As a catcher for the Cardinals, Ted Simmons helped Steve Carlton achieve his first 20-win season. As an opposing hitter, Simmons hit with power against Carlton.
One reason Simmons was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in December 2019 was he could hit any kind of pitching, including the best.
Of his 248 regular-season career home runs in the majors, Simmons hit 22 against fellow future Hall of Famers.
The future Hall of Famer who Simmons hit the most home runs against was Carlton, who spent most of his career with the Phillies after being a teammate of Simmons with the Cardinals.
A switch-hitter, Simmons hit seven home runs against Carlton, a left-hander.
Here is a breakdown of the number of home runs Simmons hit versus future Hall of Famers:
_ Steve Carlton, 7 home runs against.
_ Tom Seaver, 3
_ Don Sutton, 2
_ Ferguson Jenkins, 2
_ Bert Blyleven, 2
_ Phil Niekro, 2
_ Rich Gossage, 1
_ Bruce Sutter, 1 (See story)
_ Lee Smith, 1
_ Gaylord Perry, 1
Battery mates
Carlton debuted with the Cardinals in 1965 and Simmons debuted with them three years later, in 1968.
Tim McCarver was Carlton’s primary catcher with the Cardinals from 1965-69. After McCarver got traded to the Phillies in October 1969, Simmons and Joe Torre split the catching for the Cardinals the next year. Torre caught Carlton in 20 games in 1970 and Simmons was his catcher in 15, according to baseball-reference.com.
The first time Carlton and Simmons started a regular-season game together was June 2, 1970, a 12-1 Cardinals win versus the Giants at St. Louis. Carlton pitched a four-hitter. Simmons had a single, a triple and a walk, scoring twice. Boxscore
In 1971, when Torre shifted to third base, Simmons was the Cardinals’ catcher. He caught in 33 of Carlton’s 37 games for the 1971 Cardinals.
On Sept. 28, 1971, Carlton earned his 20th win of the season, beating the Mets at New York. Simmons was the catcher and produced a single, a double and two RBI. Boxscore
It was the last time Carlton would pitch for the Cardinals. Five months later, on Feb. 25, 1972, he was traded to the Phillies on orders of Cardinals owner Gussie Busch, who was fed up with player salary demands.
Carlton and McCarver were reunited as Phillies. According to baseball-reference.com, the catchers who caught the most games pitched by Carlton were McCarver (236), Bob Boone (147), Bo Diaz (79) and Simmons (48).
Carlton had a 3.24 ERA over the 358.2 innings Simmons was his catcher.
Mighty matchup
Carlton’s career record against the Cardinals was 38-14 with five shutouts, 27 complete games and a 2.98 ERA.
Simmons batted .274 against Carlton. Of his 34 hits, 17 were for extra bases: nine doubles, seven home runs, one triple. Simmons had a .357 on-base percentage versus Carlton, drawing 16 walks and getting hit by a pitch once.
The most significant home run Simmons hit against Carlton was on June 25, 1977, at St. Louis.
In the seventh inning, with the Phillies ahead, 2-1, Hector Cruz led off for the Cardinals and pulled the ball down the third-base line. Third baseman Mike Schmidt snared it, but his throw sailed past first baseman Richie Hebner. Cruz was credited with a single and advanced to second on Schmidt’s throwing error.
Simmons, due up next, turned to teammate Mike Anderson and said, “I’m just going to look for anything inside that I can pull and hit hard,” the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.
With McCarver catching, the first pitch Carlton threw Simmons was a slider, low and on the inside corner of the plate.
“He might have wanted to get the ball in the dirt or something because usually he doesn’t give me the ball in the strike zone unless it’s outside,” Simmons told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Simmons hit the ball into the left-field seats for a two-run home run, giving the Cardinals a 3-2 lead.
“That’s one of the hardest he’s hit right-handed,” said Cardinals manager Vern Rapp. “That was hit deep into the deck.”
Said McCarver: “Simmons is just a good hitter. He might be the purest hitter in the game outside of Rod Carew. Maybe even more than Pete Rose because Simmons has more power.”
Bob Forsch and Rawly Eastwick held the Phillies scoreless over the last two innings, preserving the win for the Cardinals. Boxscore
Three years later, on April 26, 1980, at Philadelphia, Simmons got another key hit against Carlton, but it wasn’t a home run. Carlton pitched a one-hitter versus the Cardinals. Simmons’ single in the second deprived Carlton of a no-hitter, a feat that eluded him throughout his career. Boxscore
Special deliveries
Among other noteworthy home runs by Simmons against fellow future Hall of Famers were one hit against the Braves and another hit for them.
On Aug. 23, 1975, Simmons hit a grand slam against Phil Niekro, snapping a 1-1 tie in the fifth and carrying the Cardinals to a 7-2 win over the Braves at St. Louis. Simmons said he hit a low screwball, not Niekro’s signature knuckleball.
“I just golfed it,” Simmons said. “He’s been throwing me a lot of screwballs.”
The grand slam was the fifth of Simmons’ major-league career but his first versus a right-hander. Boxscore
Simmons batted .203 against Niekro in his career. He had almost as many walks (15) as hits (16).
On Aug. 31, 1986, the Cubs played the Braves in Atlanta. The Cubs started and ended the game with two future Hall of Famers, Dennis Eckersley and Lee Smith.
Simmons, 37, and in his first season with the Braves, led off the ninth, batting for pitcher Jeff Dedmon with the score tied at 3-3.
Throwing sliders, Smith got ahead in the count 1-and-2.
“Being down 1-and-2 is not the best situation to be in against Smith,” Simmons told the Chicago Tribune. “You’re living on the edge.”
On the next pitch, “Simmons timed the slider properly and launched an electric rainbow to right field,” the Atlanta Constitution reported.
The walkoff home run gave the Braves a 4-3 triumph. Boxscore
“When they say go up there and get it done like this, it’s do or die,” Simmons said. “When you do, it’s the greatest. When you don’t, it’s the worst. I like it.”
Carlton’s final start as a Cardinal was also the final game pitched by Nolan Ryan as a Met. Ryan didn’t get out of the first inning.
Yes. Here is the story: https://retrosimba.com/2012/03/15/steve-carlton-vs-nolan-ryan-fateful-71-finale-of-aces/
What Ted Simmons accomplished against this group of hall of fame pitchers is worthy of notice. The pitchers mentioned, more often than not, enjoyed success against St. Louis. In fact, the years that we had Ted Simmons on our team, those very same pitchers accumulated a won lost record of 118-73 playing against us. On the average, as a team, we hit between . 240 and.250 against them. Ted Simmons, on the other hand has a much higher batting average. In some cases, even 30 points higher. I had never read before that statement of Tim McCarver in regards to the hitting ability of Ted Simmons. All true. And the more you think about, the more you ask yourself. Why did it take so long?
Your research yielded keen insights. Thanks for doing it and sharing it here.