A Baseball Career That Ended in . . . a Split Second: The Life and Faith of Jim Aldredge
By Jerry Guibor
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About this ebook
Jim Aldredge was a phenomenal baseball player and signed a professional contract at age 17. In his second season, he was hit in the left eye by a thrown ball. He eventually lost sight in the eye, but he attempted two comebacks and was playing very well -- better than most players with two good eyes. But the politics of baseball and racism made him realize it was time to return to Fresno and get an education. He already had enrolled at Fresno City College and was graduated with an Associate of Arts degree. He continued at Fresno State where he received bachelors and master's degrees while working full time for the City of Fresno. He earned a Ph.D. from Golden Gate University and also studied at Oxford. At nights, he taught at Fresno City College, the University of San Francisco and eventually became a full professor at Fresno State -- all the while he was working full time as an assistant city manager. He was made interim city manager a few times when mayors and administrations would change, but an outsider always got the job. Then, at last, the city came to realize they had the right man all along. He left the city when changes were on the horizon and taught at Fresno State until he retired in 2008. He was named a professor emeritus. He then created a foundation to help aspiring students and athletes, and sports programs.
Jerry Guibor
Jerry Guibor is a retired sportswriter and editor who has written three previous books: A Candle Burned, From Nyet to Da and The Original Edison Field. He also has edited and designed They Put Me in Charge . . . And Told Me I Didn’t Have a Clue, a personal and business perspective by Leif Bilen, and is editing two forthcoming manuscripts, a memoir by career missionary Rob Farnsley (the title is “When a Christian Has Same-Sex Attraction/My View From the Deck”) and Pledging Allegiance, another memoir by Leif Bilen. Each of these works is based in the Christian faith. Jerry has worked as a volunteer missionary with three different mission agencies in Russia and Ukraine for 21 years. He lived in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, in 1994-95, again in 2003, and in Kiev, Ukraine, in 2004-05. He has worked with Christian public school teachers in Ukraine each year since 2006 and continues to visit many of them twice a year. He lives in Fresno, California.
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A Baseball Career That Ended in . . . a Split Second - Jerry Guibor
Copyright © 2015 Jerry Guibor.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
iUniverse
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Bloomington, IN 47403
www.iuniverse.com
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Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
ISBN: 978-1-4917-6128-1 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4917-6132-8 (e)
iUniverse rev. date: 03/18/2015
Text by Jerry Guibor.
Research and interviews by Jerry Guibor and Craig Reid.
Cover design and cover photograph by JG Images.
Back cover photograph of books, Bible and baseball by JG Images.
Various other photographs courtesy of Jim Aldredge, Connie Clendenan and Edison High School in Fresno, California.
Thank you to the Visalia Rawhide baseball team for access to Recreation Park.
Contents
Preface
Prologue
Introduction
Part One The Baseball Years
Chapter One April 23, 1958
Encouragement
Chapter Two Can’t-Miss
Protection
Chapter Three Plans Change
A Temporary Setback
Chapter Four Whites Only
I’ll Overcome Someday
Chapter Five The Accident
Hard Times Coming
Chapter Six I’m Coming Home
Peace Like A River
Chapter Seven A New Beginning
The Great Attitude
Chapter Eight Humiliation
There Comes A Time
Chapter Nine One Last Try
The Sin Of Laziness
Part Two The Early Years
Chapter Ten War Time
The Family’s Naomi
Chapter Eleven Lessons Of Racism
Ugliness
Chapter Twelve Scraping By
Instructions For Life
Chapter Thirteen This Jackass
A Wise Mother
Chapter Fourteen Recruited To Teach Bible Lessons
Early Training
Chapter Fifteen Mr. Crandle
A Teacher’s Teacher
Chapter Sixteen Everybody Can Play
Squeeze Play
Chapter Seventeen The Lure Of Sports
Someone To Follow
Chapter Eighteen Edison High At Last
Over The Hurdles
Chapter Nineteen B’nai B’rith Heroes And Others
Heroes Set The Pace
Part Three The Halls Of Learning
Chapter Twenty He Can Do It
When The Lights Go Out
Chapter Twenty-One Heavy Schedules
Quiet Ambition
Chapter Twenty-Two An Interlude
Pressures In Life
Part Four The Career Years
Chapter Twenty-Three The Volatile Sixties
Twice As Good
Chapter Twenty-Four Somebody’s Always Unhappy
Pleasing Everybody
Chapter Twenty-Five The Classroom Beckons
Continuing Education
Chapter Twenty-Six All-Night Prayer
The Power Of Prayer
Chapter Twenty-Seven Transfer Approved
A Son’s Advice
Part Five The Years At City Hall
Chapter Twenty-Eight A Time Of Survival
Justice Reigns
Chapter Twenty-Nine Solving Issues At City Hall
Tough Decisions
Chapter Thirty An Exciting Time
Hitting The Wall
Chapter Thirty-One The Time Had Come
Moving On
Part Six The World Of Education
Chapter Thirty-Two From City Manager To Professor
Highly Regarded
Chapter Thirty-Three Two Educators Meet
Prize Her Highly
Chapter Thirty-Four Caring For Two Loved Ones
Finishing This Life Gracefully
Chapter Thirty-Five A Simple Memorial
Treasured Memories
Chapter Thirty-Six A Near-Death Experience
A Day At A Time
Chapter Thirty-Seven Another Near-Fatal Incident – Oct. 26, 2007
He Is With You
Chapter Thirty-Eight Retirement And Laurels
A Crown Of Success
Part Seven A Legacy
Chapter Thirty-Nine Edison Honors Aldredge
More Honors
Chapter Forty The Legacy
What Will You Leave?
Postscript
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Appendix D
About The Author
Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight. – Proverbs 3:5-6
The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not be in want. He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, he restores my soul. He guides me in paths of righteousness for his name’s sake. Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me. You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies. You anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows. Surely goodness and love will follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the LORD forever. – Psalm 23
In that old rugged cross, stained with blood so divine,
A wondrous beauty I see,
For ’twas on that old cross Jesus suffered and died,
To pardon and sanctify me. – verse three, The Old Rugged Cross
Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good; his love endures forever. – 1 Chronicles 16:34
Train a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it. — Proverbs 22:6
All verses in this book are from THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®, NIV® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Preface
After the publication of A Baseball Career That Ended In … A Split Second, it occurred to Jim that a deeper spiritual element needed to be added to the book. He and I talked about it over a few months, and we decided that the devotional
approach would be the best. That is what you will find in this newly revised and expanded second edition. The devotionals consist of one page for each chapter. Thus, there are 40 pages of devotionals, each starting with a Bible verse and ending with a reflection.
If you have a copy of the first edition, we wanted you to be aware of the slight difference in the second. But rest assured, the book still emphasizes The Life and Faith of Jim Aldredge. If you have just discovered this book, you will find that it contains two themes running through Jim’s life during his baseball career, his career in municipal government and his career as a professor at Fresno State University.
Those are faith and grace. In each of those areas, Jim applied to his life the instructive admonition that his mother stressed throughout his childhood and in adulthood: Try, try, try and work, work, work, and then leave the rest to God.
Along with faith, the other spiritual element the devotional adds is grace. Jim says that he could not have endured some of the trials he faced without God’s grace permeating his life. Thus, they are indelibly a part of Jim’s journey through life.
We hope that you will be spiritually edified by Jim’s story and the devotional pages. Perhaps you can incorporate them in your daily devotional or daily prayer time, or in your Bible study group or in a class at your church.
And remember: Keep the faith.
Jerry Guibor
Fresno, California
January 2015
Prologue
Upon examination, a baseball exudes a charm that is deceptively soft and maddeningly hard. It’s a siren clothed in cowhide … with an alluring sweet spot.
What is this thing, a baseball, which seemingly takes on a personality of its own? It comes in one size, 9 inches in circumference, and one weight, 5¼ ounces, at most, light enough to be thrown 100 m.p.h. and heavy enough to travel more than 500 feet on the fly.
It even has been said that some batter somewhere knocked the cover off the ball, though nobody has ever seen that happen in an official game.
Under those two stitched-together leather covers, ever so close to the surface, is cotton yarn, which gives way to wool yarn and then tougher wool yarn, but if the cover does come off, when sullied and battered and torn, string is all over the place, miles of it, before the rubber-covered cork center appears for a second, then bounces wildly down the street.
Baseballs come from a factory where they are seemingly stuffed, between all that yarn, with line drives, bleeders, towering home runs, bad hops and errant throws, causing all description of joys and insults. Those taut threads, all 108 stitches, can leave angry imprints on an ankle or shin or arm or worse, looking like a red tattoo, dispensed capriciously, much like life itself. There is no explaining any of it, but why did the ball turn on one of its own? Why did it find Jim Aldredge and his promising career in the Pittsburgh Pirates’ organization come to a halt, just like that, all too soon, in a split second?
There are no answers, only the question: He can still play, can’t he? They tell him he can, and he’s game for one more chance – even if it means interrupting his education, his all-important insurance against life’s ups and down, even if it means one or two more minor league towns, and more political and racial indignities. Especially because he’s only 19 years old and he could hit a baseball as easily as breathing and chase down that siren in the outfield as swiftly as the best could.
Introduction
There is no doubt that Jim Aldredge was a top prospect, and the encomiums and bon mots roll off the tongue easily about him, almost too easily. After all, he last played in 1963, and memories play tricks on us after that many years ago. The stories grow into legends and improve with age, and soon they are masquerading as the gospel. Baseball people swear by them.
At the time, Bob Fontaine, one of the two Pirate scouts who signed him, said Aldredge could be the next Roberto Clemente. The other scout, Don Lindeberg, didn’t go quite that far, but there is always a manager who tags a young player as a can’t miss.
In spring training, longtime manager Sparky Anderson was always saying such-and-such a player would become the next Mickey Mantle,
and that player was doomed, snakebit, and probably didn’t even make Anderson’s team.
Today, scouts and baseball people testify that Aldredge could really hit the ball.
Or: He could chase down long fly balls with the best of them.
Or: He was destined to have a big league career.
Or: He was a five-tool player.
Even though that description didn’t exist in 1956 when Aldredge signed.
So, how good was Aldredge?
Taking into account the unabashed writing style of sportswriters in 1955, which looks as quaint as one of them reporting in a news story our Fresno Grizzlies
in the 21st century, let the record and some box scores tell the tale as Aldredge progressed through his high school years to spring training to his two years as a professional baseball player:
HIGH SCHOOL
McClatchy News Service reported:
The Madera High School baseball squad won its first Yosemite League contest in three years here [Madera] yesterday afternoon when it downed the Edison High Tiger nine, 9 to 8, in an extra inning game.
Later in the same story:
Aldredge led the Edison hitting with two home runs in the third and fourth innings. He was also the mainstay in the Tiger fielding with several near impossible catches in center field.
***
After the final Northern Yosemite League baseball game of the 1956 season, McClatchy Newspapers Service wrote:
The Edison High School Tigers of Fresno, depending on the big bat of James Aldredge and the steady pitching of Walter Jones, defeated the Merced Bears, 11 to 5.
Aldredge blasted two home runs. His first came in the seven run fourth inning, 388 feet into centerfield. His second round tripper cleared the left centerfield wall at 400 feet and is believed to be the longest ball ever hit by a prep player in Merced’s Civic Ball Park.
***
Late in 1956, a Fresno Bee headline and story announced:
Stars Sign Aldredge
For Bonus of $4,000
Pittsburgh Pirate scouts Bob Fontaine and Don Lindeberg signed Aldredge, and Lindeberg was quoted in the news story:
We will take Aldredge to training with us next spring and he will have every chance to make the team. We think he has tremendous possibilities and we were very happy to sign him. We have watched him for several years and I know a lot of teams were interested in him.
Aldredge batted .417 for Coach Mickey Mansini’s Edison team last season and walloped nine home runs.
***
Another Bee headline and story:
Fresno Baseball School
Stars Whip Sacramento
Fresno Bee sportswriter Bruce Farris observed:
Aldredge, the youngest player on the field at 15 years, was a stickout in all departments and coaches on both clubs predicted a fine future for the Edison High School junior.
The big speedster smashed a double and a single in four trips, drove in one run, scored another and made two sparkling running catches in center field.
***
In the baseball school’s playoffs in 1955, The Fresno Bee headline:
Aldredge Homer Leads
Fresno All Star Club To
9-4 Win Over Modesto
Writing from the Modesto press box, Bee sportswriter Farris started the game dispatch thusly:
James Aldredge walloped a tremendous home run to ignite a five run eighth inning rally and give The Fresno Bee, KMJ, KMJ-TV All Stars a 9 to 4 baseball victory over the Modesto Bee KBEE All Stars before 1,000 fans in Del Webb Field last night.
***
In the championship game of 1955, the Sacramento Bee, KFBK All Stars thumped The Fresno Bee, KMJ, KMJ-TV, All Stars, 7-4. In the game story, sportswriter Farris noted:
Aldredge, who at 16 years old, has another year of school competition left, again sparkled at bat and in the field … His rifle throws brought much applause as did his two fine running catches.
1957 SPRING TRAINING
Fresno Bee headline:
Jim Aldredge Hammers
Five Hits for Hollywood
The lead paragraphs in The Associated Press account from March 28, 1957:
James Aldredge, 18 year old [Aldredge would not turn 18 for another 33 days] outfielder on the Hollywood Stars and a former Edison High of Fresno diamond star, had the biggest day of his professional career yesterday when he collected five singles and stole two bases in Hollywood’s 9 to 5 exhibition victory over the San Diego Padres.
Aldredge was signed by the Stars and is expected to be optioned to the San Jose JoSox of the California League. He is making a strong bid to stay with the Stars.
b%26w_Aldredge_Hollywood_box_score.jpgCALIFORNIA LEAGUE
In 1957, the San Jose JoSox edged the Fresno Sunsox 4-2, and Ed Orman reporting for The Fresno Bee wrote:
In the ninth Jim Aldredge, rookie centerfielder from Fresno, drilled a single through the infield into center. The former Edison High School star stole second and third baseman Jim Campbell’s singled pushed him to third after first baseman Dick Minice whiffed. Whitman grounded to shortstop Bob Geels. It was a double play ball but Geels chose to try to stop Aldredge at home. He made an inept throw in front of catcher Nat LeBlanc and Aldredge was already in.
From the same report:
Aldredge also made a sensational catch of [Gary] Rushing’s drive against the wall at the 400-foot mark.
***
The United Press reported about San Jose’s 6-1 win over Visalia in San Jose and said Aldredge doubled twice and singled to drive in three runs for the JoSox.
visalia_josox_box_score.jpgWESTERN LEAGUE
The Lincoln Evening Journal headline:
Aldredge Homer in 4th Gives
Chiefs 2-1 Win Over Demons
Reporter Don Bryant wrote:
Leave it to the Lincoln Chiefs and the Des Moines Bruins¹ to provide first class baseball action.
The two Western League clubs did it again Friday night, with the Chiefs taking a 2-1 victory on the strength of Jim Aldredge’s two-run home run and a eight hit pitching job by lefty Al Jackson.
Lincoln got only four hits off two Demon pitchers, and Aldredge got two of those. But his fourth inning homer was enough to give Lincoln the series win, 2-1, and keep the Chiefs on top of the league.
Des_Moines_Lincoln_box_score.jpg***
Before we enter the Life and Faith of Jim Aldredge, there is one more anecdote. After Aldredge signed with the Pirates, a St. Louis Cardinal scout told him the next spring that they would have signed him for $100,000, making him a true Bonus Baby.
The Pirates made lefty Paul Pettit the first Bonus Baby when they signed him for $100,000 in 1950. Pettit won exactly one major league game before he developed a sore arm. Would the Pirates have taken another gamble? Probably not. Indeed, there were no bidding wars. So, would the Cardinals have really made such an offer? No one will ever know.
Certainly, there is a long list of Bonus Babies who failed. Of course, Koufax was the grand success story; he was the exception. Joey Amalfitano was the mild success story. To be sure, money doesn’t guarantee success, especially not in baseball.
***
Nevertheless, there are two more testimonies. Consider them valid.
Fresno Temple Church of Christ Pastor Harry Miller remembers how Jim was one of the best baseball players in the city of Fresno and the Valley before he graduated from Edison, although he probably won’t tell you anything about this.
Kalem Barserian, the president of American Dried Fruit, who played on teams with Aldredge, said: Not only would Jim have been the next Willie Mays, without question, if he had not suffered the eye injury playing minor league ball, but he is one of the most honorable men that I have ever met. In fact, if I could be someone else in life, it would be Jim Aldredge. That’s how special a man he is.
PART ONE
The Baseball Years
Chapter One
APRIL 23, 1958
When Jim Aldredge came out of the clubhouse to warm up that night, the Lincoln Chiefs were opening a home stand against the Amarillo Gold Sox. They had just returned home from a two-week road trip to Topeka and Albuquerque.
Now, it was time to play catch and only natural that he sought out Tony Washington, one of his roommates in spring training.
Hey, Roomie,
Aldredge said, who they throwing tonight?
Don’t know who he is,
Washington replied. All I know is he’s a right-hander.
Well, that means I’m hitting third, and you’re right behind me, hitting fourth.
Aldredge batted third when facing a right-hander, and Washington, a left-handed batter, fourth. Manager Monty Basgall flip-flopped the two in the batting order when a left-hander was pitching. It was his best attempt at making his lineup more productive.
Know what he throws?
Aldredge asked.
Don’t know that either. But I know you can hit him.
***
It was encouraging news because Aldredge had gotten off to a slow start. It was too early in the season to call it a slump, but he was hitting a disappointing .245 in 28 games for the Chiefs of the Class A Western League.
In his rookie season with the San Jose JoSox, he batted .284 and led