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Johnny Bench

 
 

(born December 7, 1947, Oklahoma City, Okla., U.S.) U.S. baseball player. Bench joined the Cincinnati Reds in 1967. During his 17 seasons catching for them (1967 – 83), he helped lead the team (with Pete Rose and Joe Morgan) to four National League pennants (1970, 1972, 1975, 1976) and two World Series victories (1975, 1976). Batting right-handed, he led the National League in runs batted in three times (1970, 1972, 1974) and twice in home runs (1970, 1972). He is regarded as one of the greatest defensive catchers ever to play the game.

For more information on Johnny Lee Bench, visit Britannica.com.

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Dictionary: Bench   (bĕnch) pronunciation, Johnny Lee
 
Born 1947.

American baseball player considered among the greatest catchers in history. In 16 seasons with the Cincinnati Reds (1967–1983), he was the National League's most valuable player twice (1970 and 1972).


 
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Quotes:

"Slumps are like a soft bed. They're easy to get into and hard to get out of."

 
Wikipedia: Johnny Bench
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Johnny Bench

Catcher
Born: December 7, 1947 (1947-12-07) (age 61)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Batted: Right Threw: Right 
MLB debut
August 28, 1967 for the Cincinnati Reds
Last MLB appearance
September 29, 1983 for the Cincinnati Reds
Career statistics
Batting average     .267
Home runs     389
Runs batted in     1,376
Teams
Career highlights and awards
Member of the National
Baseball Hall of Fame
Induction     1989
Vote     96.42%

John Lee "Johnny" Bench (born December 7, 1947) is a former American Major League Baseball player for the Cincinnati Reds from 1967 to 1983. He is widely regarded as being among the greatest catchers in baseball history.[attribution needed][citation needed] He is currently on the Board of Directors for the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame.

Bench, a 14-time All-Star selection and the National League's Most Valuable Player in the 1970 and 1972 seasons, was a key member of the "The Big Red Machine", the Reds teams of the 1970s which won six division titles and World Series championships in 1975 and 1976.

Contents

Professional career

Johnny Bench played baseball and basketball and was class valedictorian at Binger High School in Binger, Oklahoma, formerly known as Hoss Spit Flats. His father told him that he felt that the fastest route to becoming a major leaguer was as a catcher. Bench was drafted thirty-sixth overall by the Cincinnati Reds in the second round of the 1965 amateur draft and was called up in August 1967. He hit .163, but impressed many with his defense and strong throwing arm. Among them: Hall of Famer Ted Williams. Williams signed a baseball for him which predicted that the young catcher would be "A Hall of Famer for sure!"[1]

Williams' prediction eventually became fact with Johnny Bench's election to the Hall of Fame in 1989.

During a spring training game in 1968, the brash Johnny Bench was catching the eight-year veteran right-hander Jim Maloney. Once a noted hard thrower, injuries had reduced Maloney's fastball's speed dramatically by this time. However, Maloney insisted on repeatedly "shaking off" his younger catcher and throwing the fastball instead of the breaking balls Bench called for. An exasperated Bench bluntly told Maloney, "your fastball's not popping". Maloney replied with an epithet. To prove to Maloney that his fastball wasn't effective anymore, Bench called for a fastball, and after Maloney released the ball, Bench dropped his catcher's mitt and comfortably caught the fastball barehanded. [2]

The Cincinnati Reds were supposed to move to open the 1970 baseball season in Riverfront Stadium, but a harsh winter the year before led to delays in readying the new multi-purpose facility. Thus, the Reds played the first half of the season at Crosley Field, their home since 1912. On June 24, the last home game at Crosley was played against the visiting San Francisco Giants. The home team was trailing 4-3 in the home half of the eighth inning, when Johnny Bench tied the game with a solo home run against future Hall of Fame right-hander Juan Marichal. The next batter, first baseman Lee May, hit a solo home run for the eventual game-winner. Afterwards, there was a brief ceremony, part of which entailed Mayor Gene Ruehlmann taking home plate out of the ground and being transported via helicopter to Riverfront Stadium and installing home plate there. After a road trip to Houston, Texas, the Reds returned to Cincinnati and played their first game at the new stadium against the visiting Atlanta Braves on June 30, 1970.

Bench praised the character of Crosley Field, but also said he wouldn't miss the fact that when it rained, the field would get very saturated.

1970 was Bench's finest statistical season; he hit .293 with 45 home runs and drove in 148. He hit .267 with 389 home runs and 1,376 RBIs during his 17-year Major League career, all spent with the Reds. His career home runs by a catcher record stood until surpassed by the former New York Mets catcher Mike Piazza.

Bench won the 1968 National League Rookie of the Year Award, batting .275 with 15 home runs and 82 RBIs, and the honors and accomplishments only continued to pile up. In his career, Bench earned 10 Gold Gloves, was the 1970 and 1972 Most Valuable Player and was named to the National League All-Star team 14 times. He also won such awards as the Lou Gehrig Award (1975), the Babe Ruth Award (1976), and the Hutch Award (1981). His most dramatic home run[citation needed] was likely his ninth inning lead-off opposite field home run in the final game of the 1972 NLCS vs. Pittsburgh. The solo shot tied the game 3-3, allowing the Reds to win later in the inning on a wild pitch, 4-3. It was hailed after the game as "one of the great clutch home runs of all time."[citation needed]

Although baseball history is filled with many outstanding catchers, such as Yogi Berra, Bill Dickey, Gabby Hartnett and Mickey Cochrane, arguably, no player revolutionized the position like Johnny Bench.[citation needed] The catcher's equipment was traditionally called "the tools of ignorance" as many catchers lacked the fielding skills or quickness to play elsewhere. But Bench, who was big (6'1" and 210 pounds) and athletic, inspired many young ballplayers to become catchers and teams began seeking and developing more athletic ballplayers for the position.[citation needed]

Although not the first to use it, Bench popularized the hinged catcher's mitt.[citation needed] Randy Hundley of the San Francisco Giants is credited as actually being the first player to use it in a game, but the success Bench had in his career after adopting it in after a stint on the disabled list in 1966 for a thumb injury on his throwing hand allowed Bench to tuck his throwing arm safely to the side when receiving the pitch. By the turn of the decade, the hinged mitt became standard catchers' equipment.

Having huge hands (a famous photograph features him easily holding seven baseballs in his right hand[1]), Bench also tended to block breaking balls in the dirt by scooping them with one hand instead of the more common and fundamentally proper way: dropping to both knees and blocking the ball using the chest protector to keep the ball in front.[citation needed]

By the latter part of his career, Johnny Bench was being compared to the greatest catchers in baseball history, but the years behind the plate began taking their toll on his knees, which is a common ailment for catchers.[citation needed] For the last three seasons of his career, Bench caught only 13 games and played mostly first base or third base.

The Cincinnati Reds proclaimed September 17, 1983 "Johnny Bench Night" at Riverfront Stadium. During the game he hit his 389th and final home run. He retired at the end of the season.

Honors and post-career activities

Johnny Bench was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York in 1989. He was elected in his first year eligible and appeared on 96% of the ballots, the third-highest ever at the time.

Three years earlier, Bench had been inducted into the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame in 1986 and his uniform #5 was retired by the team. Ironically, the number was worn by another Reds catcher, Willard Hershberger, and was retired after his suicide in August 1940. Later that year, the Reds won their second World Series, which holds the distinction of being, to date, the only World Series in which the Reds won the deciding game in Cincinnati. The Reds reactivated the #5 uniform in 1942.

In 1985, Bench starred as Joe Boyd/Joe Hardy in a Cincinnati stage production of the musical Damn Yankees, which also included Gwen Verdon and Gary Sandy.

He also hosted the television series The Baseball Bunch from 1982 to 1985. A cast of children, both boys and girls, from the Tucson, Arizona area would learn the game of baseball from Bench and current and retired greats. The Chicken provided comic relief and former Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda appeared as "The Dugout Wizard".

In 1999, Bench ranked Number 16 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Player. He was the highest-ranking catcher. Bench was also elected to the Major League Baseball All-Century Team.

Starting with the 2000 college baseball season, the best collegiate catcher annually receives the Johnny Bench Award. The most recent winner was Buster Posey of Florida State University, who is currently in the farm system of the San Francisco Giants. Notable winners include Kelly Shoppach of Baylor University, Ryan Garko of Stanford University, and Kurt Suzuki of Cal State Fullerton. Shoppach and Garko are currently teammates on the Cleveland Indians' roster (Garko has been converted to a first baseman), and Suzuki plays for the Oakland Athletics.

In 2008, Bench co-wrote the book Catch Every Ball: How to Handle Life's Pitches with Paul Daugherty. It is published by Orange Frazer Press. A "autobiography" published in 1979 called Catch You Later was authored by Bench with William Brashler.

Like many retired players, Bench has broadcast games on television and radio. He is an avid golfer, and he has performed in several Champions Tour tournaments.

In a September 2008 interview with Heidi Watney of the New England Sports Network, Johnny Bench, who was watching a Cleveland Indians/Boston Red Sox game at Fenway Park, did an impromptu impression of late Chicago Cubs announcer Harry Caray after Red Sox third baseman Kevin Youkilis, a native of Cincinnati, made a tough play to throw out the Indians' Victor Martinez at first base. Knuckleballer Tim Wakefield was on the mound for the Red Sox and Bench related a story that then-Reds manager Sparky Anderson told him that he was thinking of trading for knuckleballer Phil Niekro. Bench replied that Anderson had better trade for Neikro's catcher, too. [2]

Hip replacement

In 2004, Johnny Bench received a total hip replacement after his natural hip had worn down to bone-on-bone and gave him constant pain. The condition resulted from the repetitious squatting and rising during the course of his twenty-year-plus baseball career. Bench was fitted with a Stryker ceramic hip and has since become a spokesman for the company.

However, Stryker hip patients have complained about problems resulting from their implants including pain, difficulty walking and squeaky joints, and some have had pieces of implant parts break off or wear down unevenly.[3] The company was sent two warning letters by the Food and Drug Administration regarding ceramic hip replacements.

Bench, who says he has experienced some squeaking, quipped, “I don’t care if it plays "Dixie". [4]

References

See also

External links


 
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Some good "Johnny Bench" pages on the web:


HOFer
www.baseballhalloffame.org
 

Baseball Library
www.baseballlibrary.com
 
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Johnny Bench" Read more