Kurt Bevacqua

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Kurt Bevacqua
Runs batted in
275
Teams

Kurt Anthony Bevacqua (

Puerto Rican Professional Baseball League
from 1977 to 1981.

Early years

Bevacqua was originally drafted by the

1967 Major League Baseball Draft, but did not sign with either team. After leading Miami Dade College to the FJCC baseball tournament,[2] he finally signed with the Cincinnati Reds, who selected him in the twelfth round of the secondary phase of the June 1967
draft.

He was immediately a

Cleveland Indians for outfielder Buddy Bradford on May 8, 1971, and made his big league debut shortly afterwards.[3] Though he batted just .204 his rookie season, his versatility on the field proved valuable to the Indians. He appeared in 55 games, playing second, third, shortstop and both corner outfield positions, and earned the nickname "Dirty Kurt" for routinely having the dirtiest uniform on the team.[4]

Bevacqua spent most of the

runs batted in. He returned to the Indians that September, but batted just .114 in nineteen games. After the season, he was traded to the Kansas City Royals for pitcher Mike Hedlund.[5]

Major league career

Kansas City Royals

Bevacqua drove in a career high forty runs backing up Paul Schaal at third base in 1973. After the season, he was traded with Ed Kirkpatrick and minor leaguer Winston Cole to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Nelson Briles and Fernando González,[6] but after a short, turbulent stay in Pittsburgh, he rejoined the Royals midway through the 1974 season.[7]

Milwaukee Brewers

The following

second base causing both benches to clear.[9]

His other most memorable moment with the Brewers had even less to do with baseball. He was the 1975 Joe Garagiola/Bazooka Bubble gum blowing champion, defeating catcher Johnny Oates in the October finals.[10][11] Topps baseball card #564 in the 1976 set attests to this feat. He remained with the Brewers through May of the 1976 season. After which, he was reassigned to the Spokane Indians of the Pacific Coast League, where he remained for the rest of the season.

Seattle Mariners

After Major League Baseball announced that it would be going to expansion for the 1977 season, Bevacqua openly admitted that he was looking forward to the opportunity to join an expansion club, though he was still a member of the Brewers' organization.[12] His dream came to fruition on October 22, 1976 when he became the fourth member of the Seattle Mariners, who purchased his contract from the Brewers two weeks before the expansion draft.[13] He arrived at camp that spring to compete for the shortstop job with Craig Reynolds, whom the club had acquired from the Pirates for relief pitcher Grant Jackson. Despite an exceptional Spring training in which he batted .467, Bevacqua was released. The team's explanation was that Reynolds proved himself the better fielder, and the club already had too many right-handed bats off the bench.[14] Furious over this decision, Bevacqua toyed with the idea of playing ball in Japan, but ultimately decided to sign a minor league deal with the Texas Rangers the day after the season started. Though he never played a regular season game with them, Bevacqua's 1977 Topps card (#317) shows him in a Mariners uniform.

Texas Rangers

Shortly before his release from the Mariners, Bevacqua was arrested near his New Berlin, Wisconsin home for driving without a license. He was given a $160 fine and a ten-day jail sentence, which he was allowed to serve after the season ended.[15]

After batting .352 with nine home runs and 76 RBIs for the triple A Tucson Toros in the first half of the 1977 season, Bevacqua was called up to the majors for the second half, and immediately proved himself a valuable addition to the Rangers. He batted .333 with five home runs and 28 RBIs mostly as a pinch hitter. He also disproved Seattle manager Darrell Johnson's assessment that he was a defensive liability as he committed just one error all season while playing five different positions on the field. In 1978, he hit a career-high six home runs. After the season, he, Bill Fahey and disgruntled former Rookie of the Year Mike Hargrove were traded to the San Diego Padres for Oscar Gamble and Dave Roberts.[16]

San Diego Padres

With the Padres, Bevacqua seemed to have finally found his home. Though he still did not have a regular position, he had a career high 346

plate appearances in 1979 filling in at second, third and the outfield. He was batting .268 and on his way to a similar season in 1980 when the last place Padres went into rebuilding mode, and dealt Bevacqua to the Pirates for minor league prospects Luis Salazar and Rick Lancellotti.[17]

Bevacqua's second tour of duty in Pittsburgh went no better than his first, and he was released by the club after a season and a half in which he was given just 70

at-bats and demoted to triple A during the 1981 season.[18] Perhaps the most memorable moment of his second stint with the Pirates occurred in Spring training, when he incited a bench-clearing brawl with the Detroit Tigers after Tigers pitcher Howard Bailey hit the Pirates' Bill Robinson in the face with a pitch.[19]

Feuds and brawls

He returned to the Padres in

Italian
, too. He ordered it," referring to Lasorda. To which, Lasorda responded with the following:

Tell you what I think about it. I think that is very, very bad for that man to make an accusation like that. That is terrible. I have never ever since I've managed ever told a pitcher to throw at anybody, nor will I ever. And if I ever did, I certainly wouldn't make him throw at a fucking .130 hitter like Lefebvre or fucking Bevacqua, who couldn't hit water if he fell out of a fucking boat. And I guaran-fucking-tee you this, when I pitched, and I was going to pitch against a fucking team that had guys on it like Bevacqua, I'd send a fucking limousine to get the cocksucker to make sure he was in the motherfucking line-up because I'd kick that cocksucker's ass any fucking day of the week. He's a fucking motherfucking big mouth; I'll tell you that.

Bevacqua had in fact been batting .231 with two

runs scored, two RBIs and two walks against the Dodgers up to that point in the season. He faced the Dodgers for two more series in September, and went one-for-fifteen. Over his career, he batted .220 with one home run and twelve RBIs against Tommy Lasorda's Dodgers. He was one-for-seven against the Dodgers with Walter Alston
as manager.

Though he wasn't even in the line-up for the day's game against the Atlanta Braves, he became the centerpiece of an August 11, 1984 brawl. Braves pitcher

Home plate umpire Steve Rippley warned Whitson who threw at him again in the fourth regardless, causing both benches to clear and Whitson and Padres manager Dick Williams to get ejected. Eventually, Perez was hit by a pitch from Craig Lefferts, causing benches to clear again. The final brawl of the evening occurred in the ninth, when Graig Nettles, who homered in his previous at-bat, was hit by Donnie Moore
leading off the inning. In total, both managers, both replacement managers, four pitchers and five position players were ejected from the game.

After the ninth inning melee, a fan at Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium threw a beer at Bevacqua, causing Bevacqua to go into the stands after him. He was restrained by security guards.

1984 World Series

The rebuilding process the Padres began in 1980 culminated with a trip to the 1984 World Series. It was Bevacqua's only trip to the post-season, and though he'd batted just .200 with one home run and nine RBIs over the regular season, Dick Williams used Bevacqua as his designated hitter in three games of the World Series.[22]

With the Padres trailing the heavily favored Detroit Tigers, 3–2, in game one of the series, Bevacqua hit a double to lead off the seventh inning. However, rather than having the tying run in scoring position with the heart of the line-up coming up, Bevacqua was out trying to stretch it into a triple.[23] The Tigers went on to win the game, 3–2, making something of a goat of Bevacqua.[24]

Regardless, Williams stuck with Bevacqua for game two of the series, even moving him up from ninth to sixth in the line-up. The Padres were already down, 3–1, to Dan Petry when Bevacqua led off the fourth with a base hit. After moving to third on a Garry Templeton single, he came around to score on a ground out by Bobby Brown. The score remained 3–2 until the fifth inning, when Bevacqua hit a three-run home run to put the Padres up by the final score of 5–3.[25]

He batted a team-high .412 and hit a second home run in the fifth and final game of the series.[26] Terry Kennedy hit the only Padres home run in the World Series other than Bevacqua's two.[27] To this date, the Game 2 win remains the franchise's lone World Series victory.

Retirement

When the Padres released Bevacqua during Spring training

developmental disabilities among other charities.[29]

Bevacqua was also featured on an episode of

King of the Hill
. In the episode he was a ringer brought in to defeat Strickland Propane's softball team.

Sources

  1. ^ Sandy Burgin (August 15, 2002). "Where've you gone, Kurt Bevacqua?". Padres.com.
  2. ^ "Falcons Earn Double Chance to Win Tourney". The Miami News. May 5, 1967.
  3. The Press-Courier
    . June 21, 1971.
  4. .
  5. ^ "Overnight Sports in Brief". Reading Eagle. November 3, 1972.
  6. The Portsmouth Times
    .
  7. ^ Charley Feeney (July 10, 1974). "Bucs Sell Bevacqua To KC, Call Up Howe". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  8. Milwaukee Sentinel
    .
  9. ^ Lou Chapman (May 12, 1975). "Killebrew Steals The Show, 4-0". Milwaukee Sentinel.
  10. ^ "Bevacqua bursts Oates' bubble in finals". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). Associated Press. October 15, 1975. p. 3C.
  11. ^ "Bevacqua Bubble King". Milwaukee Sentinel. October 15, 1975.
  12. ^ Charles Noble (June 2, 1976). "Bevacqua Waits for Chance with Expansion Team". The Miami News.
  13. ^ "Mariner Buy Kurt Bevacqua". Spokane Daily Chronicle. October 22, 1976.
  14. Tri City Herald
    . March 28, 1977.
  15. The Milwaukee Journal
    . August 18, 1977.
  16. ^ "Rangers' Hargrove Traded". The Michigan Daily. October 25, 1978.
  17. ^ "Padres Deal Bevacqua To Cap Day Of Trades". St. Joseph Gazette. August 6, 1980.
  18. Beaver County Times
    .
  19. ^ Charley Feeney (March 26, 1981). "Pirates Battle It Out with the Tigers". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  20. ^ "San Diego Padres 6, Los Angeles Dodgers 4". Baseball-Reference.com. June 30, 1982.
  21. ^ "Brawls Overshadow Braves' Win Over Padres". Sunday Times-Sentinel. August 12, 1984.
  22. ^ Rob Neyer (October 20, 2002). "Believe it or not, Dunston not worst DH ever". ESPN.
  23. ^ "1984 World Series, Game One". Baseball-Reference.com. October 9, 1984.
  24. ^ Bruce Keidan (October 11, 1984). "Sparky Ponders the Big Question". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  25. ^ "1984 World Series, Game Two". Baseball-Reference.com. October 10, 1984.
  26. ^ "1984 World Series, Game Five". Baseball-Reference.com. October 14, 1984.
  27. ^ "1984 World Series". Baseball-Reference.com. October 9–14, 1984.
  28. ^ "Lamarr Hoyt to Rejoin Padres; Kurt Bevacqua is Released". The St. Petersburg Evening Independent. March 25, 1986.
  29. San Diego Union-Tribune
    . July 22, 2012.

External links