17 Aug

on this date

Baseball historians might remember this as the date in 1920 that Cleveland shortstop Ray Chapman died after being hit by a pitch from the New York Yankees’ Carl Mays; it’s the only on-field death in major league history. Some might also remember this as the date of Pete Rose’s last big league game in 1986; he struck out as a pinch hitter for Cincinnati against San Diego’s Goose Gossage.
And, yes, a couple things happened on Aug. 17 that are of local significance:
Jim Davenport, one of the best players to come out of Southern Miss, was born on this date in 1933 in Siluria, Ala. Davenport, nicknamed “Peanut,” signed with San Francisco in 1954 and spent all of his 13 big league seasons (1958-70) with the Giants before transitioning into off-field duties with the organization. He managed the team in 1985. A third baseman, he .258 with 77 homers and 456 RBIs, made two All-Star teams and played on the Giants’ 1962 World Series club that lost in seven games to the New York Yankees. Davenport batted .297 with 14 homers that season and homered off Sandy Koufax in the playoff series against the Los Angeles Dodgers. He died in 2016 at age 82.
Sammy Vick, a Batesville native who played five years in the majors, died on this date in 1986. He was 91. Vick is perhaps best known as the player who was displaced in right field when the Yankees famously bought Babe Ruth from the Boston Red Sox before the 1920 season. Vick hit .248 with 26 extra-base hits, nine steals and 59 runs in 106 games in 1919. Vick and Ruth reportedly became good friends during their one season together. Vick played very little in 1920 — while Ruth was blasting 54 homers — and moved on to Boston in 1921, his last year in the majors. A Millsaps College alumnus, he hit .248 in 213 games for his big league career.

05 Jan

sudden change

On this date in 1920, the course of baseball history – and Sammy Vick’s career – changed. The Boston Red Sox, under new ownership, sold their best player, Babe Ruth, to the New York Yankees for the sum of $125,000. Ruth, who would come to be regarded by some as the best player ever, transformed the Yankees into a dynasty that became major league baseball’s iconic franchise. The “cursed” Red Sox, who had won three World Series with Ruth, fell into a decades-long funk that only recently ended. Ruth was a two-way star for the Sox, hitting a record 29 homers as their left fielder and going 9-5 on the mound in 1919. The Yankees made him a fulltime outfielder in 1920, and he played mostly in right, where he displaced the former starter, Batesville native and Millsaps College alum Vick. After missing most of the 1918 season while serving in the military, Vick, then 24, earned the Yanks’ right field job in 1919. He had an up-and-down year, batting .248 with two homers, 15 doubles and nine triples in 106 games. Ruth’s smashing arrival – he hit 59 homers in 1920 – was the beginning of the end for Vick, who got into just 51 games that year, then was traded to the Red Sox in ’21. That was his final big league season.