Credible journalists adhere to a self-imposed policy of no cheering in the press box. John Denny wanted his Cardinals teammates to do the same in the dugout.
On July 1, 1979, Denny got into an animated argument with teammate Roger Freed, whose rah-rah spirit annoyed the Cardinals’ pitcher.
Manager Ken Boyer intervened before Freed and Denny exchanged punches.
After the game, Freed was demoted to the minor leagues, though the Cardinals said the decision wasn’t related to the flareup with Denny.
Pipe down
Denny and Dick Ruthven of the Phillies were the starting pitchers in the first game of the Sunday doubleheader at St. Louis.
In the first inning, Denny walked three batters, loading the bases, before yielding a three-run triple to Garry Maddox and a RBI-single to Manny Trillo.
After getting the third out of the inning, Denny, who hadn’t won since May 15, was in a foul mood as he headed off the field.
In the dugout, Freed, who wasn’t in the lineup, was “trying to rally the troops,” the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported, and loudly urged his teammates to fight back from the 4-0 deficit. When Denny got to the dugout, the clatter caused by the fiery Freed got on his nerves.
“John told everybody on the bench to shut up,” Freed said.
Freed told Denny, “I’ll say what I want to say.”
Denny and Freed got into a heated discussion. “Boyer and a couple of players stepped in to prevent push from becoming shove,” the Post-Dispatch reported.
Said Boyer: “Roger is a pretty strong man. I didn’t want him breaking Denny’s jaw.” Though Boyer didn’t take sides in the dispute, he noted Denny had a reputation for being moody and “guys who have been around long enough should know to lay off him.”
Denny declined comment to the Post-Dispatch.
Moving on
While Denny held the Phillies scoreless over the next five innings, the Cardinals came back against Ruthven, getting three runs in the third and one in the sixth to tie the score at 4-4.
In the seventh, the Phillies scored twice against Denny, taking a 6-4 lead, but the Cardinals responded with three runs off Warren Brusstar in the bottom half of the inning to go ahead, 7-6.
The Cardinals prevailed, 13-7, with the win going to reliever Mark Littell. Boxscore
After the game, the Cardinals demoted Freed to Springfield to open a roster spot for Game 2 starting pitcher Roy Thomas, who had been in the minors. Thomas was throwing in the bullpen when Boyer informed Freed he was being optioned.
“Roger sat on the bench, staring into space in deep shock,” according to the Philadelphia Daily News.
Freed told the Post-Dispatch, “I don’t deserve it … It hurts.”
A right-handed batter who primarily was used as a pinch-hitter, Freed returned to the Cardinals on July 11, got sent back to Springfield two weeks later and was recalled again when big-league rosters expanded in September.
In 1977, his first season with the Cardinals after stints with the Orioles, Phillies, Reds and Expos, Freed hit .398 (33-for-83), including .421 versus left-handers. He dropped to .239 in 1978, but hit .379 (11-for-29) as a pinch-hitter.
Freed got 31 at-bats with the 1979 Cardinals, hit .258, including a walkoff grand slam, and was released on April 2, 1980.
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