Dick Groat
Richard Morrow Groat was an American professional baseball and basketball player, who was an eight-time All-Star shortstop and two-time World Series champion in Major League Baseball. He rates as one of the most accomplished two-sport athletes in American sports history, a college All-America in baseball and basketball as well as one of only 13 to play both at the professional level.
In 1960 Groat won the National League batting title with a.325 average, was the league's Most Valuable Player, and earned World Series championship with the Pittsburgh Pirates. He finished his 14-year career with a.286 batting average and 2,138 hits with four teams. For seven seasons from 1956 to 1962, Groat teamed with future Hall of Fame second baseman Bill Mazeroski to give the Pirates one of the most efficient keystone combinations in baseball history. He ranked ninth in major league history in games played at shortstop and fourth in double plays.
Groat attended Duke University, where he was a two-time All-American, two-time McKelvin Award winner as the Southern Conference athlete of the year, and the first basketball player to have his number retired in school history. In 2011, he was inducted into the National College Baseball Hall of Fame, becoming the first person to be admitted to the college basketball and baseball halls of fame.
Early life and education
Groat was born in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, to Martin and Gracie Groat, the youngest of five children. He was raised in Swissvale, Pennsylvania, and attended Swissvale High School where he earned letters in basketball, baseball, and volleyball.College athletic career
Groat earned a athletic scholarship for basketball to attend Duke University where he was a two-sport star athlete. In basketball, he was a two-time college basketball All-American and one-time Helms Foundation Player of the Year recipient. He was the Southern Conference Player of the Year as well as United Press International National Player of the Year in the 1951–52 season, when he set an National Collegiate Athletic Association record, with 839 points scored.In his final regular-season game, Groat scored 48 points against the visiting University of North Carolina, the most ever by a Tar Heels opponent. The Blue Devils won in a 94–64 rout for their 13th consecutive triumph. Victories over Maryland and West Virginia extended the streak to 15 in the Southern Conference Tournament before the Blue Devils were ousted by North Carolina State 77–68 in the championship round to fall one win short of an NCAA Tournament berth.
On May 1, 1952, Groat had his jersey number 10 retired to the rafters of Cameron Indoor Stadium on campus. It would remain the only one retired by the school for 28 years. On November 18, 2007, he was inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.
In baseball, Groat played shortstop at Duke. In his senior year, he helped to lead the teams to a 31–7 record and their first College World Series. For the season, Groat hit.370 and led the team in doubles, hits, runs batted in, and stolen bases. He was a two-time winner of the McKelvin Award, given to the Athlete of the Year in the Southern Conference.
After Groat completed his junior year of college, Pittsburgh Pirates' general manager Branch Rickey offered him a chance to play professional baseball while allowing him to complete his degree in the off-season. Groat declined out of deference to Duke and its scholarship commitment. At the same time, Groat assured Rickey that, if the same contract was offered a year later, he would accept it. The St. Louis Cardinals and New York Giants also expressed interest in Groat, but Pittsburgh had the home-field advantage. He had always hoped to play near his hometown of Swissvale, a mere six miles from the Pirates' home stadium, Forbes Field. When Rickey repeated his offer in 1952 as expected, Groat signed his first professional contract in June, believed to be worth $35,000 to $40,000, which included a lucrative $25,000 bonus. Groat's contract was signed during a period that baseball's bonus rule was not in force, thus the Pirates were not obligated to keep him on their major-league roster, as was the case with other "bonus babies" of the era.
Professional athletic career
Groat, then 21 years old, joined the Pirates on June 17 in New York, without a day of minor league experience. He made his major league debut the following day and subsequently batted a team-high.284 for the remainder of the season, recording 109 hits and 29 runs batted in.After his MLB debut, Groat embarked on his second career, playing basketball for the Ft. Wayne Zollner Pistons of the National Basketball Association. Four months into the season, he enlisted in the US Army. He chose that time so his release would coincide with the start of baseball training camp two years later. During his military stint, he led Fort Belvoir teams to worldwide Army championships in baseball and basketball, the first time a single base had achieved the feat in the same year. He hit.362 on the diamond and averaged 35 points per game on the court.
When Groat returned to the Pirates in 1955, he led the last-place team in hits and the NL in putouts at shortstop. One year later, he set a dubious MLB record – most at-bats without a home run or stolen base in one season. In an attempt to improve their tenuous relationship, manager Bobby Bragan named him team captain midway through the season. Groat hit a.273 overall, but after his average tailed off in the final two months, he spent more time on his mechanics in the off-season.
Joe Brown was the Pirates' general manager in the final seven seasons that Groat spent with the team. In a 1961 Sport magazine story, Brown described his value like this: " sets an example for the rest of the team. If he goes 5-for-5 and the team loses, he's unhappy. If he goes zero-for-5 and the team wins, he's happy. He's a constant reminder to the other players that a fellow can make himself a star without having all the tools."
At the outset of the 1957 season, Groat hit.319 in April and.370 in May, which put him in early contention for the NL batting title. He finished with a.315 average and a career-high seven home runs. On September 29, he threw out the final Giants batter in the last game they played at the Polo Grounds before moving to San Francisco in 1958.
In 1958, Groat hit.300 and led the NL in putouts and double plays, as the Pirates surprised the baseball world with a second-place finish. It marked the first time that they had placed higher than seventh in nine years.
While the Pirates failed to build on the momentum in 1959, Groat was selected to an All-Star team for the first time in his career. He hit.275 and paced the NL in putouts and double plays once again. The team finished last in home runs in the league, which convinced Brown to pursue a power hitter in the offseason. One potential trade would have sent Groat to the Kansas City Athletics in exchange for Roger Maris, a highly regarded 24-year-old outfielder. Manager Danny Murtaugh opposed the move.
In 1960, as the team captain, Groat became the first Pirate to be selected Most Valuable Player since Paul Waner in 1927. He hit.325 to become the first right-handed Pirates hitter to win the batting title since Honus Wagner in 1911. He sat out 20 days after his right wrist was fractured by a Lew Burdette pitch on September 6. Originally, Groat was expected to be sidelined for at least one month but he lobbied hard for an early return in order to be better prepared for the expected trip to the World Series.
Groat was considered one of the most difficult hitters to defend against in his era and a master of the hit-and-run play, a skill he developed under Pirates batting coach George Sisler, a two time.400 hitting Hall of Famer. Groat had good knowledge of the strike zone, walking more times than he struck out in six of his 13 full seasons.
1960 World Series
While Groat hit a mere.214 against the Yankees in the 1960 World Series, partly because of his fractured wrist, he made contributions in three of the four victories. In the series opener, Groat tied the score on a double in the first inning. He came around on a Bob Skinner base hit to give the underdog Pirates an early 2–1 advantage. The lead held up, 6–4, as Groat and Mazeroski teamed up on a double play for the final outs.In the fifth game, with his team ahead, 3–1, Groat doubled to lead off the third inning. Roberto Clemente followed with an RBI single for what proved to be the decisive run. The Pirates went on to a 5–3 triumph that gave them a 3–2 lead in the series.
In Game 7, the Pirates trailed 7–4 in the seventh inning. Groat delivered an RBI single to ignite a five-run rally that staked his team to a 9–7 advantage. The Pirates went on to win 10–9 on Mazeroski's walk-off home run in the ninth inning.
Trade to the Cardinals
In 1961, Groat batted.275, and teamed with Mazeroski to lead the league in double plays. One season later, he improved to a.294 batting average and finished third in the league in doubles. He also led the NL in putouts, assists, and double plays.While the 1962 Pirates bounced back with a 93-win season, Brown had grown concerned about a pitching staff that relied heavily on veterans whose best days were behind them. The 32-year-old Groat had an inkling that he would be traded while he still had value, and his fears were realized in November, when he was dealt to the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for pitcher Don Cardwell, a 15-game winner the previous season. Groat was deeply hurt by the trade, having hoped to become a Pirates coach and possibly manager after his retirement as a player. He subsequently severed ties with the organization until a 1990 reunion of the 1960 World Series team.
Fully intent to prove that Brown had made an egregious mistake, Groat responded with a vengeance in the 1963 campaign. In his best season in the big leagues, he set career marks in RBI, hits, doubles, triples, on-base percentage, and slugging percentage to finish second to Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Sandy Koufax in the NL Most Valuable Player vote. His.319 batting average ranked fourth in the league, seven points behind the leader Tommy Davis.
While Groat produced a career-high 73 RBI in his Cardinals debut, manager Johnny Keane became convinced that he could be even more valuable as a run-producer. The veteran batted either third, fifth or sixth in the order on a regular basis in the 1964 season, when he drove in 70 runs. He hit.292, played consistent defense, and continued to mentor younger teammates in a leadership role, as the Cardinals captured their first NL pennant in 18 years. He earned the final All-Star selection of his career and led the league in assists and double plays once again.