I was glancing through a baseball magazine from 1977 the other day -- I've been reading some old Sports Illustrateds from the '60s and '70s to see how much has changed and how much hasn't as far as the journalism and what players and sports were covered, including comparing the advertisements from then to now, but this particular one was Street & Smith's 1977 Baseball Yearbook -- and there was an article on Mark Fidrych of the Tigers, who had taken the baseball world by storm as a rookie in 1976.
White pro athletes in the 1970s were often characterized by eccentric behavior and flakiness, as has been mentioned in a number of posts through the years on CF, and Fidrych ranked up there with any of them. He was 6' 3" and just 175 pounds and was nicknamed The Bird because of a supposed resemblance to Big Bird. But he was best known for talking to the ball as he pitched and just generally engaging in manic behavior on the field.
He was an amazing one-year wonder as a rookie, going 19-9 and leading the American League in ERA at 2.34 and also in complete games with 24 (out of just 29 starts). He even started the All Star game for the AL that rookie season.
As the season wore on, sellout crowds of over 50,000 became routine for home games in Detroit, with large crowds also for road games. He was a national phenomenon now long forgotten, but alas it only lasted that one season of 1976 as Fidrych only won 10 more games the next four seasons combined, with 1980 being his last year. But anyone who was a baseball fan in the Bicentennial Year of 1976 will always remember Mark Fidrych.
This video gives a taste of Fidrych's eccentricities and popularity. There are others on YouTube.
White pro athletes in the 1970s were often characterized by eccentric behavior and flakiness, as has been mentioned in a number of posts through the years on CF, and Fidrych ranked up there with any of them. He was 6' 3" and just 175 pounds and was nicknamed The Bird because of a supposed resemblance to Big Bird. But he was best known for talking to the ball as he pitched and just generally engaging in manic behavior on the field.
He was an amazing one-year wonder as a rookie, going 19-9 and leading the American League in ERA at 2.34 and also in complete games with 24 (out of just 29 starts). He even started the All Star game for the AL that rookie season.
As the season wore on, sellout crowds of over 50,000 became routine for home games in Detroit, with large crowds also for road games. He was a national phenomenon now long forgotten, but alas it only lasted that one season of 1976 as Fidrych only won 10 more games the next four seasons combined, with 1980 being his last year. But anyone who was a baseball fan in the Bicentennial Year of 1976 will always remember Mark Fidrych.
This video gives a taste of Fidrych's eccentricities and popularity. There are others on YouTube.