The Cardinals traded the National League batting champion, who also had the best outfield arm in the game, because they didn’t want to pay him.
On April 11, 1932, six months after they became World Series champions, the Cardinals dealt left fielder Chick Hafey to the Reds for pitcher Benny Frey, first baseman Harvey Hendrick and cash.
The trade was made by Cardinals executive Branch Rickey, with approval from club owner Sam Breadon, because for the second consecutive year Hafey was prepared to sit out the start of the season in a contract dispute.
At a time when players had little leverage to negotiate other than holding out, Hafey was fed up with being underpaid by the Cardinals and was determined to get what he considered fair compensation for performance that eventually earned him election to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Special talent
Born and raised in Berkeley, Calif., Hafey was a 20-year-old pitching prospect when the Cardinals signed him in 1923 on the recommendation of Charles Chapman, a University of California professor and friend of Rickey, according to the Society for American Baseball Research.
Impressed by Hafey’s hitting at Cardinals training camp that spring, Rickey, the club’s manager, made him an outfielder.
Hafey went into the farm system, hit .360 for Houston in 1924, and was called up to the Cardinals in August that year. He took over as the Cardinals’ left fielder in 1927 and went on a torrid five-year run, even though he suffered from severe sinus problems that weakened his vision.
J. Roy Stockton of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch described Hafey as “a man who hit line drives against the fences, one of the most powerful hitters ever to wear a Cardinals uniform.”
One of the first players to use eyeglasses, Hafey hit .329 or better each year from 1927 to 1931.
“He was, next to Rogers Hornsby, the best right-handed hitter I ever saw, even though he really couldn’t see well,” Cardinals infielder Andy High told Bob Broeg of the Post-Dispatch.
In the book “The Gashouse Gang,” Spud Davis, a National League catcher for 16 seasons, said in rating the best right-handed hitters, “The greatest I ever saw was Chick Hafey. He was one of the greatest all-around players, too. He could do everything. He had that arm! He could stand against the fence in left in St. Louis and throw strikes to the plate all day long. The ball came in light as a feather. If his eyes had been good, there’s no telling what he could have done.”
Broeg wrote, “His throwing arm might have been the most powerful ever.”
Moneyball
After hitting .336 with 107 RBI for the 1930 Cardinals and helping them reach the World Series for the third time in five years, Hafey sought an increase in his $9,000 salary.
Unimpressed by what Breadon and Rickey offered, Hafey sat out spring training in 1931 before signing for $12,500 after the regular season started. Because he didn’t play his first game until May 16, the Cardinals docked him $2,000, cutting his salary to $10,500, the Post-Dispatch reported.
In his book, “Memories of a Hall of Fame Sportswriter,” Broeg said, “Hafey was most unfortunately underpaid, a victim, in part, of the Great Depression, and the Cardinals’ tendency to play Scrooge.”
Hafey treated the club better than management treated him. He won the 1931 National League batting title, hitting .349 in 122 games, and helped the Cardinals win the pennant. Hafey also contributed 95 RBI and a .404 on-base percentage.
Hafey figured his performance merited a raise. According to the Post-Dispatch, he wanted a $17,000 salary in 1932 _ $15,000 as a base and $2,000 extra for the amount the Cardinals cut him the year before.
The Cardinals offered $13,000 and “labeled him privately as an ingrate who should have been thankful he’d played on four pennant winners in a six-year period, blithely ignoring his contributions,” Broeg noted.
Take a hike
When it became clear to Breadon and Rickey that Hafey wasn’t going to sign before the start of the 1932 season, they decided to trade him against the wishes of manager Gabby Street, the Dayton Daily News reported.
At 8 p.m. on April 10, 1932, Rickey called Reds owner Sidney Weil, who had been trying to acquire Hafey for almost two years, The Sporting News reported. They talked into the wee hours of the morning and came to an agreement.
What the Cardinals wanted most was cash. In addition to offering pitcher Benny Frey and first baseman Harvey Hendrick, Weil agreed to give the Cardinals “a tremendous amount of cash,” The Sporting News reported.
According to the book “The Spirit of St. Louis,” the amount was $50,000.
On April 11, 1932, the eve of the season opener, the crowd “cheered wildly” when Weil announced the trade in Cincinnati at a joint luncheon of the chamber of commerce and Kiwanis Club, according to The Sporting News.
There was no such cheering in St. Louis, just bad vibes.
In the book “The Pilot Light and the Gashouse Gang,” Broeg described the Cardinals’ treatment of Hafey as “pathetic.”
Post-Dispatch columnist John Wray, siding with management, called Hafey “a chronic conscientious objector” who “sulked himself out of a job with a championship outfit.”
Rickey shamelessly portrayed himself the victim.
“I am not saying Hafey owed anything to this club,” Rickey said to Sid Keener of the St. Louis Star-Times. “He made the hits at the plate and I realize I didn’t swing the bat for him. Nevertheless, it’s kind of tough in this business when a ballplayer loses all traces of loyalty. That’s what hurts me in trading Hafey.”
Hafey signed a $15,000 contract with the 1932 Reds and said to the Associated Press, “I’m ready to go back and bear down.”
Coming and going
A first baseman, Rip Collins, opened the season in left field for the Cardinals. Eventually, 10 players started in left for them in 1932.
On April 24, 1932, the Cardinals stumbled into Cincinnati with a 3-7 record. Hafey had asked manager Dan Howley to let him make his Reds debut in the series opener, according to The Sporting News.
Batting cleanup, Hafey had three singles in four at-bats against his former team and snared Pepper Martin’s deep drive to left. Boxscore
Hafey went on to hit .303 against the Cardinals in his career.
In September 1932, the Cardinals called up slugger Joe Medwick, who took over in left. Like Hafey, Medwick would have a Hall of Fame career. He also would run afoul of Breadon and Rickey regarding pay _ and was traded to the Dodgers primarily for cash, of course.
(Rickey had a personal incentive to trade players for cash because his contract called for him to get a percentage of the sale as remuneration in addition to his salary.)
Neither Frey nor Hendrick lasted long with the Cardinals. Within two months of acquiring them, the Cardinals returned both to the Reds for _ you guessed it _ more cash.
Hafey hit .344 for the 1932 Reds but a bout with influenza limited him to 83 games.
In 13 seasons with the Cardinals and Reds, Hafey hit .317. He hit more home runs from the No. 5 spot in the batting order than any player in Cardinals history, according to researcher Tom Orf.
The farm system the Cardinals had back then was a never ending gold mine of talent. They had all the leverage in any negotiations. The Cardinals balked at giving Hafey a raise, I’d be curious to know what they thought of the Reds not only giving Chick Hafey what he asked for, but also giving an aging Harry Heilman more than 18,000 dollars in 1932. You can’t help but ask yourself what kind of career a healthy Chick Hafey would have had.
Thanks, Phillip. The Reds teams of that era were pretty awful. The Reds finished in last place each season from 1931 to 1934.
The turnaround began when Powel Crosley bought the team from Sidney Weil in 1934. Crosley tried to lure Ohio native Branch Rickey from the Cardinals to run the Reds’ baseball operations, but Rickey wasn’t ready to leave St. Louis. He recommended Larry MacPhail to Crosley. MacPhail revived the franchise and strengthened the farm system. Though MacPhail left the Reds after the 1937 season, his efforts formed the foundation that led to the Reds winning National League pennants in 1939 and 1940.
I guess it was typical back then of owners reminding players, patronizing them, saying that they were being paid to play a kid’s game, to shut up. It’s interesting to know the line of players who stood up for what they rightly deserved, the line leading up to another Cardinal – Curt Flood. God he strikes me as an interesting human being after recently seeing the movie/documentary about him.
“a man who hit line drives against the fences” reminds me of what a friend’s dad told me about Willie McCovey, him hearing a tale that a guy was playing first base (I forget who) and Willie hit one and it nearly took his ear off and wound up over the fence.
Thanks, Steve. The patronizing has gone on for decades. At spring training in 1969, after the Cardinals had won two consecutive National League pennants, club owner Gussie Busch held a team meeting and scolded the players for being greedy and selfish.
In his 1971 book “The Way It Is,” Curt Flood said Busch “depicted us as a rabble of ingrates” and “humiliated us to the best of his ability.”
“Busch was using the occasion not only to revile us but to reassert the uniquely feudal privileges vested to him and other club owners by baseball’s reserve system,” Flood said.
It seems so fitting that Curt’s last name is Flood in the way it all changed, the eventual flood of money into player’s pockets which draws so much ire these days, but I don’t know; i’d rather have the money be given to players than owners….maybe a portion, a large portion, returned to fans who spend so much money to see the games or to charities or something.