In a race to determine the slowest runner in the National League, the loser was the commissioner of baseball, and he didn’t even run.
A pair of catchers, Del Rice of the Cardinals and Rube Walker of the Dodgers, were the contestants in what Bob Broeg of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch described as “a snail versus tortoise match race.”
When some of the Cardinals made small, friendly wagers with their Dodgers counterparts on which of the two leadfoots would win, heavy-handed baseball commissioner Ford Frick initiated a gambling investigation.
Frick backed down quickly after baseball writers mocked him in their newspaper stories for being unable to see the difference between harmless fun and scandal.
Slow going
Signed by Cardinals scout Frank Rickey, brother of general manager Branch Rickey, Del Rice was 18 when he began his pro baseball career in the minors in 1941. Rice reached the majors with the Cardinals four years later.
Listed as 6-foot-2, Rice also played one season (1945-46) of pro basketball with the Rochester Royals. His teammates included Red Holzman (the future head coach of the St. Louis Hawks and New York Knicks), Otto Graham (better known as quarterback of the Cleveland Browns) and Chuck Connors (the big-league first baseman who became TV’s “The Rifleman”). Rochester won the National Basketball League (NBL) championship that season. (In 1949, the NBL merged with the Basketball Association of America and became the National Basketball Association, or NBA.)
Like Rice, Rube Walker also was 18 when he became a pro baseball player, signing with the Cubs in 1944 and advancing to the majors with them four years later. Joe Donnelly of Newsday described him as “a large man with a twinkle in his eye and a heart that reached out to people.”
Rice and Walker were good defensive catchers who didn’t hit much. In 17 seasons in the majors, mostly with the Cardinals and Braves, Rice batted .237. Walker hit .227 in his 11 seasons with the Cubs and Dodgers.
Both also were notorious plodders on the base paths. “Neither could outrun me,” Dodgers owner Walter O’Malley, who chain-smoked cigars, said to Dan Daniel of The Sporting News. (Rice managed to steal bases twice in the majors; Walker did it three times.) A good case could be made for either being the slowpoke of the league. Their teammates decided to settle the matter with a footrace.
Amazing race
During warmups before their game on May 17, 1955, at St. Louis, the Cardinals and Dodgers got into some good-natured bantering about who was the slowest man in the league. Rice and Walker were coaxed into having a 50-yard race across the outfield.
(Walker was not the type to back down from a test. According to the New York Times, “he once challenged manager Walter Alston to a billiards match after Alston had taken 130 shots without missing.”)
Members of the teams lined up in two rows _ Cardinals on one side; Dodgers on the other _ forming a lane for Rice and Walker to rumble through, the New York Times reported.
Cardinals manager Eddie Stanky joined some of his players in making bets with Dodgers on who would win, according to the Post-Dispatch. Most of the wagers were for $5. “All told, it was guessed that $45 rested on the outcome,” the St. Louis Globe-Democrat reported.
(Dick Young of the New York Daily News noted that the wagers on the Rice-Walker footrace were pocket change compared with what went on in earlier times. When speedy outfielder Ben Chapman was with the Yankees in the 1930s, he’d routinely race all challengers and usually won. According to Young, “Babe Ruth used to bet hundreds of dollars on every race.” Chapman’s teammate, Dixie Walker, told Young, “The first time, Babe bet against Chapman and lost. After that, Babe always bet on Chapman, and cleaned up.”)
In the St. Louis contest, Rube Walker trudged out to a lead but Rice steamed ahead at the finish and won by a yard. One of the observers, 19-year-old Dodgers rookie Sandy Koufax, recalled to the New York Times years later, “They didn’t go fast enough for a photo finish. It was a study in slow motion.”
Little big man
Walker took his loss in good spirit. “I once was a gazelle,” he told the New York Times. However, baseball commissioner Ford Frick was not amused when he learned wagering was involved. He decided to investigate. According to the Daily News, the wires Frick sent to managers Stanky and Alston read: “You are ordered to submit names and amounts bet by the ballplayers.”
While Frick awaited the reports from the managers, the newspapers ridiculed him for overreacting.
_ Dan Parker, syndicated columnist: “Ford Frick is a man of fine character, but a sense of humor forms no part of it.”
_ Morris McLemore, Miami News: “It would appear Ford Frick might have more to do than worry about the footrace between Del Rice and Rube Walker.”
_ Whitney Martin, Associated Press: “Frick probably feels that from such molehills mountains grow, and that the first thing you know the boys will be … gambling that when they put a penny in a (vending) machine a stick of gum will come out.”
_ Dick Young, New York Daily News: “Frick may have been watching too many ‘Dragnet’ shows.”
Soon after, Frick dropped the investigation, the Jersey Journal reported.
Changes afoot
Stanky, Rice and Walker made headlines for a variety of other reasons in the days following the slowest man contest.
On May 27, 1955, the Cardinals fired Stanky. A week later, they traded Rice to the Braves. (The footrace had nothing to do with either move.)
On June 30, 1955, Walker was carted off the field and sent to a hospital for treatment of a gashed shoulder after Willie Mays ran over him while trying to score. “Walker went down flat on his back, clutching the ball grittily,” the Daily News reported.
(Four years later, in June 1959, Rice suffered a broken left leg in a collision with Mays near home plate. Mays slid hard into Rice, who was straddling the line while awaiting a throw. “It wasn’t his fault,” Rice told the Associated Press. “He had to slide _ that’s baseball _ but he certainly slides hard.”)
After his playing days, Walker coached in the majors for 21 seasons. He was the pitching coach for the 1969 World Series champion Mets. He later was a scout for the Cardinals when Whitey Herzog was their manager.
Rice ended his playing career with the 1961 Angels. He was the first player signed by the American League expansion franchise and was the starting catcher in their first regular-season game. Boxscore
According to the Los Angeles Times, during his stint as an Angels coach in the 1960s, Rice “etched his name into the club’s lore by organizing and winning a golf tournament played in the halls of the team’s Boston hotel (Rice wore golf spikes, glove, hat and pajamas), with the players putting into cocktail glasses.”
After four seasons managing in the minors, Rice was the Angels’ manager in 1972, Nolan Ryan’s first season with the club after being coached by Rube Walker with the Mets.

Are these the origins of The Sausage Race?
The daydream of Walter O’Malley standing on second base after stealing a base and then smoking a cigarette cracks me up.
I love that card’s style, the colors, the triangle shape with Cardinal’s emblem inside and that mysterious house in the background, hinting that Del Rice lives there and plays baseball all day!
Great to read about the NBA’s origins and another baseball player who also played professional basketball. Thoughts of Danny Ainge and Tony Gwynn who never played in the NBA. but was a standout in college.
Hah! Love your line about The Sausage Race, Steve. Wouldn’t it be fun if during the season each visiting team’s slowest player could join in racing the Milwaukee Sausages?
Delighted you appreciate the Walter O’Malley quote. I also like how the Del Rice baseball card design sparked your imagination. Yeah, what’s in that mysterious house in the background? Could be the inspiration for a Steve Myers short story.
Speaking of inspiration, I thought you’d appreciate knowing that during his time (1955-59) with the Milwaukee Braves, Del Rice inspired pitcher Bob Buhl to be at his best on the mound. Though Rice was the backup to Del Crandall, Rice became the personal catcher for Buhl. In 1957, when the Braves became World Series champions, Rice caught 28 games that Buhl pitched that season. Buhl had a 2.56 ERA in the 190 innings Rice caught him that year.
Thanks for the idea to write a short story about the card, the colors and that mysterious house. I like that idea. Gonna work on that.
Having a team’s biggest in the sausage race would be classic and send a bolt of light-heartedness in the dugout. I was surprised to see that Pete Incaviglia stole 33 bases, but got caught 26 times.
Always interesting to hear of catchers working with specific pitchers. Makes me wonder what happened with the other catcher?
I remember Del Rice well from my younger days of managing the ’57 Braves in Strat-O-Matic. I used him as a pinch-hitter quite frequently because his card had multiple home run chances on it. I wonder if Frick wanted to put an asterisk by Rice’s victory over Walker in this race.
I enjoyed your story of why the 1957 Del Rice card was a good one to have in Strat-O-Matic. Indeed, Rice slugged 9 homers in a mere 144 at-bats in 1957. Among those homers were 2 against Harvey Haddix of the Phillies, and one each versus Jim Brosnan of the Cubs, Curt Simmons of the Phillies and Herm Wehmeier of the Cardinals. The homer against Wehmeier was a 3-run shot: https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/SLN/SLN195709040.shtml
Hah! Good line about Frick and the asterisk. Thanks!
All that was missing was for them to don team mascot outfits.
With the Brooklyn Dodgers being known as “Dem Bums,” Rube Walker in a hobo outfit would have made quite a sight.
Both Del Rice and Rube Walker may have been slow footed but they were both valuable assets to their team. Both of them also possessed a ton of baseball knowledge and knew how to communicate and pass on that knowledge to younger players. I can still remember all the kidding and joking about how slow Ken Rietz was. But what a great third baseman. The story about the race and the betting is interesting. Is it true that years earlier Ford Frick investigated a betting scandal involving William Cox who at the time was owner of the Philadelphia Phillies?
In his book “White Rat,” Whitey Herzog described Ken Reitz as “maybe one of the slowest runners I’ve ever seen.”
In 1943, baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis barred Phillies owner William Cox from baseball for life after Landis’ investigation concluded Cox was betting on Phillies games through a bookmaker, United Press reported.
When Missouri voters barely approved the legalization of sports betting in their state in November 2024, jubilant Cardinals president Bill DeWitt III gushed to Sports Business Journal, “It’s incredibly satisfying.”
According to Sports Business Journal, DeWitt was “very influential” in campaigning for sportsbook gambling in Missouri.
Hey, hey, hey! I’m late to the party. Another baseball gem, Mark. I’m sitting here with my coffee with no Saturday plans as of yet. I may watch the Knicks/Celtics or I may end up with my gf in a Marshalls with my eyes glazed over. Isn’t life wonderful?
Thanks, Gary. Great to hear from you. If it’s a trip to Marshalls, I hope your sacrifice is appreciated. :)