On July 7, 1974, I went with my parents and younger sister to a Cardinals-Reds doubleheader at Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati. It was a blistering hot Sunday afternoon along the Ohio River. I was 18 and pumped with a mix of excitement and dread about seeing the team I followed passionately, the Cardinals.
The excitement came from the anticipation of seeing two Cardinals games in one day. The Cardinals were in first place in the National League East, three games ahead of the Expos, and I was getting my first look at them in person that year.
The dread came from knowing the Cardinals would be facing the Big Red Machine. This was the Reds lineup of Pete Rose, Ken Griffey Sr., Joe Morgan, Johnny Bench, Tony Perez and George Foster.
We had missed by one day seeing St. Louis ace Bob Gibson, who had pitched a three-hitter in the Cardinals’ 3-1 victory against the Reds Saturday afternoon. Boxscore
For the doubleheader, the Cardinals’ starters would be a pair of 24-year-old right-handers _ Bob Forsch, making his major-league debut, in Game 1, and Mike Thompson, 0-2 with a 5.06 ERA, in the second game.
Thompson was yanked after allowing three runs on four walks in one inning of Game 2 and never pitched again for St. Louis. (The Reds won, 11-2. Boxscore).
Forsch, though, was splendid in the opener. Paired against Tom Carroll, 21, a right-hander who also was making his major-league debut, Forsch pitched with poise against a potent lineup.
Griffey, Morgan, Perez and Bench each was 0-for-3 against Forsch. Bench struck out twice. Rose managed only an infield single against the rookie.
Center fielder Cesar Geronimo, the seventh-place batter, was Forsch’s nemesis. In the second inning, after a home run by first baseman Ted Simmons gave the Cardinals a 1-0 lead, Geronimo hit a two-out double, scoring Dan Driessen from second base, tying the score.
In the seventh, Geronimo hit a home run against Forsch. It was the deciding run in the Reds’ 2-1 victory. Forsch pitched 6.2 innings, allowing four hits, five walks and striking out two. Boxscore
“When you give up just two runs and four hits, you ought to win,” Tim McCarver, who caught Forsch’s debut game, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “I’m proud of Bobby. He did a good job, an excellent job. You couldn’t ask any more of him.”
I became a big Bob Forsch fan that day and remained so. His sudden death at age 61 on Nov. 3, 2011, stunned and deeply saddened me.
After my wife and I settled in Florida in 2002, we went as spectators to a Cardinals fantasy camp game at Jupiter, Fla., and saw Forsch as he and pitcher Joe Magrane were walking down the right-field line at Roger Dean Stadium. We called to them and they came over and were wonderful to us. I mentioned to Forsch that I had witnessed his debut in the majors. He smiled and said, “In the pregame meeting, they told me, ‘Whatever you do, don’t walk Geronimo.’ Well, I didn’t.”
Forsch wrote a book, “Tales From The Cardinals Dugout,” which I had brought with me and asked him to sign it. In bold, clear handwriting, he wrote, “Diane and Mark: Hope you enjoy! Bob Forsch”
There is a passage in the book where Forsch writes about his big-league debut:
“Tim McCarver caught my first big-league game … Red Schoendienst was the manager then and all Red said before I went to the mound was, ‘Go out and do the best you can. No matter what happens, you’ll get another chance.’ That was good to hear. I didn’t know Red well enough to think he’d lie to me!
“We had gone over the hitters before the game, how to pitch to each one … Geronimo was their center fielder, and he was real fast and a threat to steal. They told me, ‘Just don’t walk him. Make him hit to get on.’ He ended up hitting a double … and a home run. But, hey, I didn’t walk him.”
Really really miss Bob Forsch. When the Cardinals won in 1982, while feeling somewhat bad for Ted Simmons, one of the players I felt happiest for was Bob Forsch. Along with Ted, he knew what it was like to toil for mediocre teams. Bob took seriously the advice to not walk Cesar Geronimo. Walked him only once in 30 plate appearances!
Thanks. Good stuff.
Don’t know how I missed this one, but what a wonderful and personal story!
Thanks for taking the time to read it and to comment on it, Gary.