Before he became the legendary skipper of the New York
Yankees, winning 10 pennants and seven World Series, Casey
Stengel was a pretty good outfielder for 14 big league seasons and a
second division manager for the Brooklyn Dodgers and Boston Braves. So
uninspiring was his leadership of the Braves, that in 1943 he missed more than
a quarter of the season after being run down by a wayward taxi, leading one
local journalist to quip,
“The man who did the most for baseball in Boston in 1943 was the motorist who
ran Stengel down two days before the opening game and kept him away from the Braves
for two months.”
Stengel hit a combined .284 with 60 home runs and 535 RBIs
for six different teams between 1912 and 1925. He was a character, but got
along well with players, helping him become a manager once he was no longer
able to make a living with his bat and glove. He was first hired by the
Brooklyn Dodgers in 1934, but after three straight years finishing fifth or
worse it was time for him to find a new job. That opportunity came in 1938 with
the Boston Bees/Braves. Although bereft of stars other than outfielder Wally
Berger, he steered the team to a 77-75 fifth-place finish in his
first season with them. Unfortunately, it was all downhill from there.
Four consecutive finishes (1939-1942) in seventh place led
to Stengel’s employment being in a major doubt. An unfortunate intervention in
the form of being hit by a car temporarily stayed his termination.
Just prior to the start of the 1943 season Stengel was attempting
to cross a street near the team hotel in rainy Boston when he was struck
by a taxi. The driver,
Thomas Hastings, was kind enough to take the injured man to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital,
where he initially was placed in the maternity ward due to a shortage of
available beds. A diagnosis of a badly broken leg and ensuing staph infection
led to a six-week hospitalization for the maligned skipper. The injury was so
bad that amputation was considered for a time. Ultimately, it did heal, but
left him with a limp for the rest of his life.
During the 46 games Stengel missed, Bob Coleman stepped in
and admirably led the team to a 21-25 record. Many had fun at the injured
manager’s plight, sending him cards and gifts at the hospital that were
addressed to “Casey Stengel: Psych Ward.”
For his part, Stengel was his typical offbeat self while
recovering. Just before leaving the hospital, he told
reporters, “I guess the boys played over their heads early in the season just
to give me something to sing about on my hospital cot… If we have those close and extra-inning games
when the team comes home, you’ll see me in there swinging at the umpires with
my crutches and my right-leg cast.”
Upon Stengel’s return to the bench, he managed the team to a
47-60 record the rest of the way. While the sixth-place finish was an
improvement on previous years, that and the sympathy from the injury was not
enough to endear him in Beantown. Seeing the writing on the wall, Stengel resigned
from his position on January 27, 1944 and went home to California to reassess
his options. The Braves hired his replacement—Bob Coleman,
who would last through the All-Star Game of the 1945 season.
It wouldn’t be until 1949 that Stengel landed another major
league managing gig. However, this new job was with the Yankees and propelled
him into immortality. Although an errant taxi and unadoring Boston fans nearly
curtailed his career, he pushed through it and ended up a baseball managing
legend.
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