Heroes: Inspiration for All Ages by Robert S. Swiatek - HTML preview

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Roberto Clemente

When  Roberto  Clemente  Walker  was  born  in  Carolina, Puerto Rico, on August 18, 1934, the home  he entered was quite crowded. His father and mother, Don Melchor Clemente and Luisa Walker,  were there with six of his siblings: Luis,  Rosa, Osvaldo, Justino,  Andres  and  Anairis.  Three  cousins  also  resided  in  their five-room home. Don Melchor was a sugarcane supervisor and his workers stopped by each day to eat. Roberto, also called Momen, worked in the fields too but developed an interest  in baseball. He could always be found throwing and hitting something resembling a ball with either a broom handle or tree branch.

Momen competed  in the sport against neighboring barrios. While in his  first  year at Vizcarondo High School, Roberto Marin brought  him  to play for  the  Sello  Rojo  softball team.  He  played shortstop  for  two  years  there  and  at  sixteen,  Roberto  joined  an amateur  team,  the  Ferdinand  Juncos.  His  first  professional  team was  the  Cangrejeros  de  Santurce  of  the  Professional  Baseball League of Puerto Rico. For the   Santurce Cangrejeros Crabbers he hit  .288  leading  off.  Soon  the  Brooklyn  Dodgers  offered  him  a contract,  assigning  him  to  the  Triple-A  International  Montreal Royals.  In  his  debut  on  April  1,  1954,  Clemente  collected  two singles and hit an inside-the-park home run. He was the only Royal starter who played nine innings that day in a 12-2 victory over the Civilians.

In  Vero  Beach,  Florida,  Roberto  soon   met  Jim  Crow, noticing that players  with darker skin  weren't  afforded  the  same privileges as whites. His stellar efforts on April 1 didn't have him playing every day. He spent a great deal of time on the bench when he  wanted to  play.  He  felt  isolated and  alone, away from family and  subsequently  not  really  a  part  of  the  Royals.  His  lack  of playing time was an effort to hide Momen for some reason. There may  have  been  racism  behind  this  or  they  simply  didn't  want another  team to add  him to  their  roster  –  he  was  that  good.  The Brooklyn  franchise  had  no  intention of  grooming  him  for  some other team since they felt the draft would see him depart.

One  thing   you  can  say   for   the  International   Baseball League (IBL): it almost merited its name. Unlike the World Series, which  hasn‟t  had  a  team  from  Japan  or  Germany,  teams  from Canada,  Cuba  and  the  United  States  all  competed  in  the  IBL. Besides  the  Royals,  the  Ottawa  Athletics,  Toronto  Maple  Leafs, Rochester Red Wings, Syracuse Chiefs, Buffalo Bisons, Richmond Virginians and the Havana Sugar Kings completed the eight-team list.   The IBL dated back to 1884 in comparison to the American League, which was created sixteen years later.

Roberto  played  only  87  games  with  the  Royals  in 1954, hitting .257. Pirate scout Clyde Sukeforth persuaded manager Max Macon  that  Roberto  might  be  a  good  draft  pick.  Anyone  who scouted him didn't need to see much of Clemente to figure that he would be a star. On November 22, 1954, the Pirates drafted him. He was to play his entire career only with Pittsburgh.

Up  until  1955,  the  Pirates  had  horrible  seasons,  usually finishing  in  last place, but  that  changed when Momen joined the team. For the year, he only hit .255 as injuries hindered his efforts. He did contribute eighteen outfield assists. Opposing players soon realized  that  if  they tried  for  extra  bases,  he‟d  throw  them  out. Roberto would come into his own in 1960. In the opener, the Bucs whipped the Cincinnati Reds, 13-0 with Clemente going three  for four while collecting five runs batted  in (RBI). On Easter Sunday the  Pirates  won  5-0  in  the  first  game  of  a  doubleheader  with Roberto  hitting  a  two-run homer;  in the  second  game  Pittsburgh rallied for six runs in the bottom of the ninth to top the Reds 6-5. Clemente batted .336 in May knocking in 25 runs in 27 games. For the year, he  hit .314 with sixteen round-trippers and 94 RBI. The Bucs won the pennant and now had to  face the American League Champions, New York Yankees.

The Pirates started off by edging New  York, 6-4, but  the Yankees bounced back  in the  next  two  games  with thrashings of 16-3  and  10-0.  Game  four  saw  the  Pirates  even  up  the  series winning, 3-2. By this point, the Yankees had outscored Pittsburgh, 32-12.  The  mighty  New  York  team  of  Mickey  Mantle,  Roger Maris,  Yogi  Berra  and  Bill  Skowron  were  then beaten again  in game five, 5-2. The Pirates and Yankees were headed to the steel city for game six. So was presidential candidate John F. Kennedy, who came to the Gateway Center in Pittsburgh to meet the people. At the Penn-Sheraton Hotel, JFK gave a great speech in support of civil  rights.  Clemente  was  a  Kennedy  man  while  most  of  his teammates  favored  Richard  Nixon.  I  imagine  the  Yankees  also thought more of Nixon that Kennedy.

As  the  series  resumed,  it  didn't  seem  to  faze  the  Bronx Bombers who forced a seventh game by clubbing the Pirates, 12-0. It all came down to a one-game  series.  The  Post-Gazette quoted Mantle  and  Berra,  who  felt  they  were  the  better  team,  even  if somehow the Bucs did win the seventh game. These words did not escape  the  locker  room  of  the  Pirates.  Throughout  the  series, Yankee  manager  Casey Stengel  made  some  unusual  moves  with players at times.  These  may have cost  him, but by the bottom of the eighth inning,  his team led 7-4. Gino Cimoli singled and then Bill  Virdon  then  hit  a  ground  ball  to  short,  which  looked  like  a perfect  double play ball,  except  it  took a  bad  hop,  striking Tony Kubek in the throat.  Both runners were safe but Tony was on the ground  in pain. Kubek was  replaced and  Dick  Groat singled  in a run. Bob Skinner then bunted the runners over to second and third, but  Rocky Nelson flied out, bringing  up Clemente. The star right fielder then hit what appeared to be the third out of the  inning: a slow  bouncer  to  first.  However,  Skowron  fielded  the  ball  but couldn‟t  make  a  play.  A  run scored,  making  it  a  7-6  game.  Hal Smith was the  next  hitter and  that  he  was, smashing a  three-run homer to left field, scoring the two runners. The Pirates now led 9– 7. Never count the New York team out and sure enough, they tied the game in the top of the  ninth. In the bottom of the inning, Bill  Mazeroski  was  the  first  Pittsburgh  batter.  He  grew  up  in Wheeling,   West   Virginia,   so   he   certainly   felt   at   home   in Pittsburgh.  If  the  Pirates  could  get  two  men on base,  Clemente would  come  to  bat.  Ralph  Terry  was  the  pitcher  for  the  Bronx Bombers. It didn't take long for the game and the series to end as Mazeroski   slammed   a   home   run   over   the   left-field   fence: Pittsburgh 10, New  York 9.  The New Yorkers  had outscored the Pirates, 55-27, just proving that statistics are  for  losers. Clemente played  a  huge  part  in  the  victory,  as  his  hustling  to  first  in  the eighth inning kept the rally alive. He also hit safely in each of the games and his arm helped the defense.

Nonetheless, the  media  ignored Roberto, something it  had been doing for  some  time, despite  his  incredible efforts.  He  was sitting alone  in the  locker room when Courier editor  Billy Nunn, Jr.,  came  by.  Clemente  was  packing  up  after  his  shower  and mentioned using his winnings to buy a house for his mother. Nunn asked, what’s the hurry? The outfielder mentioned having to catch a plane to New York on his way home. Nunn then asked Clemente about the victory party but the latter only shrugged him off saying, I don’t like those kinds of things. As the two left, a crowd outside gathered  and  there’s  Clemente  was  heard.  Happiness  overcame Momen and an hour later he realized that they were the best fans in the world.

On November  14,  1964,  Momen  married  Vera  Christina Zabala  in San Fernando Church in Carolina.  To accomplish this, the  ballplayer  had  won over  his  future  father-in-law  and  all  the others, including Vera  herself. He was thirty and she was twenty- three and attending the ceremony were members of both families, players,   management  from  the  Pirates,   Governor   Luis  Muñoz Marín and a few others. Someone inquired of Roberto how he felt. Because of all his aches and pains, this was the wrong question to ask him, but Momen replied, I feel great! A friend then asked, then why don’t  you spit  out  the gum  you’re  chewing?  On August 17, 1965, Vera gave birth to their first son, Roberto Clemente, Jr., also called Robertito. Luis Roberto and Enrique Roberto would follow later.

In   the  2005  book  by  David  Maraniss,   Clemente:  The Passion And Grace  Of  Baseball’s Last  Hero,  one of  the chapter titles is “Pride and Prejudice”. It is as fitting as the book title David chose. Clemente took pride in his people. My pride is my land! For I  was  born  here! I  don’t  love  it  because  it’s  beautiful! I  love  it because  it  is  mine! Poor  or  rich  with  burning! I  want  it  for my own.   On   the   diamond,   he   played   for   Puerto   Rico   and   was disappointed  when he didn't  do  his  best.  Injuries plagued  him at times,  including  a  case  of  malaria  and  back  pain  from  an  auto accident.  This kept  him on the bench and people  accused  him of faking it.

The racism he faced also bothered him. Separate but equal meant  that  you couldn‟t  go  the  same  hotel or  restaurant  as  your teammates. Bringing your spouses to spring training wasn't a good idea. If you went to a movie, you had to sit in the balcony. Edward Wachtel  and  his  wife  Lillian  opened  up  the  DeSoto  Motel  to accommodate the African Americans who had been shut out of the other places. Sadly, the couple received hate mail, late night phone calls  and  bomb  threats.  Other  progressive  businessmen couldn‟t extend their hands to the blacks for the very same reason. On one occasion  Roberto  and  Vera  were  shopping  for  furniture  in New York. The baseball star had a few grand on him and wanted to see some of the  furniture downstairs. The clerk said: Well, you don’t have enough money to buy that. That’s very expensive. Clemente was  upset  but  when  another  salesman  recognized  him,  matters quickly  changed.  Nonetheless,  after  speaking  his  mind,  he  and Vera left the store without making a purchase.

Clemente had a temper, which may have been as a result of the prejudice he faced. This defect in his character may only have been confined  to  the  United  States.  At  home  with the  family  he seemed calm and loving. Around family, children and fans he was extremely gracious. He was always  helping others. While visiting Melchor at the hospital, Clemente noticed the man in the next bed in much pain. Momen stretched  his  legs and did some  messaging and  the  next day the patient said to  Roberto,  God bless you.  His pain had disappeared. The outfielder was into chiropractics and he worked on others  who suffered  from back pain, even teammates. He dreamt of opening up a spa on the ocean.

Roberto had his beefs with the writers who didn't treat him well. Manager Harry Walker acknowledged that Clemente had his critics.

He’s such a hypochondriac that that some people also think that  he’s  a  malingerer.  But  no  man  ever  gave  more  of himself or worked more unselfishly for the good of the team than Roberto. I know that the votes are already in for the most valuable player (MVP). I’m convinced that Clemente deserves it. Whether he gets it or not, he’s most valuable in my book.

Bill Mazeroski said,  I don’t  think  he’s ever jaked. He just could do things when  he was hurt as well as the rest  of  us could when we were healthy and people would see this and decide that he was dogging it.

The Pirates won another title in 1971. Even though Stargell batted  .414  for the series,  again Clemente  hit  safely  in all  seven  games.  Roger  Angell  of  the  New  Yorker  said  the  right  fielder‟s performance   was   something   close   to   the   level   of   absolute perfection. In the locker room as the series end, Bob Prince stated, and  here  with  me now, the  greatest  right  fielder  in  the  game  of baseball, Bobby, congratulations on a great world series.

Momen  was  a  man  of  the  people  whose   heroes  were statesman  Luis  Muñoz  Marín  and  Civil  Rights   leader  Martin Luther King, Jr. He couldn‟t understand how some people had so much money while others were impoverished and struggling to get by. Roberto was a giving person. Many times he would hand over a twenty-dollar bill in exchange for a bag of coins. Then he would hand out a few coins to those in dire need. He did this every day. When  traveling  to  different  cities,  he  would  visit  sick  children there.  These  ventures  were  not publicized but displayed  his  great love and concern for young girls and boys. One of his goals was to create  a  sports  facility  for  kids  to  keep  them off  the  streets  and away from drugs.

Roberto  wasn't  crazy  about  flying,  despite  the  fact  that many times he  had  no choice as a Pirate. He dreamt he  was on a plane  that  crashed.  He  also  had  great  difficulty  sleeping.  Time meant a great deal to Clemente. He had to get things done because he felt he may not live that long.

On   December   23,   1972,   a   6.5   on   the   Richter   scale earthquake  struck  Managua,  Nicaragua.  It  didn't  take  long  for Clemente  to  seek  funds,  help,  food  and  water  for  the  victims.  A few  planeloads  brought  some  relief  from  Puerto  Rico  to   the disaster, but many of the people who  needed the supplies weren't receiving  them.  Roberto  finally  decided  that  he  had  to  go  to Managua to handle matters. Arthur Rivera brought a DC-7 for the effort, but  he couldn‟t  fly  it  so  he  found a  pilot, Jerry Hill,  who could. His experience  was  limited and  the plane  had quite a  few problems,  but  it  was  loaded  with  luncheon  meat,  vegetable  oil, beans,   cornmeal,   milk  and   rice,  Momen  joined   Hill,   Rivera, Francisco Matias and Angel Lozano and squeezed into the plane. It was overloaded and on the last day of 1972, it took off. It crashed not far from shore killing all on board, including Roberto.

Eighteen years before on December 31,  Luisa  had lost  her first-born son, Luis Oquendo, when he died of a brain tumor at the age of 38. On October 14, 1972,  Al Oliver and  his  teammates at Roberto‟s birthday celebration called them together  for a picture, saying,  it  might  be the last time we’ll be together. At the time of the  efforts   to   help  those   in  Managua,  before   going   to  bed, Robertito fussed mom and asked his grandmother why his dad was going with relief supplies. His words were, that plane will crash.

At  the  memorial mass  for the  great  Pittsburgh star at San  Fernando Roman Church, thousands massed outside in the streets, while   those   gathering   inside   were   handed   a   program   with Roberto‟s mom‟s poem.

Only God makes man happy. Life is nothing.

Everything ends.

Only God makes man happy.

Pitcher Steve Blass spoke in church and choked up during his  reading,  even  though  he  was  known  for  being  one  of  the funniest guys on the Pirates.

Let this be a silent token

Of lasting friendship’s gleam

And all that we’ve left unspoken

Your pals on the Pirates team.

Willie   Stargell   characterized   his   teammate   with   these thoughts: He was proud. He was dedicated. Helping other people without  seeking  any  publicity  or  fame.  Just  making  sure  that  he could lend a hand and get the job done. A close friend of Clemente said, you could see him like a prophet.

His  lifetime  batting average  is  .317,  with 3,000  hits,  240 home  runs  and  1,305  RBI.  He  was  twice  on  World  Champion teams,  including  winner  of the  World  Series  MVP  in 1971,  and elected  to  the  All-Star  team  in  fifteen seasons.  Twelve  times  he won the Gold Glove Award. He was the National League MVP  in 1966 and four times batting champion in the senior circuit. He won the Babe Ruth Award in 1971. His play on the diamond paved the way for  many stars  flooding the  major  leagues  from south of the border.  It  may  have  been  Puerto  Rico  initially,  but  today  the Dominican Republic may lead in the number of players now in the states.

In   a   special   election   on   March   30,   1973,   Clemente, receiving 92% of the  vote and became a  member of the  Baseball Hall of Fame, only the second player not to have to wait five years after   retirement.   The  other   was   Lou   Gehrig.  Every   year  the Roberto  Clemente  award  is  given to  the  player  with outstanding skills   on   the   field   who   personally   engages   in   work   in   the community.   In   1973,   President   Richard   Nixon   posthumously presented  him  the  President‟s  Citizen‟s  Medal  and  the  Roberto Walker  Clemente  Congressional  Gold  Medal.  The  Presidential Medal of Freedom was awarded him by President George W. Bush in July 2003. Various other awards have been given and his  name adorns:  stadiums,  parks,  schools,  a  bridge,  statues  and  even  a thoroughbred  horse. The postal service honored  him with a stamp in 1984. The Pirates retired his number, 21, although some teams still use it.