Jesse Chavez of the Athletics and Madison Bumgarner of the Giants are the MVPs of this past weekend.
Standings after the jump:
Jesse Chavez of the Athletics and Madison Bumgarner of the Giants are the MVPs of this past weekend.
Standings after the jump:
The World Cup is going on now in Brazil, so perhaps there is no better time than now to talk about Frank Borghi.
Who is Frank Borghi?
Well, let’s go back to 1950. It was a World Cup year, with the tournament in Brazil then, as it is now. And Team USA was in it then, as it is now. However, this was decades before the United States was even semi-competitive in international competitions, and the team was made up entirely of amateurs or semi-pros, many of them from St. Louis, a hotbed of soccer much like it is a hotbed of baseball.
It was from St. Louis that Frank Borghi came into the picture. Borghi was the team’s goalkeeper, primarily because he lacked much leg strength to actually kick the ball well. Of course, that wasn’t his main profession- he made his living in the funeral home business, and at the time was driving a hearse as his day-job.
Not surprisingly, his relative inexperience showed early on, as he had given up 3 goals to Spain in a 3-1 loss. It wasn’t looking any easier, with England coming up and with a team made entirely of their top professional players, having already beaten Chile 2-0.
But a funny thing happened: the United States won, 1-0, on the strength of a goal in the 38th minute by Joe Gaetjen, a Haitian cook (others say he was a dishwasher or student, or possibly all three) who lived in New York and was only on the team due to the lax FIFA citizenship regulations of the time. The win wouldn’t have been possible without Borghi, who constantly stopped the English onslaught, holding them scoreless despite 20 shots on goal.
The end result was a shocker. It is said (possibly inaccurately) that many newspapers around the world, not believing the result, printed it as a 10-0 win for England, having thought there was a mistake. It probably looked even more shocking a few days later, when the USA was trounced by Chile, 5-0.
Which brings us back to Borghi. After all, he was a goalie mainly because he didn’t have much leg strength, which begs the question of how he got into soccer in the first place?
The answer is that originally he didn’t. No, his true love was baseball- soccer was initially just a hobby to stay fit during the off-season. In fact, Borghi was a good enough player that he was briefly a professional, playing catcher in the very low minors of the Cardinals system in 1946:
| Year | Age | AgeDif | Tm | Lg | Lev | Aff | G | PA | AB | R | H | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | SB | CS | BB | SO | TB | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1946 | 21 | -1.4 | Carthage | KOML | D | STL | 103 | 272 | 71 | 9 | 6 | 0 | .261 | .338 | 92 | |||||||||
| 1 Season | 103 | 272 | 272 | 71 | 9 | 6 | 0 | .261 | .261 | .338 | .599 | 92 | ||||||||||||
While in Carthage, Borghi would have likely caught for future MLB pitchers Cloyd Boyer and Bob Habenicht. Borghi, however, would never reach anywhere close to the bigs as a baseball player- according to Baseball Reference, 1946 would be his only year professionally (other sources say that he played more than that year, but it’s possible that those were in non-affiliated leagues or simply have been lost due to the haphazard score-keeping and coverage of the minors at the time). After his professional baseball career ended, he spent more of his time on soccer… which is how a washed-up catcher helped Team USA pull off one of the biggest upsets in soccer history.
Borghi still lives in St. Louis and is a member of the St. Louis Sports Hall of Fame and the National Soccer Hall of Fame.
Seth Smith of the Padres went 3-3 with 2 HRs and a walk yesterday, and so, I give him the MVP award. It’s his second of the season!
Standings after the jump, of course:
Zack Wheeler had a complete game victory yesterday for the Mets, and he’s the MVP of Yesterday.
Standings after the jump, as usual:
Sometimes, it’s better to just let the Tweets tell the story:
Today, I get to see Bartolo Colon batting. In person. This may rival being at the Game 7 of the 2011 World Series.
— Matt Sebek (@MattSebek) June 18, 2014
If Bartolo Colon puts the ball in play and gets to run, don’t even ask me for my ticket stub. There is some memorabilia that is priceless.
— Matt Sebek (@MattSebek) June 18, 2014
Bartolo Colon leads off the 6th. I predict he gets his first hit of the season. #NL4EVA
— Marc Carig (@MarcCarig) June 18, 2014
Bartolo Colon just doubled.
— Anthony DiComo (@AnthonyDiComo) June 18, 2014
BARTOLO COLON JUST HIT A DOUBLE AND @MARCCARIG IS A GENIUS AND EVERYTHING IS AMAZING.
— Jared Diamond (@jareddiamond) June 18, 2014
BARTOLO COLON WITH THE METS’ FIRST EXTRA BASE HIT OF THE DAY. HELPING HIS OWN CAUSE. #NL4EVA
— Marc Carig (@MarcCarig) June 18, 2014
My day is complete. I just watched Bartolo Colon hit a ball down the line and make it to second.
— Jenifer Langosch (@LangoschMLB) June 18, 2014
You mean he allowed one, right? RIGHT?! RT @paul_boye: BARTOLO COLON JUST DOUBLED
— Beyond the Box Score (@BtBScore) June 18, 2014
Bartolo Colon just doubled. It was beautiful.
— Drew Silva (@drewsilv) June 18, 2014
Looks like I missed history.
— D.J. Short (@djshort) June 18, 2014
Bobby Abreu is fanning Bartolo Colon in the dugout after doubling and scoring in the 6th inning. #Mets
— Rich MacLeod (@richmacleod) June 18, 2014
See how dumb the DH is?
— Drew Silva (@drewsilv) June 18, 2014
It’s an impressive twitter hoax to get all of the diaspora that I follow to try and convince me that Bartolo Colon hit a double today.
— Pat Lackey (@whygavs) June 18, 2014
I MISSED THE BARTOLO DOUBLE I AM SO UPSET
— Lana Berry (@Lana) June 18, 2014
Ladies and gentlemen, Bartolo Colon’s first career double. http://t.co/hom4YPo6aF
— Cut4 (@Cut4) June 18, 2014
Bartolo Colon personifies the #NL4EVA movement.
— Marc Carig (@MarcCarig) June 18, 2014
42,221 witnessed Bartolo’s first career double. But 102,221 will claim that they did.
— Marc Carig (@MarcCarig) June 18, 2014
BARTOLO COLON HIT A DOUBLE. THIS IS NOT A DRILL. http://t.co/swQ0Leoa5o https://t.co/KvTJLglm2w
— SB Nation (@SBNation) June 18, 2014
Bartolo Colon outscored Spain today. #THEPRESTIGE
— Ryan Nanni (@celebrityhottub) June 18, 2014
Bartolo Colon hit a double today if you need reassurance that your dreams are worth believing in.
— Reid Wisdom Belew (@ReidBelew) June 18, 2014
Highest Game Scores in history, 9-inning game:
Kerry Wood’s 21-K one-hitter: 105
Clayton Kershaw’s No-Hitter Last Night: 102
…And then every other game ever pitched, including perfect games.
Gee, I wonder who the MVP of Yesterday is?
Standings after the jump:
Tony Gwynn, who sadly has passed away at a far-too-young 54, faced Greg Maddux- perhaps the greatest pitcher of the expansion era- a total of 107 times (Regular and Post Season).
He never struck out. Not even once.
Rest in Peace, Tony. You were the greatest hitter since Ted Williams, and the world of baseball is a sadder place without you in it.
Lance Lynn, Danny Duffy and… Vance Worley?
Vance Worley?
Weird.
Standings after the jump: