Sunday, October 14, 2018

#175-176 Tom Haller Tom Haller In Action

Seasoned 60’s backstop at the tail end of his career....held his own for LA but the acquisition of Duke Sims to share the job was the writing on the wall....Haller was subsequently traded to Tigers where he was slated to be second string to Bill Freehan....for a while at least until Duke Sims trailed him to Detroit relegating Haller to 3rd string....A decade earlier, Haller made a quick rise into the Giant’s catcher vacany....steady performance from 1962 to 1967 for The City....average 18 home runs to compliment a .248 BA....made the all star team his last two year in San Francisco.....more surprising was dealt to the rival Dodgers a first since the clubs moved to the west coast....new ballpark, Haller’s power numbers dropped but his BA rose by 28 points....Was the Dodger’s best hitter in 1968 with 55 points over the team batting average....drove in 53 of the team paltry 470 runs....brother was an umpire....student of baseball knowledgeable, strong defensive skills, efficient game calling....was intended to join Phillies for 1973....did not play and was released at early 1974.....after 5 years absence returned to baseball in various front office posts....Contracted West Nile Virus in 2004, passed away from the disease after a 3 month battle. 




5 comments:

  1. The Phillies broght Haller in to mentor rookie Bob Boone in 1973 (much like they did with Jose Pagan to support rookie Mike Schmidt the same year), but Haller refused to report. After a year on the sideline, he was released.

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  2. I had heard about the intended mentor role but did not know he refused to report. Thank you for the imput, sometimes info like that isn't written down. Turned out good for Schmidt and Boone were definite upgrades from previous Phillie prospects like Mike Anderson and Roger Freed.

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  3. In 1973, the Phillies went from John Bateman to Bob Boone at catcher, and from John Vukovich to Mike Schmidt at 3B. They also added starting pitchers Jim Lonborg and Ken Brett.

    Putting their disastrous 1972 season in the rear-view mirror!

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  4. Wow, I was just thinking back. Contrary to the present-day Phillies who add unknowns, never-weres, and other teams' rejects hoping for a miracle, the 1970s' Phillies collected these players:

    1970 - Larry Bowa
    1971 - Willie Montanez (later flipped for Garry Maddox)
    1972 - Steve Carlton, Greg Luzinski
    1973 - Mike Schmidt, Bob Boone, Del Unser (later flipped for Tug McGraw), Jim Lonborg, Ken Brett (flipped for Dave Cash after 1 year)
    1974 - Dave Cash
    1975 - Tug McGraw, Garry Maddox, reacquired Dick Allen
    1976 - Jim Kaat, Ron Reed
    1977 - Bake McBride
    1979 - Pete Rose

    The current Phillies are run by a group of chumps.

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  5. Haller's brother was the ump arguing with Earl Weaver in that famous youtube video. Weaver commented on this argument in his book. He said he questioned Haller's integrity because Haller had umped a game with his brother Tom playing catcher once against the O's.

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