Friday, May 30, 2008

Ode to the Light Hitting First Baseman

For years the Royals have been enamored with light-hitting first basemen, whether it be for the defense, their grit, or their outright moxie. First base has long been a position where teams employed burly home run hitters, usually the most feared man in the lineup. Not Kansas City. We like our first basemen to fling their bat at the ball, hit ground balls, make productive outs, and play solid defense. Sure, we've had the occasional John Mayberry, Willie Aikens, Steve Balboni, and even Hall of Famer George Brett. But who wants to see boring, rally-killing home runs, when we can see Hal Morris hit a weak ground out?

It is time to give these Princes of Pop-ups the recognition they deserve. I bring you, Ode to the Light Hitting First Baseman.

Pete LaCock 1977-1980

452 Games .277/.329/.380
12 Home Runs
Grit Factor: High

You must be gritty
With a name like “LaCock”

The children, they’ll tease you

With names that will shock


The Royals dealt Mayberry

Who looked like a blimp

But when they looked to LaCock

His bat would go limp


Pat Tabler 1988-1990

287 Games .279/.339/.347
4 Home Runs
Grit Factor: High

Pat was as clutch
As a hitter could get

If the bases were loaded
RBI were a sure bet


He wasn't strong like an ox
Or fast like a bullet
But he had a nice swing
And a pretty sweet mullet


Gerald Perry 1990


133 Games .254/.313/.361
8 Home Runs
Grit Factor: Low

The Royals were dazzled
By his All-Star bat

Gerald hit .300

An important stat


One thing to consider

Before trading ol’ Char

Was it really such a feat

To be a Braves All-Star?


Todd Benzinger 1991

78 Games .294/.334/.386
2 Home Runs
Grit Factor: Medium

First base was a mess
In 1991

Martinez and Benzinger

Could score nary a run


With Carmelo not hitting

It was Todd’s turn to go

Nicknamed “Mercedes”

He played more like a Yugo


Wally Joyner 1992-1995

518 Games .293/.371/.434
44 Home Runs
Grit Factor: Medium

Wally showed much power
In ’86 and ’87

“Wally World” was a hit

The Angels were in heaven


Then he went to KC

And the power would fall
And Royals fans discovered

It’s a small “World” after all

Hal Morris 1998

127 Games .309/.350/.381
1 Home Run
Grit Factor: Medium

Hal Morris was here
And gone in a flash

His interest in KC

Was simply for cash

But he provided us memories
Of baseball in the sun
We'll never forget

That one home run


Dave McCarty 2000-2002

214 Games .255/.317/.432
20 Home Runs
Grit Factor: Medium

He found new life in KC
After being a draft bust
He showed off some power

And a glove you could trust


After getting a contract

He never as well fared

But that cash was guaranteed

So thanks Allard Baird!


Ken Harvey 2001-2005

271 Games .274/.322/.411
27 Home Runs
Grit Factor: Low

A rotund singles hitter
Without much power

He was named as an All-Star

His one shining hour

While some first basemen
Cause opposing pitchers terrors

Ken Harvey was simply

A comedy of errors

Doug Mientkiewicz 2006

91 Games .283/.359/.411
4 Home Runs
Grit Factor: Off the Charts

Always a slick glove
With a World Series ring

The Royals were excited

At the grit Doug could bring


Alas, he never hit homers

As the summers got muggy

But to be quite honest

This ode is not fair to Dougie

Ross Gload 2007-2008

145 Games .276/.310/.399
7 Home Runs
Grit Factor: Mientkiewicz-esque

We were more than happy
When Sisco left town
But when we saw Ross hit

Those smiles turned to frowns


He slaps at the ball
Its what he does best

But someone should tell him

To take off the dress

3 comments:

Chris said...

Very funny!!

I have to agree with you that the poem definitely wasn't fair to Dougie.

Anonymous said...

brilliant stuff

Anonymous said...

where does the 'not fair to dougie' thing come from i keep hearing it.