A gifted
skater, boxer and musician, his legion of fans in baseball knew him as either
"The Apollo of the Box" or "The Count". The Sporting News preferred to describe him as
an intolerant racist and "a man of the most sordid nature". A canny
promoter in Louisville witnessed the effect his good looks had on women and
used him to introduce the revolutionary notion of a Ladies Day at the stadium.
In the divorce court, his wife admitted to hitting him with a potato roller
only after he had already cut her with a knife and smashed a water jug over her
head. For a sober individual who never smoke or drank, Tony Mullane cut quite a
dash.
At the age
of five, his parents Dennis and Elizabeth brought him away from their native
Cork to live in the new world, and eight decades later, his death after illness
would be marked by obituaries in the New York Times and the Chicago Daily News
. Between 1881 and 1894, he was arguably the best pitcher in baseball's major
leagues, winning a total of 285 games, a figure that still ranks him among the
top 25 players in that position of all time. Last Thursday, however, marked the
120th anniversary of the day Mullane became the first player to pitch both
right and left-handed in the same game, a feat so remarkable that only three others
have ever managed it.
Although
remembered most for his ambidexterity, his turbulent career teemed with
incident. Once he realised how good he was, he began demanding a salary
commensurate with his talent. A bold request at a time when players were bound
to a team until the team decided otherwise by an oppressive device known as the
'reserve clause', the Corkman was the ultimate contract rebel.
After two
immense seasons with the St. Louis Browns, he tried to move across town to the
St. Louis Maroons for more money. When the Browns' owner sneakily lured him
back by stumping up the cash before then forcibly transferring him to a lesser
club, Mullane signed for the Cincinnati Reds instead, and suffered a one year
suspension from the game for his temerity.
"The
flamboyant Mullane scrambled from club to club in pursuit of higher pay, but
clearly he was worth it," writes William Curran, in Strikeout: A celebration
of the art of pitching. "He should easily have reached 300 career wins had
the American Association not suspended him at the height of his career for
jumping his contract. All the same, The Count's frequent moves fetched him
salaries many times what a good position player commanded in that era. It is
suspected that in his best years Tony received under-the-table bonuses as well.
Mullane's career illustrates that, even as early as the 1880s, a proven winner
could almost write his own contract although few other hurlers seemed bold
enough to press their advantage."
At one
point, Mullane was drawing down $5,000 a year, more than six times the average
wage in the sport. He was worth every penny. Apart from being the most
formidable pitcher of the age - his physical strength befitting somebody who
spent his teenage years fighting in the bareknuckle boxing rings of
Pennsylvania - he could fill in competently at every other position on the
field. If that was a truly noteworthy gift in a game where players specialise
in one position from an early age, Mullane was a highly unpopular figure among
contemporaries. Despite lavish earnings, his lust for more caused him to sit
out another half a season late in his career as a protest against league-wide
pay cuts. Then there was the matter of his unreconstructed racism.
"Moses
Fleetwood Walker was the best catcher I ever worked with, but I disliked a
Negro and whenever I had to pitch to him, I used to pitch anything I wanted without
looking for the signals," wrote Mullane of Walker, his former team-mate
with the Toledo Blue Stockings. "One day he signalled me for a curve ball
and I shot a fast ball at him. He caught it and walked down to me. He said:
'I'll catch you without signals but I won't catch you if you are going to cross
me when I give you signals.' And all the rest of the season he caught me and
caught anything I threw. I pitched without him knowing what was coming."
Once his
pitching power faded, Mullane worked a couple of seasons as a professional
baseball umpire before serving as a Chicago policeman until retiring at the age
of 65. Even though his obituaries twenty years later contained no mention of
his prejudices, they hurt him later. Baseball's Veterans Committee placed him
on a list of 200 former players who were considered for entry to the sport's
distinguished Hall of Fame back in 2002. His gaudy career statistics made him
look like a posthumous shoe-in but the rules expressly state that voters must
consider a person's character and integrity as much as their playing ability.
And once
they did that, he had no chance.
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