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Dodger star Clem Labine dies at age 80

milagros317

Wielder of 500 Feathers
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Rest in peace, Clem. I well remember your role on the 1955 World Championship team.

The AP wire service story:
VERO BEACH, Fla. -- Clem Labine, a relief pitcher who threw two of baseball's most significant shutouts in his role as a part-time starter and pitched for two Dodgers World Series teams in the 1950s, died Friday. He was 80.

Clem Labine had been in a coma for more than a week after brain surgery.Labine had been in a coma at Indian River Medical Center in Vero Beach for more than a week following brain surgery to explore a mass in his head, the team announced, and hospital spokeswoman Kim Leach-Wright confirmed his death.

Labine was hospitalized Feb. 13 because of pneumonia, shortly after completing a stint as an instructor at an adult "fantasy camp" at the Dodgers' training camp.

"He was not recognized the way he should have been. He was a great pitcher, but he was surrounded by too many stars," said Tommy Lasorda, the former Dodgers manager who was Labine's teammate. "He played the game the way it was supposed to be played. He gave it everything he had, he got along with everyone and everyone loved him."

Labine spent 13 seasons in the major leagues, mostly as a bullpen specialist with the Dodgers, first in Brooklyn and then in Los Angeles. He also pitched with Detroit and Pittsburgh, and briefly for the New York Mets.

"I always thought Clem would've had a great career as a starting pitcher," former teammate Carl Erskine said. "But he told me, 'I didn't want to start. I liked the pressure of coming into the game with everything on the line.' "

In 1951, his first full major league season, Labine was thrust in the middle of the three-game National League pennant playoff between the Dodgers and New York Giants. After the Giants won the opener, Brooklyn had no regular starter available for Game 2. Labine got the assignment by default and threw a six-hit shutout to keep the Dodgers alive in the best-of-three series. Bobby Thomson's ninth-inning home run won the pennant for the Giants the next day.

The playoff shutout came in just Labine's sixth major league start and 15th game. He would throw another one, allowing just seven hits in Game 6 of the 1956 World Series and beating the New York Yankees 1-0 in 10 innings to force a seventh game, which the Yankees won. That shutout came a day after Don Larsen's perfect game, the only no-hitter in World Series history.

"He had the heart of a lion and the intelligence of a wily fox, and he was a nice guy, too," Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully said. "He will be truly missed by all who knew him."

Labine played football, hockey and baseball growing up in Woonsocket, R.I., and volunteered for the paratroopers during World War II. He was signed by the Dodgers in 1946 almost by accident when a scheduled tryout with the Boston Braves fell through.

Labine came to Brooklyn in 1950, appearing in just one game. He was the handyman of the Dodgers staff in 1951, posting a 5-1 record with a 2.20 earned-run average and was comfortable as both a reliever and occasional starter. He won eight games the next season and by 1953, he had become Brooklyn's main man out of the bullpen, with 10 of his 11 victories that year coming in relief.

That season had a disappointing ending when he appeared in three World Series games against the Yankees and was tagged with two losses, including the decisive sixth game when he gave up the winning hit to Billy Martin in the ninth inning.

Two years later, in 1955, Labine enjoyed his best season, leading the league with 60 appearances and going 13-5, with 10 victories and 11 saves out of the bullpen. The Dodgers captured their first World Series that year with Labine winning Game 4 with 4 1/3 innings of relief and coming back the next day to pitch three more innings and save Game 5. That season, Labine went 3-for-31 at bat and all three hits were home runs.

Labine led the league in saves each of the next two seasons with 19 in 1956 and 17 in 1957, making the All-Star team both years. Relying on a wicked curve ball and sinker, he had uncanny success against Stan Musial, retiring the Hall of Famer 49 straight times.

Labine accompanied the Dodgers on the move from Brooklyn to Los Angeles in 1958 and was with the team when it won the World Series in 1959. He was dealt to Detroit and then on to Pittsburgh in 1960 and went 3-0 with a 1.48 ERA for the world champion Pirates.

After one more season with the Pirates, Labine was drafted by the expansion Mets in 1962. He appeared in just three games before retiring and returning to Rhode Island as a partner in a company that manufactured golf clothes and other sports wear.

Labine was a central character in "The Boys of Summer," Roger Kahn's book of reminiscences with the old Dodgers, which told of how the pitcher's son, Jay, lost a leg when he stepped on a land mine during the Vietnam War.

He is survived by his wife, Barbara; son, Clem Labine Jr. of Woonsocket, R.I.; daughters Barbara Grubbs of Reno Nev., Gail Ponanski of Smithfield, R.I., Kim Archambault of Smithfield, and Susan Gershkoff of Lincoln, R.I.; five grandchildren and one great grandchild.

From the Dodgers official website:

VERO BEACH, Fla. -- Clem Labine, one of
"The Boys of Summer" on the Brooklyn Dodgers teams of the 1950s chronicled by author Roger Kahn, died on Friday after a brief illness. He was 80.
"I had the pleasure of meeting Clem Labine during the 50th anniversary celebration of the 1955 World Series championship," said Dodgers owner Frank McCourt. "The memories of Clem's career will forever be remembered by his loyal fans."

Labine, a right-handed relief pitcher who made an occasional clutch start, pitched 13 seasons in the Major Leagues, was a two-time All-Star and appeared in five World Series. Labine's best season was 1955, when he went 13-5 with a 3.24 ERA, leading the league with 60 appearances and finishing 15th in MVP voting as the Dodgers won their first World Series championship.

"Clem Labine was one of the main reasons the Dodgers won it all in 1955," said Hall of Fame announcer Vin Scully. "He had the heart of a lion and the intelligence of a wily fox ... and he was a nice guy, too. He will be truly missed by all who knew him."

Labine pitched in four games in that World Series, going 1-0 with a 2.89 ERA. Although save totals were not kept in those days, retroactively he was credited with leading the league in saves in 1956-57.

He was signed by the Dodgers before the 1944 season, spent seven years in the Minor Leagues and was traded by the Dodgers in 1960 to the Tigers. He also pitched for the Mets.

"Clem Labine was one of the greatest guys I had the pleasure of playing with," said former teammate Tom Lasorda. "He represented the Dodgers with class, dignity and character. He was one of the finest pitchers to ever play the game. He was a great family man, and we're going to miss him."

A day after Don Larsen's perfect game for the Yankees in the 1956 World Series, Labine started and pitched a 10-inning, 1-0 shutout in Game 6.

"I always thought Clem would've had a great career as a starting pitcher," said former teammate Carl Erskine. "But he told me, 'I didn't want to start. I liked the pressure of coming into the game with everything on the line. I could also do it more often as a reliever.' He told me that this past month at the Dodgers Adult Camp."
 
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Sorry to hear that Mil's.I cant say i remember him,but i do hope he will R.I.P.
 
Another one passes...

Where he's going, it will be a perpetual Ebbets Field...where you see the smoke from thousands of cigarettes wafting upwards in the afternoon sun, you hear the cheers and the profanity mixing in with Hilda Chester's ever present cowbell, and you smell the hot dogs carried around by the vendors in wicker baskets. Here, the ball still rockets off a bat towards right field, where there's no question of how Carl Furillo's gonna field it; no question of whether Preacher Roe's "nuthin' ball" is going to tie Braves hitters in knots; no question of Duke Snider's sitting in the dugout, forever whining and crying about having to face left handers.

The park is still located in what should be the fourth largest city in America...and in the netherworld, it's still a place where four fifths of the assembled multitude in the virtual shrine on Bedford Avenue have never experienced air conditioning...

It would be a nice place to go.
 
Thats a great post Knox,it reminds me of the days when baseball was still a game......
 
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Thanks...

Now, on the same subject, I find it disturbing that the Dodgers are going to abandon Vero. The Almighty Dollar is an inanimate object with no heart, or feelings, or memory, or conscience.
 
Yes, the decision to abandon Vero Beach for Arizona (probably as of 2009) was heartless. :sowrong:
 
milagros317 said:
That was very poetic, Knox. Thanks for posting.

It's a shame,i used to love baseball like any redblooded American kid.I remember going to the old Municipal Stadium in K.C. to cheer on the Royals,back in the day of Amos Otis,Cookie Rojas,Freddy Kirkpatric and so many others...I dont know when or why,but for some reason baseball lost its hold on me,and i have never been able to recapture the feeling....
 
Its a crime for the Dodgers to leave Vero Beach. :sowrong: I visited there a few years ago and it is truely a shrine.
 
Labine was a central character in "The Boys of Summer," Roger Kahn's book of reminiscences with the old Dodgers, which told of how the pitcher's son, Jay, lost a leg when he stepped on a land mine during the Vietnam War.

Labine's career was before my time, but I well remember Kahn's book about "Dem Bums."

Are any of those old Dodgers still around now?
 
pseudonym said:
Are any of those old Dodgers still around now?

Concerning the 1955 World Champion Brooklyn Dodgers:

These team members have died:
Sandy Amoros
Don Bessent
Roy Campanella
Carl Furillo
Jim Gilliam
Don Hoak
Gil Hodges
Clem Labine
Peewee Reese
Jackie Robinson

These team members are alive today:
Carl Ersekine
Sandy Koufax
Tommy Lasorda
Billy Loes
Don Newcombe
Johnny Podres
Duke Snider
Don Zimmer

Why do pitchers have a much better survival rate than hitters? I have no idea if this holds in general.
 
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