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Will Guzman get a chance to twinkle?

Jul 15, 2008 12:00 AM (88 days ago) by Phil Wood, The Examiner
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Related Topics: WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - Nationals’ fans can only hope that NL All-Star skipper Clint Hurdle finds a way to get shortstop Cristian Guzman into tonight’s game at Yankee Stadium in some meaningful way. Guzman leads the league in hits with 126, and is second overall in Major League Baseball. Plus, he was originally a Yankee product, traded away to Minnesota for Chuck Knoblauch in 1998. One would hope he’d get more than just a token at-bat.

Nationals Park will likely get an All-Star Game of its own in the next few years. The city has hosted 4 games previously: 1937, 1956, 1962 and 1969. The last time the All-Stars came to town, Washington’s Frank Howard homered in his only at-bat, and lefty reliever Darold Knowles retired the only 2 hitters he faced. The NL won, 9-3.

The 1962 All-Star Game was the highlight of the inaugural season at RFK — then known as District of Columbia Stadium. It was also the final year of baseball holding two All-Star matchups, something that had started in 1959: play one, wait three weeks and play another one. The Washington game was the first one that summer, and righthander Dave Stenhouse was representing the Senators. It’s worth pointing out here that Stenhouse was 6-4 at the break prior to the first game on a club that was, quite frankly, terrible. The 1962 club lost 101 games and was dead last in virtually every offensive category.

AL Manager Ralph Houk used only 4 pitchers that day, none of them named Stenhouse. Perhaps, since D.C. native Maury Wills was the game’s MVP with a single, a stolen base and 2 runs scored in a 3-1 NL win, Houk thought the city would be satisfied with that. Three weeks later — a Monday afternoon, by the way — the leagues matched up again, this time at Wrigley Field, and by this time Stenhouse had won 4 straight decisions and was 10-4. On this day, he’d not only pitch, he’d start for the AL.

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“I didn’t know I was starting until I got on the bus at the hotel that morning,” he told me some years back when he was coaching college baseball in Rhode Island. “Houk walked past where I was sitting and told me he was giving me the ball, and at first it didn’t really register.”

You see, Stenhouse had participated in teammate Claude Osteen’s wedding the previous day, and on the morning after the reception, he was, let’s say, not registering a whole lot of anything.

Still, he got to the field, worked out the signs and warmed up with catcher Earl Battey, and went to work in the bottom of the first. He hit the NL’s first batter, shortstop Dick Groat (“I guess I was a little nervous”) and then retired Roberto Clemente on a flyball to right. Willie Mays then hit a short single to left with Groat stopping at second. He then walked Orlando Cepeda to load the bases (“Some of those pitches were close”) before Tommy Davis fouled out to Battey and Ken Boyer lined out to short. He retired the first two hitters in the second before giving up a double to pitcher Johnny Podres — ouch — and Groat singled him in. He then struck out Clemente to end the inning and his day.

Stenhouse is largely forgotten by local fans these days — he went 1-8 the rest of that year and 16-28 for his career — but on that day in 1962, he held his own with the best the game had to offer, and helped his league win, 9-4. Here’s hoping Guzman gets his chance on the big stage tonight.

Phil Wood is a contributor to Nats Xtra on MASN. Contact him at philwood@dcexaminer.com.

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Comments from Examiner Readers

11:55 AM MST on Wed., Jul. 16, 2008 re: "Will Guzman get a chance to twinkle?"

Gary (Olney) said:
Phil, are you gone from WTEM? Dan Snyder buys the station and the way he finds to improve it is to get rid of you? Is he nuts? You were the best thing that happened to that station. I loved taking my dog for a nice two hour walk on Saturday mornings when I would invariably hear stories about my favorite Senators (Bennie Daniels, Tom Cheney, Ken Hunt) or about my favorite local bands (Nils Lofgren). You will be missed a lot.

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10:36 PM MST on Wed., Jul. 2, 2008 re: "Interleague play in need of fixing"

Cal said:
Now we can add Matt Chico also. And yet no one wants to listen to Dr. Mike Marshall.

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10:28 AM MST on Tue., Jul. 1, 2008 re: "Interleague play in need of fixing"

Cal said:
Phil, I go back with you when you did the updates at :15 and :45 way back when. Is there any concern with all the pitcher's arms the Nationals are blowing out? First Patterson, now Cordero and probably Hill also? What is the purpose of having surgery when they come back with the same motion that caused the problem in the first place? Isn't that the definition of insanity?

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12:45 PM MST on Wed., Jun. 11, 2008 re: "An attendance issue? Not so fast my friend"

Examiner Reader said:
You're right on Phil. The biggest problem I see is one you brought up, the prices are ridiculous. I for one will not go to the new stadium until they drop their ridiculous prices. Dee Shannon

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