With one swing of his exceptionally hot bat, Irv Noren struck back at the team that cast him aside and kept the Cardinals in the thick of the 1957 National League pennant race.
Noren was an outfielder for 11 seasons in the major leagues, including five (1952-56) with the Yankees and three (1957-59) with the Cardinals.
A left-handed batter, Noren, 32, was claimed by the Cardinals on Aug. 31, 1957, when he was placed on waivers by the Athletics.
Thought by some to be washed up after undergoing surgeries on both knees and hitting .213 for the 1957 Athletics, Noren went on a tear with the Cardinals and helped them make a run at the first-place Braves in the final month of the season.
American Leaguer
After serving in the Army during World War II, Noren signed with the Dodgers in 1946 and excelled in their farm system for four years.
In 1949, playing for manager Fred Haney with the Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast League, Noren batted .330 with 29 home runs and 130 RBI, but the Dodgers sold his contract to the Washington Senators after the season.
As a rookie with the 1950 Senators, Noren hit .295 with 98 RBI. The Yankees acquired him in May 1952 and Noren was valuable, playing all three outfield spots as well as first base. In 1954, he led the Yankees in batting (.319).
Noren played for the Yankees in three World Series, all against the team that rejected him, the Dodgers.
Hunger to win
The Cardinals were 7.5 games behind the front-running Braves when they acquired Noren. “As long as we’ve got an outside chance to win the pennant, or for that matter, increase our chances of finishing second, we are going to do all we can,” Cardinals general manager Frank Lane told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The Braves were managed by Fred Haney, who eight years earlier had managed Noren with the Hollywood Stars.
After being swept by the Reds in a Labor Day doubleheader on Sept. 2, 1957, the Cardinals fell 8.5 games out of first. Then they won 11 of their next 13. Noren helped, getting seven hits in his first 15 at-bats as a Cardinal.
On Sept. 17, 1957, the Dodgers, who had made public their plans to abandon Brooklyn after the season and relocate to Los Angeles, came to St. Louis to open a two-game series against the Cardinals.
For Noren, it would be his first chance to face his original franchise in a regular-season game.
In the seventh inning, the Cardinals led, 6-5, and had the bases loaded with one out. Ken Boyer was due to bat against right-hander Ed Roebuck.
Seeking a hit to break open the game, Cardinals manager Fred Hutchinson sent Noren to the plate for Boyer, preferring to have a batter from the left side face Roebuck.
Noren swung at Roebuck’s first pitch and lined it into left-center, clearing the bases with a three-run triple and giving the Cardinals a 9-5 lead.
The Cardinals went on to a 12-5 victory and were three games behind the Braves with 10 play. Boxscore
The triple gave Noren, the Dodgers’ castoff, a .529 batting average as a Cardinal.
“We are a hungry team,” Lane said to the Associated Press.
Helping hand
The Cardinals split their next four games, dropping five behind the Braves. The Braves then won two of three against them in Milwaukee and the deflated Cardinals lost their last three to the Cubs, finishing in second place.
Noren batted .367 (11-for-30) for the 1957 Cardinals and had an on-base percentage of .429. He had 10 RBI in 17 games.
After the season, Noren opened a bowling alley in Pasadena, Calif. When the Cardinals played the Dodgers in their first season in Los Angeles in 1958, Noren had several of his teammates as his guests at the bowling lanes.
Noren hit .264 in 117 games for the 1958 Cardinals. He was traded to the Cubs in May 1959.
Noren was the third-base coach for the Athletics when they won three consecutive World Series championships (1972-74).
I don’t know if there is any truth to this. The Dodgers traded Noren to the Senators for cash because they had apparently invested in the pro football team that played in Brooklyn. Story has it, they lost a ton of money on that deal. Irv also has three games to his credit as a professional basketball player. In one of those games, he played along side Jackie Robinson.
Thanks for the info. Research indicates that the trade of Irv Noren to the Senators indeed was prompted by the baseball Dodgers’ need for cash after suffering financial losses in their pro football team investment. Noren played with Jackie Robinson and future Cardinal George Crowe on an integrated minor-league basketball team, the Los Angeles Red Devils. Noren also played for three games with the Chicago Gear of the National Basketball League (George Mikan was his teammate) before the Dodgers’ Branch Rickey put a stop to his basketball career.
Thanks for another great article. I am a baseball card collector (only Cardinals) and your articles bring these cards to life.
Thank you, Ed.