheader sweep. Another, “How long ago was that?” moment: The Mets would play 30 doubleheaders that season (they only swept three).
The Mets May 12 1962 doubleheader sweep of the Braves was the first time in MLB that a doubleheader sweep was completed with both games ending with a walk-off home run.
So, the Mets were now 7-17 and three of the wins belonged to Anderson. Things didn’t go as well for Anderson moving forward. He pitched in 40 more games that season and, over that span, went 0-16, 5.81 (he did have four saves) He finished 1962 (when the Mets went 40-120) with a 3-17, 4.35 line. He pitched in two more MLB seasons, going 0-3, 6.85 and, while I am still digging into this, Anderson is the only pitcher I have been able to find who won both ends of a doubleheader and, from that point on, never won another MLB game. His final stat line was 7-23, 5.10 and his best season was his rookie campaign (1961 Cardinals) when he went 4-3, 3.26 in 25 appearances.
Now, here’s another 1962 Mets ’diversion that caught my attention.
Double Vision – Or, “That’s Your Uncle(s) Bob.”
On August 15, 1962, the Phillies topped the Mets 9-3 in the first game of a doubleheader at the Polo Grounds. No big surprise there, as the Mets’ record going into the game was 30-88. What was more surprising was that Phillies’ outfielder Don Demeter hit his 19th and 20th home runs of the season in the game – off a right-handed and a left-handed “Bob Miller.” Oh yes, and he did it while listed in the lineup two different defensive positions.
In the third inning, with the Phillies’ up 2-0, Demeter (who had started the game in left field and in the five-spot in the order) smacked a solo shot off starter (right-hander) Robert Lane “Bob” Miller. Then in the ninth inning, Demeter – who had moved to center field in the seventh – hit a three-run homer (extending the Phillies’ lead to 9-2) off southpaw reliever Robert Gerald “Bob” Miller. Two homers, in one game, off two Bob Millers, a right-hander and a port-sider.
Demeter, notably, was on the way to his best-ever major-league season. In 1962 (his sixth of eleven MLB seasons), he achieved his career highs for average (.307), home runs (29), RBI (107), runs scored (85), hits (169) and doubles (24). He played in a total of 11 MLB seasons (1956, 1958-67 … Dodgers, Phillies, Tigers, Red Sox, Indians), going .265-163-563.
The two Millers? Starter Bob Miller went 1-12, 4.89 in 1962 (69-81, 3.37 with 52 saves in 17 MLB seasons – 1957, 1959-74 … Cardinals, Mets, Dodgers, Twins, Indians, White Sox, Cubs, Padres, Pirates, Tigers). Reliever Bob Miller went 2-2, 10.17 in 1962, the last of his five MLB seasons (6-8, 4.72). He played in the majors in 1953-56 and 1962.
Next week, another 1962 Mets-inspired, Tidbit a comparison of the only two teams to lose 120 (or more) games in a season in the Modern ERA (since 1900): The 1962 Mets and the 2024 White Sox.
Primary Resource: Stathead.com
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