For Immediate
Release – May 25, 2009
Contact: Terry Cannon, Executive Director, The
Baseball Reliquary
Phone (626) 791-7647; e-mail:
terymar@earthlink.net
www.baseballreliquary.org
THE
BASEBALL RELIQUARY ANNOUNCES
2009 CLASS OF ELECTEES TO
THE SHRINE OF THE ETERNALS
The Board of Directors of the Baseball
Reliquary, Inc., a Southern California-based
nonprofit organization dedicated to fostering an
appreciation of American art and culture through
the context of baseball history, is pleased to
announce the 2009 class of electees to the
Shrine of the Eternals. The Shrine of the
Eternals is the national organization’s
equivalent to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Steve Dalkowski, Roger Maris, and Jim
Eisenreich were elected upon receiving the
highest number of votes in balloting conducted
in the months of April and May 2009 by the
membership of the Baseball Reliquary. The three
electees will be formally inducted into the
Shrine of the Eternals in a public ceremony on
Sunday, July 19, 2009 at the Pasadena Central
Library, Pasadena, California.
Of the fifty eligible candidates on the
2009 ballot, Steve Dalkowski received the
highest voting percentage, being named on 34% of
the ballots returned. Following Dalkowski were
Roger Maris with 30% and Jim Eisenreich with
27%. Runners-up in this year’s election included
Effa Manley (26%), Casey Stengel (26%), Don
Zimmer (26%), Charles M. Conlon (23%), Dizzy
Dean (22%), and Luis Tiant (22%).
The inspiration for wild fastball pitcher
Nuke LaLoosh in the movie
Bull Durham,
STEVE DALKOWSKI etched his name in
baseball lore during nine highly erratic minor
league seasons from 1957-1965. Born in 1939, the
unimposing lefthander (5’10," 170 lbs.) threw
terrifying fastballs estimated, in the days
before radar tracking, at 105-110 mph, amassing
nearly 1,400 strikeouts in only 995 innings
pitched. He threw so fast that at least one
opposing batter soiled his uniform in
expectation of facing a Dalkowski heater. No
less a hitting authority than Ted Williams said
Dalkowski was the hardest thrower he had ever
seen. In fact, after standing in against a Dalko
pitch in spring training, Williams walked away
from the batting cage, muttering that he never
wanted to face the lefty hurler again. Williams
needn’t have worried; "White Lightning" never
made it to the big leagues. In addition to being
fast, Dalkowski was also wild, so wild that his
pitches often soared twenty feet or more out of
the strike zone. "He could pierce a brick wall,"
one sportswriter said of the bespectacled
pitcher, "but they never knew which brick wall."
He routinely led the minors in bases on balls,
walking a career total of 1,354 batters in the
same 995 innings. A typical game for Dalkowski
was seven innings pitched, 18 strikeouts, and 15
walks. While pitching for future Hall-of-Famer
Earl Weaver in Aberdeen, South Dakota, he walked
18, struck out 20, and tossed a no-hitter.
Adding to the Dalkowski mystique was his
off-field unpredictability and Olympian thirst
for alcohol. Before blowing his arm out on the
cusp of making the Baltimore Orioles roster in
1963, Dalkowski made considerable on-field
progress under Weaver’s tutelage. However, his
behavior grew increasingly erratic, fueled by
professional disappointment and uncontrollable
alcoholism. After washing out of the Orioles
system in 1965, Dalkowski drifted West, working
for a time as a migrant worker in California’s
Central Valley. Increasingly disabled from
alcoholic dementia, Dalkowski received help from
the Association of Professional Ball Players of
America (APBPA) periodically from the
mid-seventies through the mid-nineties. He
ultimately settled into a healthcare center in
his hometown of New Britain, Connecticut where
last reports indicated that he is in reasonably
good health.
The baseball world’s near canonization of
Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa during their 1998
pursuit of the single-season home run record
made even sadder the circumstances surrounding a
similar pursuit by ROGER MARIS
(1934-1985) 37 years earlier. In 1961, Maris, an
outfielder for the New York Yankees, slammed 61
home runs, thus breaking the venerable Babe
Ruth’s record, much to the chagrin of Yankee
fans — Mantle was supposed to be the anointed
one — newspaper reporters, and Commissioner
Ford Frick, he of the celebrated asterisk. Yes,
Maris was was named MVP in 1960 and 1961. Yes,
he appeared in more World Series — seven: five
with the Yankees, two with the Cardinals — than
any other player of the 1960s. Yes, he played a
Gold Glove outfield, played his heart out, until
injuries slowed him down. And yes, he was a
devoted husband and father, a quiet, loving,
humble guy who only wanted to play the game and
be left at peace to enjoy his life and family.
But this wasn’t enough for people. Everyone
wanted Roger not to be Roger. Maybe not Mickey,
no one could be Mickey, but someone else,
someone more electrifying, more voluble, and
more interesting. This nice Midwestern
guy wasn’t New York enough, wasn’t cosmopolitan
enough, didn’t know that heroes are supposed to
be accessible, articulate, adorable. He was just
Rog, a ballplayer. And for this he paid a very
high price. Although Maris was silenced by
cancer in 1985, his name is often brought up by
fans who strongly feel that this man who played
the game so well and with such quiet dignity
should be enshrined in the National Baseball
Hall of Fame.
Over the years, the Baseball Reliquary
has celebrated the lives and careers of many
people who — in pursuit of their life goals —
have overcome enormous obstacles on the strength
of nothing but sheer guts. We’ve feted folks who
have bulldogged through physical disabilities
and gender bias, men and women who have suffered
merely by being a bit different, people who have
beat overwhelming odds to live out their dreams.
JIM EISENREICH is one such person. Born
in 1959, Eisenreich was a highly touted prospect
who struggled through baffling neurological
problems at the beginning of his career. He was
ultimately diagnosed with Tourette Syndrome, a
debilitating disorder characterized by
uncontrollable physical tics and jerks, erratic
behavior, and frequent vile verbal outbursts. It
was assumed that Eisenreich was simply goofing
around, that he could stop this behavior at any
time if he so wished. He couldn’t, and he feared
he was going crazy. The Minnesota Twins, the
team that had originally signed Eisenreich, had
grown so impatient with their young player’s
problems that they waived him for the grand sum
of one dollar. After proper diagnosis and
treatment, Eisenreich began to produce for his
new team, the Kansas City Royals, emerging as a
gifted left-handed hitter and outfielder. In
1987, he was named the Royals most valuable
player, an immense honor for a player who shared
the field with the likes of George Brett and Bo
Jackson. He gained even greater fame when he
appeared with the Phillies in the 1993 World
Series and the Florida Marlins in 1997, when he
punctuated his career with a Series home run.
These events brought Eisenreich and Tourette
Syndrome to a national audience, slowly
increasing awareness of the disease. Despite
setbacks, Eisenreich played fifteen seasons,
retiring with a career .290 average and a World
Series ring. Eisenreich, who bears a faint
resemblance to the great Honus Wagner, currently
spends his time as head of the Jim Eisenreich
Foundation for Children with Tourette Syndrome,
based in Missouri, which he founded with his
wife in 1996. The Foundation’s key concerns are
increasing public awareness of the disease,
providing financial support to families in need,
and mobilizing charities and philanthropists to
support further scientific inquiry.
Steve
Dalkowski, Roger Maris, and Jim Eisenreich will
join thirty other baseball luminaries who have
been inducted into the Shrine of the Eternals
since elections began in 1999, including, in
alphabetical order, Jim Abbott, Dick Allen,
Emmett Ashford, Moe Berg, Yogi Berra, Ila
Borders, Jim Bouton, Jim Brosnan, Bill Buckner,
Roberto Clemente, Rod Dedeaux, Dock Ellis, Mark
Fidrych, Curt Flood, Josh Gibson, William
“Dummy” Hoy, Shoeless Joe Jackson, Bill James,
Bill “Spaceman” Lee, Marvin Miller, Minnie
Minoso, Buck O’Neil, Satchel Paige, Jimmy
Piersall, Pam Postema, Jackie Robinson, Lester
Rodney, Fernando Valenzuela, Bill Veeck Jr., and
Kenichi Zenimura.
For additional information on the Shrine
of the Eternals, visit the Baseball Reliquary
Web site at
www.baseballreliquary.org, or contact
Terry Cannon, Executive Director, by phone at
(626) 791-7647 or by e-mail at terymar@earthlink.net.
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