The Three Foot High Hitter

The Three Foot High Hitter

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The Three Foot High Hitter

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The Three Foot High Hitter

The Three Foot High Hitter

The Three Foot High Hitter
The Three Foot High Hitter
The Three Foot High Hitter

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Online Magazine

The Three Foot High Hitter

You could count on the knuckles of one thumb the number of midgets who have appeared in major league ball games. His surname was Gaedel, his given name Edward, he was 26 years old, and he was born on June 25, 1925, in Chicago, Ill., of 2 midgets. All that, however, is relatively unimportant. In short, the vital statistic is that Eddie Gaedel was 43" small, though the tallest short story in baseball history.

When St. Louis Brown's owner Bill Veeck brought Edward Gaedel up to the majors on August 19, 1951, there were those who thought he was just another Veeck stunt. They were right. The baseball career of William L. (for Lunacy as one writer put it) Veeck, Jr., was built on gimmicks that increased attendance, and the midget, though he might have looked like an hors d'oeuvre, was the main course of that kinky career.

It was beautiful. A midget. A brownie for the Browns. An anatomic bomb. After locating Gaedel in Chicago, Veeck and his confederates trained the midget, who knew nothing about baseball except that you bit the ball with the bat and ran like you were escaping the Valley of the jolly Green Giant. Young Gaedel had been a stunt man and vaudeville entertainer. His past, however, wasn't important when one considered that it would be as easy for a pitcher to throw through the eye of a needle as enter the kingdom of his 11/2' strike zone.

All Veeck had to do, he thought, was teach his midget how to crouch and point him in the direction of 1st base. The imp's imp was signed to a standard contract making him one of baseball's better paid players at $100 a day although he was hired for only one day and waived the 30 day notice clause. Veeck also took out a $1 million insurance policy protecting himself against "sudden death or sudden growth," which when canceled (short rate") would come to just $1.50 for one day. The insurance policy may have indicated Veeck's apprehension at the prospect of his miniature man driving for the fences, because Gaedel grew overconfident, swinging from the heels as his practice sessions progressed,

On the day of the big game not even the scorecard reading "1/8 Gaedel," which has since become a collector's item, aroused the slightest suspicion. Neither did the Browns arouse any suspicion, running true to form and losing the 1st game of the doubleheader. There was much Veeckian celebration between games, including a band featuring Satchel Paige on the drums at home plate, but no one suspected anything, not even when a nervous Eddie, ready to resign, was stuffed inside a 7' birthday cake and rolled out onto the infield grass. "Ladies and gentlemen, as a special birthday present to manager Zack Taylor," the PA announcer explained, "the management is presenting him with a brand new Brownie!" Up popped Veeck's midget, from a cake that cost more than he did, but still no one caught on.

In the last half of the 1st inning, though, everyone understood. "For the Browns," came the grating announcement over the loudspeaker, "number one eighth, Eddie Gaedel, batting for Saucier." Instant happiness came to everyone connected with the Browns except center fielder Frank Saucier, the only man in baseball history ever taken out for a midget pinch hitter. Gaedel, lustily waving 3 bats, approached the plate. "This can't be," umpire Ed Hurley said, pulling off his mask and getting down on his knees to examine Gaedel closely. But it was. Zack Taylor came trotting out with the midget's contract, a time stamped telegram to American League headquarters, and a copy of the Browns active list proving that there was room on the roster for the midget. Hurley bad to motion number 1/8 into the batter's box.

The Tiger's Bobby Cain had thought Gaedel was just another Veeck gag. When be realized he would have to pitch to the mini hitter his mouth opened wide and he just gawked for a moment before walking halfway to the plate to confer with Detroit catcher Bob Swift, who was laughing so hard he nearly fell over. "Let's go," Gaedel squeaked. "Throw it in there, fat, and I'll moider it." He was slightly more than twice as tall as his 17" bat, but the right handed runt considered himself a threat. Veeck got a little nervous. Would his midget swing for the fences" He remembered that Gaedel had once asked him how tall Wee Willie Keeler was.

When Bob Swift regained his composure, and Cain accepted his fate, they discussed bow they would pitch to the pixie. There was no precedent in baseball history, but they had to decide to pitch him low. After a delay of some 15 minutes in all, Gaedel inched up to the plate. Swift got down on both knees behind the midget. Hurley rubbed his eyes. Cain was ready to pitch to the shrunken strike zone.

But Gaedel didn't go into his crouch! The midget's sad eyes changed, and supreme confidence usurped his being. Assuming a classic stance like a dinghy of the Yankee Clipper, feet spread wide, bat high, he stared at the confines of Sportsmen's Park. What fantasies he must have had. The resounding crack of the

bat, a long, long drive, the concussive deafening roar of the crowd as the ball soared over the center field roof and be himself was trotting around the bases tipping his cap. . . '. And that would be only the beginning. . . . What did Wee Willie Keeler, what did Rizzuto have that the human proton, the protean pygmy didn't have. . . . As for Veeck, be was thinking, "I should have brought a gun up here. I'll kill him, I'll kill him if he doesn't get on base!'

Cain, however, ruined all Gaedel's grandiose plans and spared him possible assassination. Cain simply had no control, none at all. He lobbed in 4 pitches, but the midget got nothing to swing at. The Ist 2 were about head high, but Cain couldn't come down. The only man in the history of big league baseball ever to walk a midget! Cain was so hysterical he could just about reach his hysterical battery mate. Gaedel never got a chance to gain immortality with a mighty Ruthian blast, for ball 3 and ball 4 were so high they wouldn't have been strikes on Wilt Chamberlain.

With a barely perceptible look of scorn on his face, the midget took his pass and trotted down to 1st base. There he held one foot on the bag while waiting for pinch runner Jim Delsing, the only man ever to pinch run for a midget. Then he slapped Delsing on the rump, shook hands with the 1st base coach, bowed to the crowd, and cut across the infield to the Browns' dugout behind 3rd. He took a long time to get there, waving and bowing, thorougbly enjoying his moment upon the stage.

According to Veeck's plans, the Browns were to beat the Tigers 1 0 in the 2nd game of the doubleheader, his midget representing the winning run, but the lowly Browns couldn't have won with Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs; despite the best laid plans of midgets and maestros, St. Louis was shortchanged 6 2. The following day, in the words of one reporter, the American League president Will Harridge "turned thumbs down on Tom Thumb." Harridge had tried to outlaw the midget while plate umpire Hurley was examining his papers, but Veeck had refused to answer the phone and bad shut off the office teletype. Soon the league leader passed a new rule requiring all player contracts to be approved by the president. Veeck, for his part, termed this decision "unfair to the little man."

As for Eddie Gaedel, the midget never played in another ball game. After his sententious farewell speech ("Now that someone has finally taken a step to help us short guys, Harridge is ruining my baseball career."), he hung up his spikes. Veeck got him many bookings on the basis of his sole sterling performance, including one baseball date at Comisky Park, where he landed at 2nd base with 3 other midgets disguised as Martians, "captured" Nellie Fox and Luis Aparicio, and informed the crowd over the public address system that his little people were going to help Veeck's White Sox. About a year after this, on June 18, 1961 Eddie Gaedel died, at age 36, a month before another great competitor, Ty Cobb. Veeck writes in his autobiography that The New York Times gave Eddie a front page obituary, an honor usually reserved for statesmen and Nobel Prize winners, but in reality it was just one of the 7,500 deaths the Times reported that year, and was on page 12 It was unusual only in that Gaedel rated 3 stars in the Times Index, indicating an unexplained violent death. His body had been found in the bedroom of his apartment on Chicago's South Side, and an inquest was ordered when police noted bruises on his face and body. The Times did acknowledge, however, that Eddie Gaedel was the only midget ever to play in the major leagues, and no midget, it is certain, will again step up to bat in a big league baseball game. In fact, Eddie was probably the 1st and last Lilliputian to reign in the entire Brobdingnagian world of professional sports.  


 
 
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The Three Foot High Hitter