Monday, October 1, 2012

#13 Dick Gernert





A short digression here before we look at Dick Gernert. The Venn diagram below represents my baseball awareness. The blue circle in the middle is my 'Awareness Sweetspot" and it runs from about 1958 to 1994. The red circle represents players from this 1959 set who's best years were played in the early to mid fifties and of whom I was for the most part unaware of (or at least unaware of their talents). Gernert, Mickey Vernon and Andy Pafko all in this circle.The green circle represents guys who played the majority of their career after the 1994 strike/lockout and of whom my familiarity is confined to having heard their names at best but not knowing much about them.

Off the top of my head I'd include Derek Lowe, Nomar Garciaparra, and Pat Burrell as guys I see on cards and can't really identify with. Chipper Jones is in the latter circle as well. When I heard he was getting the 'Farewell Tour' treatment I went and educated myself on him and his career. Heck of a ballplayer.


Anyway, back to Dick Gernert. The Pennsylvania native played basketball at Temple University before signing with the Red Sox in 1950. He debuted in Boston in 1952 and he hit 40 homers in his first two seasons. He played primarily in the minors for the next two years before he re-established himself on the Boston scene in 1956. From then through the end of the decade he shared first base duties with Vic wertz, Pete Runnels and others.

He played his last few seasons with the Cubs, Tigers, Reds and finally the Colt 45s. He hit more tahn 100 homers in the majors and finished with a .254 average. Once he retired he served as a coach, scout and minor league manager for many years. He looks a lot like Ed Kranepool I think.

Here is Dick Gernert:


Here is Ed Kranepool:

Maybe it's just me.

4 comments:

  1. I've got to do one of those baseball awareness Venn diagrams. I feel myself going over toward your Chipper Jones green circle. Not quite there yet, but soon.

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  2. I like those charts, especially the ones where 3 circles intersect at a very small triangle in the center, with some humorous caption. For example circle 1 could be "all my baseball card knowledge", circle 2 could be "everything else I know", and circle 3 is "stuff that's actually important". The small sliver where they all intersect surely has some funny label, but it's late and I'm tired.


    By the way, Kranepool looks less surly above than on most of his baseball cards that I can remember.)

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  3. I just remembered... the common area above is "Bob Duliba"!

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  4. @night owl I got an email last night from a guy who couldn't believe I didn't know much about Chipper Jones. ::shrug:: I just hadn't rekindled my baseball interest until last summer when I picked up the box of Ginter. I had gone to games along the way but outside of the Astros I really wasn't clued in on stuff. Wasn't long ago I heard that Jim Thome had 600 homers. I really felt like Rip Van Winkle.

    @jim LOL at Bob Duliba I remember everyone called him 'Ach Duliba'. If you google that he pops up as the top hits!

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