Joe Schultz batted in a minor-league game when he was 14, played nine years in the majors, helped develop Cardinals prospects such as Bob Gibson and Tim McCarver, and coached for St. Louis clubs that won two World Series titles and three National League pennants.

The role that defined his baseball career, though, was his one season as Seattle Pilots manager.
In November 1969, Schultz was fired after the Pilots finished at the bottom of their division in their only American League season.
Instead of it being a footnote in his career, Schultz’s stint with Seattle became a climax because of the book “Ball Four.” In chronicling his time with the Pilots, pitcher Jim Bouton made Schultz a central figure in the bestseller.
All in the family
Though born in Chicago, Joe Schultz Jr. grew up in the family home in St. Louis on Labadie Avenue, a couple of blocks from Sportsman’s Park. His father, Joe Sr., was an outfielder who played 11 seasons in the majors, including from 1919-24 with the Cardinals. In those days, little Joe Jr. “wore a cutdown Cardinals uniform, circled the bases after games at Sportsman’s Park and slid until he was a tired tyke,” according to Bob Broeg of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
After his playing days, Joe Sr. managed in the minors, including three seasons (1930-32) with the Cardinals’ Houston farm team. During the summers, Joe Jr. joined his dad wherever he was managing.
Dizzy Dean pitched for Joe Sr. at Houston. The manager let his 12-year-old son catch Dean’s warmup throws. “I’d catch him all right _ until he really cut loose,” Joe Jr. recalled to the Post-Dispatch.
(Nearly 30 years later, when Joe Jr. managed Omaha, Bob Gibson pitched for him. So, father and son had the distinction of managing Dizzy Dean and Bob Gibson.)
In 1932, just after he turned 14, Joe Jr. made his pro baseball debut.
“My dad was managing Houston and we were playing Galveston in the last game of the season,” Joe Jr. recalled to the Kansas City Star. “He got to the ninth inning and sent me up (to bat). A left-hander named Hank Thormahlen (35 years old and a 20-game winner) was pitching. I got a single to center field. I don’t remember being nervous about it. I guess I was too young to realize what was happening.”
(After a stint as a Cardinals scout _ he was the one who recommended pitcher Mort Cooper to them _ Joe Sr. became farm director of the Pirates. He was in South Carolina to see Pirates farm teams training there when he died at age 47 of ptomaine poisoning.)
Player and teacher
As a ballplayer for St. Louis University High School and the Aubuchon-Dennison American Legion team, Joe Jr. “could pop the ball on the roof at Sportsman’s Park,” the Post-Dispatch declared.
The Cardinals signed Joe Jr. in 1936 and sent him to their farm club at Albany, Ga., where he roomed with another catcher from St. Louis, Bob Scheffing. (Like Joe Jr., Scheffing would play and manage in the majors.)
Schultz reached the big leagues with the Pirates in September 1939, but the next year, in the minors at Portland, he broke his right shoulder when he tripped over first base. Three years later, he hurt his throwing arm again. “It’s tough catching when you can’t throw properly,” Schultz said to the Post-Dispatch. “Like trying to play the piano without fingers.”
A backup catcher with the Browns (1943-48), Schultz excelled as a pinch-hitter. In 1946, he had a .516 on-base percentage (10 hits, six walks) in 31 plate appearances as a pinch-hitter. The left-handed batter hit .386 overall (22 for 57) that season.
After a year (1949) as a Browns coach, Schultz managed in the farm systems of the Browns, Indians, Reds, Orioles and Cardinals. He managed Cardinals farm teams from 1958-62. The former catcher was instrumental in the development of Tim McCarver, who played for three minor-league teams Schultz managed.
Calling McCarver “a natural born leader,” Schultz said to the Post-Dispatch, “He’s got the best hustle, drive, and most contagious winning spirit I’ve ever seen.”
After leading Atlanta to an International League championship in 1962, Schultz was promoted to the coaching staff of Cardinals manager Johnny Keane. (Thirty years earlier, Keane played shortstop and hit .324 for a Springfield, Mo., squad managed by Schultz’s father.)
Schultz coached first base for the 1964 World Series champion Cardinals. After Keane left for the Yankees, his successor, Red Schoendienst, retained Schultz and made him the third-base coach. Schultz also continued to mentor McCarver, who became an all-star with the Cardinals.
“I feel that my catching has become better,” McCarver told the Post-Dispatch in 1966. “A big reason is Joe Schultz. Schultz stays on me all the time, reminding me to work my arm up and throw strikes. He keeps driving me to work harder on defense and with the pitchers.”
(Schultz also liked backup catcher Bob Uecker. He told the Post-Dispatch, “Uecker has an excellent arm. He gives the pitcher a good target. He moves well around the plate and is an outstanding handler of pitchers.”)
In September 1968, with the Cardinals on their way to securing a second consecutive National League pennant, Schultz was named manager of the Seattle Pilots. He beat out two former Seattle minor-league managers, Joe Adcock and Bob Lemon, for the job.
No pressure
Schultz, 51, brought a relaxed, old-school style to managing the expansion club.
“I liked Joe Schultz a lot,” Pilots infielder John Kennedy said to the Everett (Wash.) Daily Herald. “He knew what he was dealing with. He wanted to win, but he was realistic enough to know that our chances of winning were also slim and none. So he took it that way. He was a fun guy to play for.”
Jim Bouton told the newspaper, “Joe was an easygoing guy, very spontaneously funny, very unintentionally funny. I don’t think he could really stomach being a baseball manager. He was much more suited to the backslapping and cheerleading that comes better from a coach.”
“Ball Four” is filled with examples of Schultz’s sanguine sayings to his players:
_ “Well, boys, it’s a round ball and a round bat and you got to hit it square.”
_ “Boys, I guess you know we’re not drawing as well at home as we should. If we don’t draw fans, we’re not going to be making the old cabbage.”
_ “OK, men, up and at ’em. Get that old Budweiser.”
On June 9, John Gelnar escaped a bases-loaded jam in the 10th inning to earn his first save in a Pilots victory at Detroit. According to Bouton, in the clubhouse afterward, Schultz told his team, “At a way to stomp on ’em, men. Pound that Budweiser into you and go get ’em tomorrow.” Then he spotted Gelnar sipping from a pop bottle. “For crissakes, Gelnar,” Schultz said, “You’ll never get them out drinking Dr. Pepper.” Boxscore
(“Some people have said I made all that stuff up,” Bouton told the Everett newspaper. “My answer is that I can’t write that well. I could never have dreamed up Joe Schultz. I’m not that clever.”)
In “Ball Four,” Bouton wrote, “There’s a zany quality to Joe Schultz that we all enjoy and that contributes to keeping the club loose.”
The Pilots won three of their first four games and continued to surprise skeptics with their play the first two months of the 1969 season. On May 27, their 20-21 record gave them a better winning percentage than the White Sox (17-19), Yankees (21-24), Senators (21-26), Angels (12-28) and Indians (10-27).
Tommy Harper, an infielder and outfielder who’d been in the majors since 1962, thrived under Schultz, who told the Kansas City Star: “At the start of the season, I called Harper in and told him, ‘Why don’t you be like Lou Brock? You can make yourself better known and earn some money. You’ve got speed. Any time you can get a jump, go ahead and steal.”
Emboldened, Harper had 73 steals for the 1969 Pilots and they led the major leagues in stolen bases (167). As Bouton noted of Schultz in his book, “He’s letting Harper run on his own and letting the guys hit and run, and he doesn’t get angry when they get thrown out stealing. It makes for a comfortable ballclub.”
The Pilots also had Don Mincher (25 homers) and Tommy Davis (80 RBI), plus a deep bullpen with Diego Segui (12-6, 12 saves), Bob Locker (2.18 ERA, six saves), John O’Donoghue (2.96 ERA, six saves) and Bouton (2-1, 3.91 ERA).
Overall, though, Pilots batters struck out too much (1,015 times, most in the league) and their pitchers gave up the most runs (799) and most home runs (172) in the majors.
After stumbling to 9-20 for July and 6-22 for August, the Pilots finished 64-98.
One and done
Though as Bouton noted in his book, “I’ve heard no complaints about Joe. I think he’s the kind of manager everybody likes,” Pilots general manager Marvin Milkes fired Schultz.
“I have no regrets,” Schultz told the Tacoma News Tribune. “I thought we did all right for the first year. The players hustled and never got into any trouble … We were an entertaining club … In the end, it’s always the manager’s fault, but I can go down in the record books as the one and only Pilots manager.”
Indeed, with ownership in financial trouble, the franchise was sold, moved to Milwaukee for the 1970 season and renamed the Brewers.
Schultz was a Royals coach in 1970, then joined manager Billy Martin’s staff with the Tigers in 1971. When Martin was fired in September 1973, Schultz became interim manager and guided the Tigers to a 14-14 record. He remained a Tigers coach on manager Ralph Houk’s staff through the 1976 season.
Asked his opinion of “Ball Four,” Schultz told Rich Myhre of the Everett Daily Herald he never finished reading it. “I wouldn’t waste my time reading the rest of it,” he said.
However, according to Bouton in his follow-up book, “I’m Glad You Didn’t Take It Personally,” Schultz said of “Ball Four,” “The more I think about it, it’s not so bad.”

There are a lot of quotes here that I remember from Ball Four, even if I haven’t read it for well over a decade.
This one stands out: “For crissakes, Gelnar,” Schultz said, “You’ll never get them out drinking Dr. Pepper.”
God, it must have been degrading to be a professional (and a 20-game winner at that) and have a 14-year-old shot-nosed punk get a hit off you.
P.S. I hope you and the wife had a wonderful Thanksgiving, Mark. The food was excellent on my side, but regrettably I watched a lot of bad football.
John Gelnar, the Dr. Pepper pitcher, probably should have taken Joe Schultz’s advice and pounded those Budweisers. Gelnar was 3-10 for the Pilots. One of those losses was in a start against the A’s. With the score tied at 2-2 in the sixth, the A’s had two on, two outs, when Diego Segui relieved Gelnar and gave up a three-run home run to Blue Moon Odom: https://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1969/B07150SE11969.htm
I’m glad you had a peaceful _ and well-fed _ Thanksgiving Day, Gary, and I’m mighty thankful for how online blogging enabled us to form a friendship.
What an incredible baseball legacy Joe Schultz Sr. and Joe Schultz Jr. formed. You would have to consider them one of baseballs royal families. I can’t help but imagine the fun and exciting childhood that Joe Jr. must have had. As manager of the Seattle Pilots I think that all things considered he did a very admirable job. If you subtract a rough skid during the months of June and July where they won only 15 out of 57 games they actually didn’t do too bad for an expansion team.
Yes, indeed, father and son Schultz were a part of baseball quite a long time. Joe Sr. reached the majors as a player in 1912 and Joe Jr. coached in the big leagues until 1976.
The Pilots had a record of 13-13 for the month of May and 14-15 for the month of June, even through they were outscored by their opponents in each month. I think that shows Joe Schultz was doing something right. Mel Stottlemyre, a 20-game winner for the Yankees in 1969, and Jim Kaat, a 14-game winner for the Twins that season, each lost twice to the Pilots.
As a Brewers fan, I will always have a soft spot for the Pilots. It’s such a unique story, a team playing one year in a city and then moving. I had to shake my head when I read “ptomaine poisoning.” I had no idea what that was so I looked it up. What a horrible way to die. It seems to have something to do with rotting meat and vegetables. I’m reminded to keep meat frozen as long as possible or eat it right away. Hope you and family had a nice Thanksgiving Mark.
The sudden death of Joe Schultz Sr. in Columbia, S.C., while on a scouting trip was indeed tragic. His condition was clearly so grave that his wife Josephine and son Joe Jr. were beckoned and they rushed to South Carolina _ Josephine from St. Louis and Joe Jr. from the Pirates just before the start of the season. They were at his bedside when Joe Sr. died. At the funeral in St. Louis, Honus Wagner represented the Pirates.
A good old “baseball guy.” Could use more of those nowadays. I miss the play-by-play broadcasters, too, as opposed to the current, constant prattle of corporate monotones. That’s my end-of-year rant as we near the 58th anniversary of Charlie Smith for Roger Maris.
I appreciate the rant. I’m in full agreement with you on the broadcasters. Too many today are just shills for the marketing departments of the club or the leagues.
Another example of Joe Schultz being a stand-up guy: Asked his reaction after the Pilots fired him, Schultz told the Associated Press, “You get paid to win. That’s the name of the game. Maybe it was all for the best.”
Thanks for the mention of the anniversary of the Charlie Smith for Roger Maris deal. For those interested, here’s a link to my piece on how that trade developed: https://retrosimba.com/2016/12/08/how-cardinals-took-a-chance-on-roger-maris/
I used to bum around with Joe’s son, Tom. Took me into the Cards clubhouse and I got to meet a retiring Stan Musial. Quite a thrill for an 11-year-old!
What an amazing experience! Thanks for sharing it with us.