Thursday, March 15, 2018

Kingman's Style




From chapter 5 of Dan Epstein’s very enjoyable Stars and Strikes: Baseball and American in the Bicentennial Summer of ’76


The Yankees’ crosstown counterparts weren’t starting off the season too badly, either. Despite their impressive pitching staff, few expected the offensively challenged Mets, under the guidance of rookie manager Joe Frazier, to be much of a factor in the NL East. And yet, they played 13-7 ball in April, thanks in part to the bat of their one major offensive weapon, right fielder Dave “Kong” Kingman. Kong – or “Sky King,” as Kingman preferred to be called – hit 36 homers for the Mets in 1975, and appeared to be on track for even more in ’76. The free-swinging Kingman rarely walked, and struck out around four times for every home run he hit; yet, despite an ungainly swing that Sports Illustrated’s Larry Keith likened to “a very tall man falling from a very short tree,” the 6’ 6” slugger specialized in gargantuan rainbow shots that seemed to pierce the very atmosphere before returning to earth. “Dave’s style is to swing hard in case he hits it,” said veteran Mets first baseman Ed Kranepool. “When he’s connecting, the only way to defense him is to sit in the upper deck. I’ve never seen anybody hit the ball farther.”

Nor had too many other people. On April 14, with the wind blowing out at Wrigley Field, Kingman launched a moon shot off of Cubs reliever Tom Dettore that sailed over the left field bleachers, carried across Waveland Avenue, and headed up Kenmore Avenue, where it finally caromed off the air-conditioning unit of a residence three houses up from the corner. Variously estimated at traveling between 530 and 630 feet, Sky King’s blast was widely adjudged to have been the longest home run ever hit at Wrigley. Though the Mets lost that game 6-5, Kingman came back the next day and sent two more baseballs flying out of the park and clanging off building facades along Waveland, with his second of the game plating three runs to give the Mets an eventual 10-8 victory. The three tape-measure blasts in Chicago came as part of a spree that saw Kingman hammer seven homers in seven days.

With his jaw-dropped power – even his infield pop-ups were awe-inspiring – and angular good looks, Kingman could have been a major New York celebrity, but the only swinging this bachelor ever did was on the field. A moody introvert, Kingman preferred to lead a solitary existence at his four-bedroom home in rural Cos Cob, Connecticut, where he spent his downtime building furniture in his garage. “I prefer a private life of my own. I like to live quietly,” he told sportswriter Jack Lang. “I enjoy playing in New York, but I don’t enjoy living in the city. I like peace and quiet. I like to get away from it all. I enjoy woodworking. I enjoy making things.”


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Me, nine, ten years old, my dad a big Mets fan. Stretched out on the living room floor in the suffocating, air-conditioned-less heat, watching the Mets lose one game after another. Kingman was always exciting (at least to my father; I don’t even know if I understood the game all that well back then or even had the willpower to give it more than a half-inning’s attention). My brother even had Kingman’s autographed 8 ½ x 11, if I recall correctly. I also remember going to several games at the old Shea stadium, and even being quite close to the field one time, maybe a dozen rows behind the third base dugout.

Ah, memories from my youth …

1 comment:

  1. Great read. Here's a little tidbit on Kong. The following year, he played for 4 different teams in all 4 divisions. Mets - NL East, Padres - NL West, Angels - AL West, Yankees - AL East.

    Uncle

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