’64 Phillies: The sad tale of Chris Short
| By Frank Fitzpatrick, The Philadelphia Inquirer | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
Perhaps the moniker earned such posthumous prominence because, both ironically and literally, it was so fitting.
On the mound, the
Short's
And his clothes weren't all that didn't seem to fit.
Affable, beer-bellied, countrified, and seemingly oblivious to social customs, Short was in fact the son of a
And though
"His father was a judge," said
A half-century has passed since Short became half a mantra of
Short did not appear to be dead-armed in his two losses. Against
After their historic fall, the 1964
Few of their stories, though, were as odd or as sad as Short's.
The pitcher who once threw 15 shutout innings during an 18-strikeout performance against the
Done at 36, he developed diabetes and drifted in and out of various jobs, trying to support three sons and two ex-wives. He wed a third time in 1978. A decade later, a near-fatal aneurysm sent him into a coma from which he never returned.
Short's resources were exhausted by 13 months in a
"I even got
As the coma lingered, few former teammates visited. In time, even his sons stopped coming. "I'm too emotional,"
Finally, on
"There were very few players at his funeral," Mahaffey recalled. "Very few people, really."
A hard thrower signed as a Bordentown senior, Short reached the big leagues in 1959. Initially, he lacked a consistent out pitch and he struggled with some awful
Through five seasons, he was 32-42, so frustrating his manager that Mauch once told writers he'd "trade him for a bale of hay."
Going into 1964, though, Short developed a change-up.
"He had a good fastball and a curve," Mahaffey said. "But once he got that change-up he was really tough. He got lefthanders and righthanders out."
Short and the newly acquired Bunning became the backbone of Mauch's '64 rotation. Despite beginning that season in the bullpen, he started 31 times, threw 2202/3 innings, won 17 games.
"He was a really fine pitcher," Bunning said. "That year we had a little competition going to see who could pitch better, and, believe me, it wasn't easy keeping up with Shorty."
His 17th and last victory came on
A day later, with a 61/2-game lead, the
"That's how he was," Bunning said, "happy-go-lucky."
For the next four seasons, though 1967 would be truncated by injury, Short was one of baseball's best lefthanders. He won 18 more games in 1965 and in '66 became the first
But he hurt his back in 1969, underwent surgery, and was never the same.
He lingered with the
Though he never made more than
"He lasted a day, maybe two," Bunning recalled. "Then he signed the first contract he was offered."
In later years, some who knew him said, Short drank heavily and ran up debts. And, as always, he didn't worry much about what he wore.
"He'd come in wearing one of these
Short was working for a Wilmington insurance agency when the aneurysm hit. Alone in the office, he would not be discovered for three hours.
"I played with a lot of people," Mahaffey said. "A lot of them didn't like me and there were many I didn't like. But I never met anyone who didn't like
@philafitz
___
(c)2014 The Philadelphia Inquirer
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