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I Can’t Believe I Missed Steve Balboni’s Birthday


This was a home run

Luckily, Baseball-Reference’s blog was all over it.

As the B-R blog covers exquisitely well, Steve Balboni was not a very good baseball player. However, he was an extremely entertaining baseball player. For one, he looked pretty funny. For two, and most importantly, the dude could hit some home runs.

The reason that I care about Steve Balboni goes back to a game in which I attended in the womb: this June 4th, 1989 game between the New York Yankees and the Milwaukee Brewers at County Stadium in Milwaukee. My mom shares some of my love of baseball, and she shared her love of Steve Balboni for me, which, if I recall correctly, was born from this game.

This game featured a few collectibles, including a home run from Yankee Deion Sanders (off of the stalwart Bryan Clutterbuck) and a two-homer game from Jesse Barfield. However, it was Steve Balboni’s sole at-bat (replacing Don Mattingly in the field) which makes this game live on for my family. Balboni saw 12 pitches in that at-bat, and nine strikes. That means that Balboni fouled off at least 6 balls in a row (my mom described it as 17, which unfortunately can be struck as exaggeration from the B-R box score) before blasting a home run into the seats.

Sometimes, it takes a player’s skill or one magical postseason moment for him to live on in a fan’s mind. In this case, it was simply one heroic at-bat in a game between two bad teams in a Milwaukee summer. For that, Steve Balboni, we (specifically, my mom) thank you. And happy (belated) birthday, Steve.




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Jack Moore is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with degrees in Mathematics and Economics. He also blogs the Brewers at Disciples of Uecker, the Wisconsin Badgers at Badger of Honor and fantasy baseball at Roto Hardball. Follow him on twitter at @jh_moore.

5 Responses to “I Can’t Believe I Missed Steve Balboni’s Birthday”

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  1. Just looked on Retrosheet… here’s Balboni’s at-bat. I count six straight foul balls on 2-2…

    CFBBFFFFFFBX

    (looks like you can also get pitch sequence by clicking on the “number of pitches” link in the play-by-play listing of that at-bat on the BR game page:

    1. Called Strike
    2. Foul
    3. Ball
    4. Ball
    5. Foul
    6. Foul
    7. Foul
    8. Foul
    9. Foul
    10. Foul
    11. Ball
    12. Ball in Play )

    Vote -1 Vote +1

  2. Gringo says:

    Thanks because your BR link led me to this little MVP voting nugget:

    http://www.baseball-reference.com/awards/awards_1985.shtml#ALmvp

    What’s wrong with this picture?

    Vote -1 Vote +1

  3. Gringo says:

    ^[eventually] led

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  4. Only the great Steve Balboni could garner MVP votes with a .7 WAR. Truly one of the all time greats.

    Vote -1 Vote +1

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