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baseball player; business owner
Personal Information
Born May 18, 1946, in Wyncote, PA; son of Martinez (a tailor) and Clara (a homemaker) Jackson; married Jennie Campos in 1968, divorced 1972.
Education: Graduated from Cheltenham Township High School, two years at Arizona State University.
Career
Played for the Oakland Athletics, 1967-75, Baltimore Orioles, 1976, New York Yankees, 1977-1981, California Angels, 1982-1986, and Oakland Athletics, 1987; advisor to the Oakland Athletics, 1988-1993, advisor to the New York Yankees, 1993--.
Life's Work
During Reggie Jackson's spectacular 20-year baseball career, he led his teams to five world championships and 11 division titles. He was the owner of what the Chicago Tribune termed "the most famous left-handed swing in the business," earned 12 trips to the All-Star Game, and was the American League home run champ four times. During his stellar major-league career as an outfielder and designated hitter, he hit 563 home runs, the sixth-highest total in the history of the game. Conversely, he is the all-time leader in strikeouts with 2,597.
Jackson's World Series performances were truly remarkable. In five championships series, he carried a .357 average. In the 1977 World Series, Jackson hit three home runs in three consecutive at-bats and carried a .450 average. This incredible performance earned Jackson the title "Mr. October." His impressive talents made him one of baseball's most popular players. Fans packed the ballpark to see Jackson play, whether at home or on the road. As he remarked to the Chicago Tribune, "I could put meat in the seats." Jackson capitalized on his success by signing one of baseball's first multimillion dollar free agency contracts.
Reginald Martinez Jackson was born on May 18, 1946 to Martinez and Clara Jackson in Wyncote, Pennsylvania, a mostly white Philadelphia suburb. His parents' marriage was rocky and the family's homelife suffered as a result. As Jackson explained in his book, Reggie: The Autobiography: "I wasn't exactly brought up in one of those Norman Rockwell paintings you used to see on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post." When Reggie was six, his parents divorced and his mother left, taking three of Jackson's siblings with her. Reggie stayed behind with his dad, half-brother, and sister.
Martinez Jackson ran a dry cleaning and tailoring shop that occupied the first floor of the family home. Reggie helped out in the shop when he wasn't in school, and, he claimed, ". . . to this day, if I had to put a pocket on a pair of slacks, or put cuffs on them, I could do it. And make a pretty good living at it." The elder Jackson was Reggie's hero and instilled in him a sense of self-discipline and a strong desire to succeed. "To this day," he said, "my father is almost a mythical figure to me. . . . 'You've always got to show initiative, Reggie,' he'd tell me, 'You've got to have ambition. Or you won't amount to a hill of beans.'" His father was demanding, requiring excellence in everything from clothes to speech. As Reggie recalled in his autobiography, "Clean was the thing: Dad always demanded clean. . . . Biggest sin in the world was to get the school clothes dirty. If I did, there was no discussion, nothing to argue about. If there were any problems with the clothes, there was always an excellent chance that Martinez Jackson would be looking to give a lickin.'
Reggie's tremendous athletic ability was obvious from an early age. By the time Jackson was thirteen, he was considered the best ballplayer in town. He was also the only black player on his team, the Greater Glenside Youth Club. As a member of the Greater Glenside Youth Club, Jackson experienced racial prejudice for the first time. During a game against a visiting team from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Reggie's coach benched him and refused to let him play. It was, he recalled, "the first time I'd ever come up against anything like that; the first time I ever realized that black was different, that black could be a problem." When the coach finally let him pinch hit in the last game of the series, Reggie was determined to prove his worth and hit a home run. He struck out instead. What made him feel worse was the fact that his father had attended the game and seen him fail. "I just felt so ashamed after the game, ashamed I had gotten that one chance and failed me, failed him, failed everybody. He asked me if I wanted to ride home with him in the truck. I told him I wanted to walk. . . . And I walked. Crying. . . . And every time I put a foot down, I'd say the same thing. 'I'm gonna be a major leaguer.'"
Despite this disappointment, Jackson's reputation as an athlete continued to grow. He played baseball, basketball, football, and ran track. By the time he was a high school senior, he said, "I had football and baseball recruiters practically camped out on the doorstep." Reggie's talents were apparent to his father as well, but Martinez saw athletics as a ticket to a college education, not a possible career choice.
After graduating from high school, Jackson went to Arizona State University on a football scholarship. The gridiron workouts were particularly grueling, and Reggie began to practice with the baseball team as a respite. After two ASU baseball team members made a bet with Reggie that he couldn't make the team, he arranged a tryout and won a spot on the team. During the summer of his freshman year, he played with the Baltimore Orioles' farm team, and returned to the ASU baseball team the following autumn.
By the end of Jackson's sophomore year in 1966, his reputation as a baseball player had begun to attract the attention of major league scouts. He was ranked second in the pro draft, and several teams expressed an interest in him. He signed with the Kansas City Athletics for $85,000 and a new Pontiac, a sum that would seem paltry later in his career. Charlie Finley, the A's owner, knew he'd made a good deal. "'Reggie,' Jackson remembered him saying, 'you're going to win me a World Series some day.'"
Jackson spent his first year with the A's as a member of their minor- league team, which was based in Birmingham, Alabama, and traveled with the team throughout the South. The South's segregation laws were a rude awakening for Jackson. He found that landlords wouldn't rent an apartment to him, he was routinely refused service in restaurants, and threatened with physical violence. One of his staunchest supporters was team manager John McNamara. If the team stopped at a restaurant and was refused service because of Jackson, McNamara would order the team to reboard the bus. "He'd just take the whole team out of the restaurant, we'd get into the bus and we'd keep driving until we found a place that would serve us all. To my mind, McNamara was a giant," Jackson recalled.
Jackson was called up into the major leagues for two stints, the first so brief that he called it his "cup-of-coffee tour." In his second appearance with the Oakland A's, in September 1967, he hit his first major-league home run. He finished the season with the team, and never went back to the minors. He stayed with Oakland from 1967 until 1975.
In 1972, Oakland A's owner Charlie Finley's dream of a world championship was realized. However, Reggie was unable participate in the World Series because he'd torn a hamstring muscle in the fifth and final game of the American League championship series. Determined to score the tying run that would keep the A's in the game, Jackson threw himself across home plate as the muscle tore, removing himself from any possible participation in the World Series. In addition to missing the World Series, his marriage to his college sweetheart ended in divorce.
The A's won the world championship again in 1973 and Jackson was an integral part of the team's success. He was named both American League Most Valuable Player and Sporting News Major League Player of the Year in 1973; he also led the American League in home runs. Jackson helped to lead the A's to their third consecutive world championship in 1974 and was the American League's home run leader in 1975.
In 1976, Jackson was traded to the Baltimore Orioles and became a free agent the following year. The Montreal Expos offered $5 million for five years, explained Reggie, "but I decided that I wanted to play in the United States, old patriotic me. . . . and I've got to admit, that hot lady called New York and that smoothie Steinbrenner swept me off my feet." Steinbrenner offered Jackson $2.96 million over three years, with a $60,000 bonus for a Rolls Royce. "It was all written out on a hotel napkin," he recalled. On it, at the bottom, Jackson wrote, "'I will not let you down. Reginald M. Jackson.'"
Jackson's arrival in New York got off to a difficult start. His huge salary and reputation as a slugger caused both the press and Yankee fans to expect superhuman feats from each at-bat. In addition, some team members were jealous of Jackson's superstar status and snubbed him. "I wanted to be part of the Yankee family," he explained later, "and when everyone didn't greet me with open arms, I drew back, got more insecure, and started running my mouth a little."
Jackson angered his teammates further after a supposedly off-the- record conversation with a sports writer. When the writer asked Jackson what he thought he could contribute to the Yankees, Reggie answered that he was "the kind of guy who can put a team over the top." He compared the Yankees to a mixed drink, and talked about all of the gifted players that were part of the team. "And I said, 'Maybe I've got the kind of personality that can jump into a drink like that and stir things up and get it all going." The interview appeared several weeks later in Sport magazine and, according to Jackson, was greatly distorted and filled with negative comments about teammates that he never made. His statement about being the catalyst that could pull a talented team together was condensed into an egotistical self- promotion: "You know, this team . . . it all flows from me. I'm the straw that stirs the drink. It all comes back to me." The story convinced many Yankee players and fans that Jackson's ego was out of control.
In addition to his sometimes rocky relationship with teammates and fans, Jackson's career in New York was also characterized by his contentious relationship with Yankee manager, Billy Martin. Martin and Jackson argued frequently and the animosity between them was palpable. During a nationally televised game against the Boston Red Sox, the tension between them boiled over publicly. The argument began after Martin charged that Jackson's tentative fielding allowed a runner to reach second. As television cameras rolled, the two nearly came to blows in the dugout and had to be separated by teammates and coaches. "Neither man backed down," reported the Boston Globe, "People knew Martin was tough. But after that incident, there was no doubting the toughness of Jackson."
Despite the difficulties, Jackson's experience with the New York Yankees was not entirely negative. He helped the Yankees win world championships in 1977 and 1978, batting .450 in the 1977 World Series and .391 in the 1978 World Series. However, it was his remarkable feat of hitting three home runs on three first pitches from three different pitchers in three consecutive at-bats that earned Jackson a special place in the record books. Bob Oates of the Los Angeles Times called it, "the century's peak [athletic] achievement." "It was the happiest moment of my career," Jackson said. "It is the happiest moment of my career." In 1980, Jackson led the American League in home runs for the third time in his career. He also had a candy bar named after him, which led Catfish Hunter to quip in the Los Angeles Times, "When you unwrap a Reggie Bar, it tells you how good it is."
Jackson stayed with the Yankees through the 1981 season and then spent five years with the California Angels. Although he was still popular with the fans, age and time had started to erode Jackson's skills. As the Chicago Tribune reported, "The straw that stirs the drink has been told the party's just about over." However, Reggie still loved the game, and when a reporter asked him if he was still having fun, he replied "Sure, I'm having fun! At my salary, you'd be having fun, too."
As his playing career drew to a close, Jackson shared the American League lead in home runs with Milwaukee's Gorman Thomas in 1982. During his final season with the Angels in 1986, he hit his 563rd home run, which placed him sixth among all-time home run leaders. "It meant a lot," he told the Chicago Tribune. "I wanted to remember the whole time. I guess I ran a tape recorder in my own mind: The pitch, how I left home plate, how I went around the bases, how I touched home plate and people's hands I shook."
In 1987, Jackson signed with the Oakland A's for his final major league season. "The best thing that happened to me [in that final year] was in Boston," Jackson recalled. "I came up [to bat], and Sherm Feller, the public-address announcer, said, 'Ladies and gentleman, in maybe his last appearance at Fenway Park, a future Hall of Famer, No. 44, Mr. October.' That's all. No Reggie Jackson. Just Mr. October. It's something I'll cherish." He played his final game in Chicago, and although he wanted to go out with a "dinger," he had to settle for two hits. He left the field to a standing ovation.
Following his retirement from baseball, Jackson pursued many business ventures: automobile dealer, product spokesman, sports analyst, and real estate developer. He served as an advisor to the Oakland A's from 1988 to 1993, and the New York Yankees beginning in 1993.
In 1993, Reggie Jackson was elected to the Hall of Fame on the first ballot. In a heartfelt speech, Jackson thanked his father for his insistence on education and excellence, and for teaching him to "climb the ladder of equality with dignity," quoted the Los Angeles Times. The Chicago Tribune reported that Jackson paid special tribute to Jackie Robinson and Larry Doby, "I know I wasn't the best. All I have to do is look behind me. . . . Thanks, Jackie; thanks, Larry. We owe you." He ended his speech, reported the Boston Globe, with the words of another famous Yankee: "Friends, in the words of Lou Gehrig, today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth. I've had a dream and I've been able to live it."
Awards
American League Most Valuable Player, 1973; Sporting News Major League Player of the Year, 1973; American League home run champion, 1973, 1975, 1980, 1982; member of the Sporting News American League All-Star team, 1969, 1971-75, 1977-82, 1984; inducted into the baseball Hall of Fame, 1993.
Further Reading
Periodicals
— Amy Loerch Strumolo
| Quotes By: Reggie Jackson |
Quotes:
"The greatest manager has a knack for making ballplayers think they are better than they think they are."
"I feel that the most important requirement in success is learning to overcome failure. You must learn to tolerate it, but never accept it."
| Wikipedia: Reggie Jackson |
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This biographical article needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately, especially if potentially libelous or harmful. (August 2007) (Find sources: Reggie Jackson – news, books, scholar) |
| Reggie Jackson | |
|---|---|
| Right fielder | |
| Born: May 18, 1946 Wyncote, Pennsylvania |
|
| Batted: Left | Threw: Left |
| MLB debut | |
| June 9, 1967 for the Kansas City Athletics | |
| Last MLB appearance | |
| October 4, 1987 for the Oakland Athletics | |
| Career statistics | |
| Batting average | .262 |
| Home runs | 563 |
| Hits | 2,584 |
| Runs batted in | 1,702 |
| Teams | |
| Career highlights and awards | |
|
|
| Member of the National | |
| Induction | 1993 |
| Vote | 93.6% (first ballot) |
Reginald Martinez "Reggie" Jackson (born May 18, 1946), nicknamed "Mr. October" for his clutch hitting in the postseason, is a former American Major League Baseball right fielder who played for five different teams from 1967 to 1987 and currently serves as a special advisor to the New York Yankees. Jackson helped win three consecutive World Series titles as a member of the Oakland A's in the early 1970s and also helped win two consecutive titles with the New York Yankees. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1993. He now resides in Carmel, California.
Contents |
Reggie Jackson was born in Wyncote, Pennsylvania, just north of Philadelphia in the heart of southern dog town. His father was Martínez Clarence Jackson, a former second baseman with the Newark Eagles of the Negro Leagues [1], who raised his son as a single parent after divorcing Reggie's mother.[2] His grandmother was born in St. Croix. In Jackson's family, Martinez was a "personal" name and not a last name, his grandmother fell in love with that Spanish name and named his son "Martínez Clarence". Then, Reggie's father named him "Reggie Martínez". But "Martínez" in his family doesn't have any Latino roots, except that his grandmother lived with his family a few years in Puerto Rico before going to live in the United States.
Jackson graduated from Cheltenham High School in 1964, where he had excelled in both football and baseball. Jackson then attended Arizona State University on a football scholarship. There, he met Jannie Campos, his first wife, a Mexican-American, learning to speak Spanish with Jannie's fathers. Reggie switched to baseball following his freshman year, impressing coach Bobby Winkles with his great baseball skill.
In the 1966 Major League Baseball Draft, Jackson was selected by the Kansas City Athletics. He was the 2nd overall draft pick in the 1st round, behind catcher Steve Chilcott, who was selected by the New York Mets.[3] Jackson progressed through the minors quickly, reporting for his first training camp with the Single-A Lewis-Clark Broncs, Lewiston, Idaho in June, 1966, having signed for $85,000 (source: "40 Years Ago Today" in the "Lewiston Morning Tribune" June 15, 2006[4], and playing one season for the A's Single-A teams, the Broncs and Modesto, California and one more season for their Double-A affiliate in Birmingham, Alabama. It was in Birmingham that Jackson got his first taste of racism, being one of only a few blacks on the team.[5] He credits the team's manager at the time, John McNamara, who had previously been the Bronc's catcher-manager, for helping him through that difficult season.
In an ironic twist, events during his minor league time would mar the end of Jackson Major League years. The May ll, 1987 cover of "Sports Illustrated" pictured Jackson for the ninth and final time (the first having been July 7, 1969). This cover's headline read, "Reggie Speaks Out on Racism and Pitches for a Front-Office Job in '88." The article, ppg. 40-49, entitled "We Have a Serious Problem that Isn't Going Away" was touted as revealing the racism within baseball, which caused the lack of African-Americans in the Major League front-offices and to promote Jackson for such a position in 1988, the first season after retirement from playing. Reggie wrote: "I went to their farm club in Lewiston, Idaho. There I got hit in the head by a pitch and was taken to a local hospital. But they wouldn't admit me because I was black. Our minor league pitching coach, Bill Posedel, called Charlie Finley, and Finley got me out of there. I was in Modesto the next day."[6]
Unfortunately, a subsequent investigation by the local daily newspaper, "The Lewiston Morning Tribune"[7] within a week of the SI issue hitting the newsstands revealed the opposite. A check of the records of the emergency room doctor showed that he examined Reggie then ordered Jackson admitted for observation. The records of the Sisters of Carondolet, the order of Roman Catholic Nuns who owned and operated St. Joseph's Hospital in Lewiston, concurred, showing that Jackson was held overnight and released the next morning. The newspaper further reported the records showed the Broncs were billed for the ER and the stay and paid both bills promptly, strongly suggesting it was without objection. Reggie has never explained this discrepancy.
Jackson debuted in the major leagues with the A's on June 9, 1967, a 6-0 A's victory over the Cleveland Indians in Cleveland. Following that season, the Athletics moved to Oakland. Jackson hit 47 home runs in 1969, and was briefly ahead of the pace that Roger Maris set when he broke the single-season record for home runs with 61 in 1961, and that of Babe Ruth when he set the previous record of 60 in 1927. Jackson later said that the sportswriters were claiming he was "dating a lady named 'Ruth Maris.'" That off-season, Jackson sought an increase in salary, and A's owner Charlie Finley threatened to send Jackson to the minors. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn successfully intervened in their dispute, but Jackson's numbers in 1970 dropped sharply, as he hit just 23 home runs while batting .237. The Athletics sent him to play in Puerto Rico. There he played for the San Juan team and hit 20 homers and knocked in 47 runs to lead the league in both departments. Jackson hit a memorable home run in the 1971 All-Star Game at Tiger Stadium in Detroit. Batting for the American League against Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Dock Ellis, the ball he hit soared above the right-field stands, striking the transformer of a light standard on the right field roof. In 1984, he would hit a home run over that roof.
| Reggie Jackson's number 9 was retired by the Oakland Athletics in 2004 |
In 1971, the Athletics won the American League's Western Division title, their first first-place finish since 1931, when they played in Philadelphia. They lost the American League Championship Series to the Baltimore Orioles. The A's won the Division again in 1972; their series with the Tigers went five games, and Jackson scored the tying run in the clincher on a steal of home. In the process, however, he tore a hamstring and was unable to play in the World Series. The A's still managed to defeat the Cincinnati Reds in seven games. It was the first World Championship won by a San Francisco Bay Area team in any major league sport.
He helped the Athletics win the pennant again in 1973, and was named Most Valuable Player of the American League for the season. The A's defeated the New York Mets in seven hard-fought games in the World Series. This time, Jackson was not only able to play, but his performance led to his being awarded the Series' Most Valuable Player award. The A's won the World Series again in 1974, defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers in five games. This Series marked the first time that two teams from California played each other for a sport's World Championship, and, through 2009, the only time a team other than the New York Yankees has won three consecutive World Series. While playing in Philadelphia, the Athletics had won three straight pennants from 1929 to 1931, but lost the third World Series in that stretch after winning the first two.
The A's won the Division again in 1975, but the loss of pitcher Catfish Hunter, baseball's first modern free agent, left them vulnerable, and they were swept in the ALCS by the Boston Red Sox. With the coming of free agency after the 1976 season, and with team owner Finley unwilling to pay the higher salary that Jackson would ask for, Jackson was traded on April 2, 1976 along with minor leaguer Bill VanBommell and Ken Holtzman to the Baltimore Orioles for Don Baylor, Mike Torrez, and Paul Mitchell. Both his new team, the Orioles, and his former team, the Athletics, finished second in their respective divisions. Reggie Jackson tied the then American League record of hitting home runs in six consecutive games at Baltimore in 1976.
Besides putting up monster numbers during his nine years with the Athletics, including 254 home runs, Jackson was also no stranger to controversy or conflict in Oakland. Sports author Dick Crouser wrote, "When the late Al Helfer was broadcasting the Oakland A's games, he was not too enthusiastic about Reggie Jackson's speed or his hustle. Once, with Jackson on third, teammate Rick Monday hit a long home run. 'Jackson should score easily on that one,' commented Helfer. Crouser also noted that, "Nobody seems to be neutral on Reggie Jackson. You're either a fan or a detractor." One-time teammate Darold Knowles would seem to be in the latter camp. "There isn't enough mustard in the world to cover that hot dog", he said.
Perhaps the most notable off-field incident involving Jackson occurred on June 5, 1974, when outfielder Billy North and Jackson engaged in a clubhouse fight at Detroit's Tiger Stadium. Jackson injured his shoulder, and catcher Ray Fosse, attempting to separate the combatants, suffered a crushed disk in his neck, costing him three months on the disabled list.
| Reggie Jackson's number 44 was retired by the New York Yankees in 1993 |
The Yankees signed Jackson to a five-year contract, totaling US$2.96 million, on November 29, 1976. Upon arriving in New York, the number 9 that he had worn in Oakland and Baltimore was worn by third baseman Graig Nettles. Jackson asked for number 42, in memory of Jackie Robinson. But manager Billy Martin brought his friend Art Fowler in as pitching coach, and gave him number 42. So, noting that then-all-time home run leader Hank Aaron had just retired, Jackson asked for and received number 44, Aaron's number. On his first day in spring training the following February, however, Jackson wore number 20 (the number of Frank Robinson, who had also just retired) before switching to 44.
Jackson's first season with the Yankees, 1977, was a difficult one. Although team owner George Steinbrenner and several players, most notably catcher and team captain Thurman Munson and outfielder Lou Piniella, were excited about his arrival, Martin was not. Martin had managed the Tigers in 1972, when Jackson's A's beat them in the playoffs. Jackson was once quoted as saying of Martin, "I hate him, but if I played for him, I'd probably love him."
The relationship between Jackson and his new teammates was strained due to an interview with SPORT magazine writer Robert Ward. During spring training at the Yankees' camp in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Jackson and Ward were having drinks at a nearby bar. Jackson's version of the story is that he noted that the Yankees had won the pennant the year before, but lost the World Series to the Reds, and suggested that they needed one thing more to win it all, and pointed out the various ingredients in his drink. Ward suggested that Jackson might be "the straw that stirs the drink." But when the story appeared in the May 1977 issue of SPORT, Ward quoted Jackson as saying, "This team, it all flows from me. I'm the straw that stirs the drink. Maybe I should say me and Munson, but he can only stir it bad."
Jackson has consistently denied saying anything negative about Munson in the interview and that his quotes were taken out of context.[8] However, Dave Anderson of the New York Times subsequently wrote that he had drinks with Jackson in July 1977, and that Jackson told him, "I'm still the straw that stirs the drink. Not Munson, not nobody else on this club."[9] Regardless, as Munson was beloved by his teammates, Martin, Steinbrenner and Yankee fans, the relationships between them and Jackson became very strained.
On June 18, in a 10-4 loss to the Boston Red Sox in a nationally-televised game at Fenway Park in Boston, Jim Rice, a powerful hitter but a slow runner, hit a ball into right field that Jackson seemed to get to without much speed, and Rice reached second base. Furious, Martin removed Jackson from the game without even waiting for the end of the inning, sending Paul Blair out to replace him. When Jackson arrived at the dugout, Martin yelled that Jackson had shown him up. They argued, and Jackson said that Martin's heavy drinking had impaired his judgment. Despite Jackson being eighteen years younger, about two inches taller and maybe forty pounds heavier, Martin lunged at him, and had to be restrained by coaches Yogi Berra and Elston Howard. Red Sox fans could see this in the dugout and began cheering wildly, and the NBC TV cameras showed the confrontation to the entire country.
Yankee management managed to defuse the situation by the next day, but the relationship between Jackson and Martin was permanently poisoned. Nevertheless, late in the season, after resisting requests from various sources to do so, most particularly Steinbrenner, Martin put Jackson in the fourth position in the batting order, the "cleanup" position generally reserved for the team's most powerful hitter. Jackson's hitting improved (he had 13 home runs and 49 RBIs over his next 50 games), and the team went on a winning streak. On September 14, while in a tight three-way race for the American League Eastern Division crown with the Red Sox and Orioles, Jackson ended a game with the Red Sox by hitting a home run off Reggie Cleveland, giving the Yankees a 2-0 win. The Yankees won the division by two and a half games over the Red Sox and Orioles, and came from behind in the top of the 9th inning in the fifth and final game of the American League Championship Series to beat the Kansas City Royals for the pennant.
During the World Series against the Dodgers, Munson was interviewed, and suggested that Jackson, because of his past post-season performances, might be the better interview subject. "Go ask Mister October", he said, giving Jackson a nickname that would stick. (In Oakland, he had been known as "Jax" and "Buck.") Jackson hit home runs in Game 4 and Game 5 of the Series.
Jackson's crowning achievement came with his three-home-run performance in Game 6, each on the first pitch, off three different Dodger pitchers. (His first plate-appearance, during inning two, resulted in a four-pitch walk.) The first came off starter Burt Hooton, and was a line drive shot into the lower right field seats at Yankee Stadium. The second was much faster line drive off reliever Elias Sosa into roughly the same area. With the fans chanting his name, "Reg-GIE! Reg-GIE! Reg-GIE!" the third came off reliever Charlie Hough, a knuckleball pitcher, making the distance of this home run particularly remarkable. It was a towering drive into the black-painted "hitter's background" seats in center, 475 feet away, which stunned the ABC Television sportscasters covering it:
As the ball bounced into the black bleachers, the first time a Yankees player had hit those stands in Yankee Stadium's post-renovation configuration...
Since Jackson had hit a home run off Dodger pitcher Don Sutton in his last at bat in Game 5, his three home runs in Game 6 meant that he had hit four home runs on four consecutive swings of the bat against four different Dodger pitchers. Jackson became the first player to win the World Series MVP award (named for Babe Ruth, the only other player to hit three home runs - twice - in a World Series game) for two different teams. In 27 World Series games, he amassed 10 home runs, including a record five during the 1977 Series (the last three on first pitches), 24 RBI and a .357 batting average. In 2009, Chase Utley tied Jackson's record for most home runs in a single world series.
An often forgotten aspect of the ending of this decisive Game 6 was the way Jackson left the field at the game's end. Ironically, despite everything Jackson had done for the Yankees that night, the uncontrollable behavior of Yankee Stadium fans left him feeling understandably worried for his safety. Fans had been getting somewhat rowdy in anticipation of the game's end, and some had actually thrown firecrackers out near Jackson's area in right field. Jackson was alarmed enough about this to walk off the field, in order to get a helmet from the Yankee bench to protect himself. Shortly after this point, as the end of the game neared, fans were actually bold enough to climb over the wall, draping their legs over the side in preparation for the moment when they planned to rush onto the field. When that moment came, after pitcher Mike Torrez caught a pop-up for the game's final out, Jackson started running at top speed off the field, actually body checking past some of these fans filling the playing field in the manner of a football linebacker.[10]
The Yankees' home opener of the 1978 season, on April 13 against the Chicago White Sox, featured a new product, the "Reggie!" bar. In 1976, while playing in Baltimore, Jackson had said, "If I played in New York, they'd name a candy bar after me." The Standard Brands company responded with a circular "bar" of peanuts dipped in caramel and covered in chocolate, a confection which was originally named the Wayne Bun as it was made in Ft. Wayne, Indiana. The Reggie! bars were handed to fans as they walked into Yankee Stadium. Jackson hit a home run, and when he returned to right field the next inning, fans began throwing the Reggie bars on the field in celebration. Jackson told the press that this confused him, thinking that maybe the fans did not like the candy. The Yankees won the game, 4-2.
But the Yankees could not maintain their success, as manager Billy Martin lost control. On July 23, after suspending Jackson for disobeying a sign during a July 17 game, Martin made a statement about his two main antagonists, referring to comments Jackson had made and team owner George Steinbrenner's 1972 violation of campaign-finance laws: "They're made for each other. One's a born liar, the other's convicted." It was moments like these that gave the Yankees the nickname "The Bronx Zoo."
Martin resigned the next day (some sources have said he was actually fired), and was replaced by Bob Lemon, a Hall of Fame pitcher for the Cleveland Indians, who had been recently fired as manager of the White Sox. Steinbrenner, a Cleveland-area native, had hired former Indians star Al Rosen as his team president (replacing another Cleveland figure, Gabe Paul). Steinbrenner jumped at the chance to involve another hero of his youth with the Yankees; Lemon had been one of Steinbrenner's coaches during the Bombers' pennant-winning 1976 season.
After being 14 games behind the first-place Red Sox on July 18, the Yankees finished the season in a tie for first place. The two teams played a one-game playoff for the division title at Fenway Park, with the Yankees winning 5-4. Although the home run by light-hitting shortstop Bucky Dent in the seventh inning got the most notice, it was an eighth-inning home run by Jackson that gave the Yankees the fifth run they ended up needing. The next day, with the American League Championship Series with the Royals beginning, Jackson hit a home run off the Royals' top reliever at the time, Al Hrabosky, the flamboyant "Mad Hungarian." The Yankees won the pennant in four games, their third straight.
Jackson was once again in the center of events in the World Series, again against the Dodgers. Los Angeles won the first two games, taking the second when rookie reliever Bob Welch struck Jackson out with two men on base with two outs in the ninth inning. The Yankees won Game 3 on several fine defensive plays by third baseman Graig Nettles, and took Game 4 in ten innings. The key play in Game 4 (and of the Series) came in the sixth inning with one out and Thurman Munson on second and Jackson on first. Lou Piniella hit a low line drive, Jackson had to stop between bases, not knowing if the ball would be caught. It was not, and Dodger shortstop Bill Russell stepped on second to force Jackson and threw to first. The ball hit Jackson on the right hip and caromed away while Piniella reached first and advanced to second, with Munson scoring.
Dodger manager Tommy Lasorda argued with the umpires, saying that Jackson intentionally interfered and that Piniella should also be declared out. The umpires did not change their call, and the Yankees went on to win. The Yankees won the series in Game 6, with Jackson getting revenge on Welch with a home run.
In 1980, Jackson batted .300 for the only time in his career, and his 41 home runs tied with Ben Oglivie of the Milwaukee Brewers for the American League lead. However, the Yankees were swept in the ALCS by the Kansas City Royals.
In 1981, the last year of his Yankee contract, Jackson endured several difficulties from George Steinbrenner. Steinbrenner consulted Jackson about signing then-free agent Dave Winfield, and Jackson expected Steinbrenner to work out a new contract for him as well. Steinbrenner never did (some say never intending to) and Jackson played the season as a free agent. Jackson started slowly with the bat, and, when the 1981 Major League Baseball strike began, Steinbrenner invoked a clause in Jackson's contract forcing him to take a complete physical examination. Jackson was outraged and blasted Steinbrenner in the media. When the season resumed, Jackson's hitting improved, partly to show Steinbrenner he wasn't finished as a player. He hit a long home run into the upper deck in Game 5 of the strike-forced 1981 American League Division Series with the Brewers, and the Yankees went on to win the pennant again. However, Jackson injured himself running the bases in Game 2 of the 1981 ALCS and missed the first two games of the World Series, both of which the Yankees won.
Jackson was medically cleared to play Game 3, but manager Bob Lemon refused to start him or even play him, allegedly acting under orders from Steinbrenner. The Yankees lost that game and Jackson played the remainder of the series, hitting a home run in Game 4. However, they lost the last three games and the Series to the Dodgers.
Jackson became a free-agent again once the 1981 season was over. The owner of the California Angels, legendary entertainer Gene Autry, had heard of Jackson's desire to return to California to play, and signed him to a five-year contract.
On April 27, 1982, in Jackson's first game back at Yankee Stadium with the Angels, he broke out of a terrible season-starting slump to hit a home run off former teammate Ron Guidry. The at-bat began with Yankee fans, angry at Steinbrenner for letting Jackson get away, starting the "Reg-GIE!" chant, and ended it with the fans chanting "Steinbrenner sucks!" By the time of Jackson's election to the Hall of Fame, Steinbrenner had begun to say that letting him go was the biggest mistake he has made as Yankee owner.
That season, the Angels won the American League West, and would do so again in 1986, but lost the American League Championship Series both times. On September 17, 1984, on the 17th anniversary of the day he hit his first home run, he hit his 500th, at Anaheim Stadium off Bud Black of the Royals.
In 1987, he signed a one-year contract to return to the A's, wearing the number 44 with which he was now most associated rather than the number 9 he previously wore in Oakland. He announced he would retire after the season, at the age of 41. In his last at-bat, at Comiskey Park in Chicago on October 4, he collected a broken-bat single up the middle, but the A's lost to the White Sox, 5-2. He is the last Kansas City A's player to play in a Major League Baseball game.
Jackson played 21 seasons and reached the post-season in 11 of them, winning six pennants and five World Series. His accomplishments include winning both the regular-season and World Series MVP awards in 1973, hitting 563 career home runs (sixth all-time at the time of his retirement), maintaining a .490 career slugging percentage, being named to 14 All-Star teams, and the dubious distinction of being the all-time leader in strikeouts with 2,597. Jackson was the first major leaguer to hit one hundred home runs for three different clubs, having hit over 100 for the Athletics, Yankees, and Angels.
During the off-season, but while still active in baseball, Jackson worked as a field reporter and color commentator for ABC Sports. Just over a month before signing with the Yankees in fall 1976, Jackson did analysis in the ABC booth with Keith Jackson and Howard Cosell the night his future team won the American League pennant on a homer by Chris Chambliss. During the 1980s (1983, 1985, and 1987 respectively), Jackson was given the task of presiding over the World Series Trophy presentations. In addition, Jackson did color commentary for the 1984 National League Championship Series (alongside Don Drysdale and Earl Weaver). After his retirement as an active player, Jackson returned to his color commentary role covering the 1988 American League Championship Series (alongside Gary Bender and Joe Morgan).
He also made appearances in the film The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!, in which he played the Angels' outfielder diabolically programmed to kill the Queen of England. He also appeared in Richie Rich, BASEketball, Summer of Sam and The Benchwarmers.
Jackson's role off the field has also extended to speaking out concerning race relations and lobbying baseball teams to reach out to black former players to hire them as managers, coaches, scouts and front-office executives. On a lighter note, he likes to say, citing his African heritage, "When I was a boy, I was 'colored.' As a teenager, I was a 'Negro.' As a young man, I was 'black.' As an older man, I was 'African-American.' Now that I'm an old man, I'm 'multi-cultural.'" Jackson recalls, "During my youth, I was called, Nigger, Toad, Spearchucker, Ape, Watermelonhead and asked my father, why I was being called all these names. He replied, 'Son, look at yourself, to look inward will give you the answer you desire.'"
Beginning Oct 6, 2009, Jackson's prominent voice will receive an outlet on Sirius Satellite Radio [1]. Along with former ESPN anchor Bill Pidto, Jackson will co-host the show "October Nights" for a period of six weeks. A press release from Sirius indicated that the show will be broadcast on the Mad Dog Radio [2] channel Tuesdays from 7PM to 9PM. Jackson and Pidto will take calls from listeners, offering their expert opinions on October baseball for both the American and National Leagues. And Jackson will, of course, speak about his own experiences.
Those experiences are likely to be detailed in his new book, "Sixty-Feet Six-Inches," now available in stores and on Amazon.com. The book, whose title refers to the distance between the pitcher's mound and home plate, details his career and approach to the game, along with that of co-author and fellow Hall of Famer Bob Gibson.
Jackson and Steinbrenner would reconcile, and Steinbrenner would hire him as a "special assistant to the principal owner", making Jackson a consultant and a liaison to the team's players, particularly the minority players. By this point, the Yankees, long noted for being slow to adapt to changes in race relations, have come to develop many minority players in their farm system and seek out others via trades and free agency. Jackson usually appears in uniform at the Yankees' current spring training complex in Tampa, Florida, and has been sought out for advice by current stars such as Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez.
Jackson was inducted to the Hall of Fame in 1993. He chose to wear a Yankees cap on his Hall of Fame plaque[11] after the Oakland Athletics unceremoniously fired him from a coaching position in 1991.[12]
The Yankees retired his uniform number 44 on August 14, 1993, shortly after his induction into the Hall of Fame. The Athletics retired his number 9 on May 22, 2004. He is one of only eight Major League Baseball players to have their numbers retired by more than one team, and one of only three to have different numbers retired by two MLB teams.
In 1999, Jackson placed 48th on The Sporting News' list of "The 100 Greatest Baseball Players." That same year, he was named one of 100 finalists for the Major League Baseball All-Century Team, but was not one of the 30 players chosen by the fans.
The Yankees dedicated a plaque in his honor on July 6, 2002, which now hangs in Monument Park at Yankee Stadium. The plaque calls him "One of the most colorful and exciting players of his era" and "a prolific hitter who thrived in pressure situations." Each Yankee so honored and still living was on hand for the dedication: Phil Rizzuto, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford and Don Mattingly. Ron Guidry, a teammate of Jackson's for all five of his seasons with the Yankees, was there, and would be honored with a Monument Park plaque the next season. Out of respect to some of the players who Jackson admired while growing up, Jackson invited Willie Mays, Hank Aaron and Ernie Banks to attend the ceremony, and each did so. Like Jackson, each was a member of the Hall of Fame and had hit over 500 career home runs. Each had also played in the Negro Leagues.
Jackson expanded his love of antique cars into a chain of auto dealerships in California, and used his contacts to become one of the foremost traders of sports memorabilia. He has also been the public face of a group attempting to purchase a major league team, already having made unsuccessful attempts to buy the Athletics and the Angels. His attempt to acquire the Angels along with Jimmy Nederlander (minority owner of the New York Yankees), Jackie Autry (widow of former Angel's owner, Gene Autry) and other luminaries was thwarted by Mexican American billionaire Arturo Moreno who outbid Jackson's group by nearly $50 million for the team in the winter of 2002.
In 2007, ESPN aired a mini-series called The Bronx is Burning, about the 1977 Yankees, with the conflicts and controversies around Jackson a central part of the storyline. Jackson is portrayed by Daniel Sunjata. In 2008, he threw out the first pitch at Yankees Opening Day, the last one at Yankee Stadium. He also threw out the first pitch at the first game at the new Yankee Stadium (an exhibition game).
On October 9, 2009, Reggie Jackson threw the opening pitch for Game 2 of the ALDS between the New York Yankees and the Minnesota Twins.
There have been others in New York City sports history who got similar and comparable "Mr. October" nicknames as Reggie Jackson got.
In the late 1980's, Daryl Strawberry of the New York Mets had the nickname of "Mr. September" for this increased production during the Mets' late season drives for the playoffs.
In 1994, when the Rangers won the Stanley Cup—first in 54 years. Rudy Giuliani, witnessing the first New York sports team championship victory just five months after becoming mayor, called the team's captain, Mark Messier, "Mr. June,"[13] for his goal in Game 7 of the Finals, as that goal won the Stanley Cup. (The Rangers had three different goal scorers in Game 7—Messier, Adam Graves, and Brian Leetch. Messier's goal was the winner, as Vancouver Canucks Captain Trevor Linden scored two goals.).
Seven years later, Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter got the nickname "Mr. November" when he hit a home run to win Game 4 of the 2001 World Series. Though the game began on October 31, the home run happened after midnight, during the early morning hours of November 1. (The Yankees, however, lost the World Series to the Arizona Diamondbacks—the home team won all seven games of the series and the Diamondbacks had home field advantage, and apart from his home run, Jeter had a very poor series overall, batting under .200).
Yankee players Dave Winfield and Alex Rodriguez have been referred to as "Mr. May" and "Mr. April," respectively, as a way of deriding them for their lack of postseason production. The latter, however, has caused many in the media to question if he could be the new "Mr. October" with his explosion in the 2009 playoffs.
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Some good "Reggie Jackson" pages on the web:
HOFer www.baseballhalloffame.org |
Baseball Library www.baseballlibrary.com |
| Charley Lau: The Art of Hitting .300 (1992 Sports & Recreation Film) | |
| Joe DiMaggio: Yankeeography (TV Episode) (2002 Sports & Recreation TV Episode) | |
| Baseball's Best Memories, Vol. 2 (199z History Film) |
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