San Francisco Seals
By Martin Jacobs and Jack McGuire
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San Francisco Seals - Martin Jacobs
Examiner.
INTRODUCTION
I started playing baseball when I was six years old with a sock-ball folded up tight and wrapped in duct tape. I used a broomstick for a bat. On weekends, if I wasn’t visiting the beach or spending the day at the Saturday matinee watching my favorite superheroes, I was playing stickball in some empty sand-dune lot where I lived in San Francisco.
When I became a teenager, my interest shifted to Big Rec,
a sunken baseball diamond in Golden Gate Park. It was here that promising kids joined the city’s best amateurs for an intense game of hardball. Even in the dead of winter these games would draw large crowds—and if I was lucky I might catch a foul ball. Baseball captured my imagination then, and my appetite for it grew even greater as San Francisco Seals pro baseball reined in the city.
San Francisco was part of baseball’s Pacific Coast League from 1903 to 1957, but its team didn’t officially become known as the Seals
until the 1907 season. The Seals spawned an enthusiasm that spanned several generations. In six decades in San Francisco, they were the most successful minor-league franchise ever—they finished first 12 times, including 4 Governor’s Cups—winning over 100 games a record 24 times.
If I had been around in the first half of the 20th century, I might have called those years the turbulent times
—an era impacted by the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906, the Great War a decade later, the Depression years of the 1930s, World War II in the 1940s, and the Korean War in the early 1950s. But for a local baseball aficionado like myself, that era might also be remembered as the most inspiring years of our lives.
Still, through all this unsettledness the Seals flourished. My dad became a big Seals fan by way of the East Bay. Though he grew up in Oakland in the 1920s watching the Oaks at Emeryville Park, he never missed an Oaks-Seals game. During those formative years, he says, transportation was limited because very few people owned an automobile. It was not uncommon for players to be seen in full uniform traveling on ferries, trolleys, and bicycles with equipment bags slung over their shoulders.
With help from the major leagues, the Seals were provided, to some degree, with star-quality players. Others on the team were past their prime or just finishing out their careers. Homegrown rookies engendered San Francisco’s pride. Whenever one of the city’s own made it big, fans became both saddened and heartened, because a local star had departed to the big leagues. It wasn’t uncommon for teenagers to drop out of school to play for the Seals. Because the competition was so intense for spots on the roster, most teenagers would jump at the chance to play as long as an approving parent signed the deal.
Nevertheless, the city produced outstanding young players. The DiMaggio brothers—Joe, Dom, and Vince—from a crab-fishing family in North Beach, revitalized the Seals in the 1930s. Perhaps the city’s all-time favorite Seal and personality was Frank Lefty
O’Doul. O’Doul’s popularity as a player and manager lasted over a span of more than 30 years.
As popular as the DiMaggios and O’Doul were to Seals tradition, other stars contributed greatly to the team’s heritage, including Paul Waner, Earl Averill, Willie Kamm, Lefty
Gomez, Ferris Fain, Hugh Luby, Sam Gibson, Smead Jolley, and Larry Jansen. The list goes on and on. Six former Seals—Joe DiMaggio, Harry Heilmann, Earl Averill, Lefty
Gomez, and Paul and Lloyd Waner—are enshrined in the distinguished baseball Hall of Fame.
I was too young to have witnessed the early Seals, but as a 13-year-old youth in 1956, I hawked peanuts and ice cream bars at Seals Stadium. I loved that stadium; it was cozy and the fans there were boisterous and passionate. I remember the bright uniforms with SEALS
lettering emblazoned across their chests just like the big league Red Sox wore. Players like Marty Keough, Albie Pearson, Frank Kellert, Bill Renna, Ken Aspromonte, Hayward Sullivan, and Leo Kiely were my heroes then.
The last year the Seals played in San Francisco was 1957. It was a fitting conclusion to Seals baseball in the city. They won their final pennant—an event that marked the beginning of my life-long romance with the team.
What began on the sandlots of San Francisco almost a century ago now continues on a big-league field called SBC Park where the major league San Francisco Giants play today. Seals Stadium is gone, but the Giants play the same game of baseball that the Seals once did. As a longtime fan, I will never forget the team. In this new book, San Francisco Seals, I hope to rekindle fond memories of those legendary Seals—arguably the greatest baseball team in Bay Area history.
—Martin Jacobs
Even though, it cost me a week of detention in grammar school, one of my fondest memories was opening day in 1956—the Seals versus Vancouver. My older brother and his friends decided to leave school at lunch time and took me with them. It was my very first professional baseball game and what a thrill it was. From then on I became hooked on Seals baseball. I visited Seals Stadium frequently, going early and staying late to get autographs. I’ll never forget my fond memories of the players: Jerry Casale, a pitcher who hit a 560-foot home run; Manager Eddie Joost blowing up at umpires; Frank Malzone arriving from Boston with a packed car asking me for directions to the clubhouse; Albie Pearson fooling around with the kids like he was one of us; Bill Renna’s monstrous home runs, matching Steve Bilko of the Angels for power; Leo Kiely seemingly winning every time he took the mound; and the antics of Joe Gordon and his players during the second game of the doubleheader during their final game at Seals Stadium in 1957. I was happy we won the pennant that year, but I was sad when they left.
—Jack McGuire
ONE
THE FORMATIVE YEARS
During the Pacific Coast League’s (PCL) initial season, San Francisco’s inaugural game was played on Thursday, March 26, 1903, on the Recreation Grounds at Eighth and Harrison Streets. They defeated the