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The Top 100 Cubs Of All Time - #95 Mitch Williams

photo appears to have been taken in Mesa at spring training; Williams is wearing the home pinstripes, but the green wall looks like the CF background at Ho Ho Kam Park

Profile by BCB reader San Diego Smooth Jazz Man

The Wrigley Field organist would crank out "Wild Thing" by the 60s garage band "The Troggs" nearly every time closer Mitch Williams took the mound in 1989 for the Cubs, inspired by the film of the same year, the original Major League. And more often than not, Williams would successfully close out the game in that division winning season. But along the way, he'd induce stress, worry, and nervousness in both his teammates, his mangers - and, of course, all of us fans who wished winning a close game could be just a bit easier. For this roller-coaster ride that Mitch Williams took us on - and the success he had, at least for that one magical year - Mitch "Wild Thing" Williams has earned a spot on the list of the 100 Greatest Cubs Of All Time.

Cubs fans have argued about whether or not the acquisition of Williams on December 5, 1988 might rank as one of the worst trades the team ever made. Well, it's possible. In the short term, Williams' work in 1989 was crucial to the team winning the divisional title, and playing in the NLCS against the San Francisco Giants. Mitch went with a 2.76 ERA, with 67 strikeouts and 36 saves. That year, Williams made the All-Star team for the only time in his career. Williams came to the Cubs in a massive 10 player deal with the Texas Rangers in which the Cubs also obtained pitchers Paul Kilgus, Steve Wilson, and a pair of minor leaguers. However, the Cubs gave up (then) outfielder Rafael Palmeiro, and pitchers Jamie Moyer and Drew Hall.

Obviously, Kilgus and Wilson fizzled. Palmeiro and Moyer...well, not so much. At the time, the Cubs were frustrated by the young Palmeiro because he didn't show much in the way of power. Well, Palmeiro did start to hit for power, after leaving the Wrigley Field for the wide-open spaces of Arlington Stadium.(But, now, I guess you could now say we are not quite sure how his power-hitting ability blossomed. But that's another story.) And that Moyer guy - at last report, he's still pitching. So, in the long term - this trade didn't pan out well for the Cubs.

Anyway, Don Zimmer's 1989 Cubs were a fun bunch to watch. The young Mark Grace was just beginning to establish himself - and, the Chicago media learned that Grace was always ready with a quote. After one of Williams' many tightrope walks to finish a game - more than once, Williams would come in, walk a couple of batters, even walk the bases loaded - and would then proceed to strike out the side. This began on Opening Day that year, the very first game he pitched in a Cub uniform. In the ninth inning, he loaded the bases on three dinky singles, and then struck out the side, including Mike Schmidt, Cub tormentor, to end the game.

Not only that, Williams' usual mechanics found him falling off the mound after every pitch, sometimes winding up with his back to the hitter. Grace, after witnessing these performances said "Mitch pitches like his hair's on fire." Writer Roger Angell of the New Yorker described Williams' antics as "scary...and hilarious." In his own defense, Williams said his erratic pitching was because he had poor control and "because I didn't know where the ball was going." Well, give him style points for honesty.

Note from Al: toward the end of the 1989 season, Williams performed one of the unintentionally funniest feats I have ever seen at Wrigley Field, during the game on September 18 vs. the Mets. With the Cubs leading 7-4 in the bottom of the 8th, Williams, who had come into the game in the top of the inning, was left in to bat with two runners on. He hit a three-run, opposite-field home run -- his first major league hit. Gales of laughter ensued, but Williams decided to make the game interesting by allowing two runs in the ninth and loading the bases, bringing the tying run to the plate in the person of -- nobody. No one could find the next hitter, Darryl Strawberry; he had thought the game was over and had started getting ready for the showers. After hurriedly dressing, Strawberry headed to the plate -- and Williams struck him out to end the game, a 10-6 Cubs win.

Anyway, the rollicking season with Williams as the closer ended with the Cubs losing the NLCS to the Giants 4-1. I was in attendance at Candlestick Park for games 3 and 4, both lost by the Cubs, obviously. Thankfully, I wasn't able to be in San Francisco for the deciding Game 5 - lost by Williams. (Note from Al: I WAS at that fifth game, played in torrid 90-degree temperatures, one of the warmest SF days I have ever experienced). He entered the game in the 8th inning, with a runner on second and the score tied at 1. Will Clark lined a single right back through the box to give the Giants a 3-1 lead. What isn't remembered much, is that the Cubs fought back, singling three straight times to make the score 3-2, and had the tying run in scoring position, when Ryne Sandberg grounded out to give the Giants the NL Pennant. (And, of course, the next week, the World Series was interupted by the Loma Prieta Earthquake.) That's not exactly a career highlight for Williams - but it got worse - really, really worse for him a few years in the future.

Williams' antics were a bit more than the Cubs could swallow, and he was dealt to the Phillies in 1991. His career took a bit of an upswing for Philadelphia, as he established himself as the Phillies closer and saved 30 games that season. In 1993 - he saved 43 games for the Phillies, in his usual nerve-racking fashion, and the Phils won the NL Pennant. Now, here's where it gets really, really worse for Mitch.

The Phils entered Game 6 of the 1993 World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays down 3 games to 2. On the road at Skydome, the Phillies scored five runs in the seventh inning to take a 6-5 lead, and it was up to Williams to preserve the victory and force a Game 7.

It wasn't meant to be - instead, Mitch became a part of World Series lore.

With one out and two on base in the bottom of the ninth - the Jays' Joe Carter got hold of a 2-2 pitch from Williams and slammed it for a home run, giving the Blue Jays an 8-6 walk-off World Series victory. It was the first time a World Series had been won in such dramatic fashion in 33 years. (Bill Mazeroski of the Pirates, in 1960 was the last individual to hit a walk-off homer to win a World Series, beating the Yankees.)

Williams, apparently wasn't as popular with his Phillies teammates as he was with the Cubs. Whenever Williams was on the mound, his nervous teammate Curt Schilling was usually burying his face in a towel. To this day, Williams is very bitter towards Schilling.

Afterwards, Williams was philosophical about his place in baseball history."I'm not going to go home and commit suicide...I wish I hadn't thrown it down and in to Carter. I was trying to keep the ball away from him. It was a mistake...It ain't comin' back...I can't replay it and win it...I can't change this one, much as I'd like to, if only because my teammates busted their butts. I let 'em down...But don't expect me to curl up and hide from people because I gave up a home run in the World Series. Life's a bitch. I could be digging ditches. I'm not."

Nor would he be pitching in the majors much after Carter's blast. Williams was promptly traded to the Astros, then closed out his career with the California Angels and the Kansas City Royals in 1997.

After he left baseball, Williams opened a bowling emporium outside Philadelphia and toward the end of Carter's career, ESPN staged a bowling match between Carter and Williams at Williams' alley. Carter won that matchup, too.

Mitch Williams' career stats from baseball-reference.com

Sources: Wikipedia; Baseballlibrary.com; Baseball-fever.com

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Ahhh
I'll never forget Carter's storybook homer---and how awful I felt for our ex-Cub Mitch. I heard he couldn't even go home after that game, as he was getting death threats on his home phone from Phillies fans.

He was crazy, but I'll always have a special place in my heart for all the '89 Cubs, Williams included.

HENDRY!

by cubbiejulie on Nov 15, 2006 9:48 AM CST reply actions  

YES!
Mitch Williams! Wild Thing! What a character. And what a season in '89. Good choice!
it takes two things to be a cubs fan...a sense of humor, and old style beer.

by markgraceismyhero on Nov 15, 2006 9:50 AM CST reply actions  

Mitch Williams
on the mound clinching the division against the Expos is one of my fondest baseball memories, even if I can't recall who he struck out to end the game(was it Dave Martinez?).
Trading him for Bob Scanlan and Chuck McElroy was dumb.

by jamie @ Bleed Cubbie Blue on Nov 15, 2006 10:21 AM CST reply actions  

This is a rather strong indicator
that maybe for a team as bad as the Cubs have been, an all-time top 50 would be easier to compile and be far less depressing.  Maybe for a team as bad as the Cubs even a top 35.  

by TR on Nov 15, 2006 12:44 PM CST reply actions  

Oh, please.
At least Williams had one great season here. Trust me, this WILL get better.

by Al Yellon on Nov 15, 2006 12:48 PM CST up reply actions  

Come on, don't ruin this...
These bios are a great way to at least remember great performances during a season...100 players is a lot of players and unless we want all of them to be from the turn of the century Cubs dynasty, we have accept that some guys on the list will not be great players overall.

Yes, 89 was an enjoyable season many things went right and we had tremendous luck...Williams was part of it a big part.

The Cubs gambled when they ecided that Williams was worth closing, he was a terribly high variance player and walked way too many guys to be counted on consistently...Neither the Cubs nor Phils, nor anyone else was able to ride luck with Williams to a championship.

The guy did what they asked him to do and everyone knew his control was his downfall.  The Phillies and their fans shouldn't blame him for anything.  The people that deserve the blame (if there is any blame) are the GMs and coaches who foolishly beliveed that he'd be something different.

I'm glad the world series life didn't ruin his perspective...

Why couldn't the Cubs just keep Moyer and Palmeiro?  What was wrong with them?

by DudeVf1 on Nov 15, 2006 11:36 PM CST up reply actions  

What was wrong?
Well, Moyer couldn't pitch.  Don't forget that no less than five teams released Moyer after he left the Cubs--including the Cubs, who had him in for Spring Training in 1992.  Moyer spent the whole of 1992 pitching for the Tigers AAA team--and then Detroit released him after the season.  Moyer wasn't any good until he was 33 years old.  Then, he became pretty good.

Palmeiro's problem was that he couldn't play left field and neither could Mark Grace.  One of them had to go.

A little song, a little dance. A little seltzer down your pants

by Josh Timmers on Nov 16, 2006 6:05 AM CST up reply actions  

Plus...
... based on Palmeiro's minor league stats, and his two years with the Cubs, I don't think ANYONE could have anticipated his power explosion.

by Al Yellon on Nov 16, 2006 8:19 AM CST up reply actions  

The mistake was...
at least at the time, they tried to decide which one would develop more power.  They decided Grace would.  They were wrong.  Until the steroids revelation, it was one of Frey and Zimmer's biggest mistakes.  But now, who knows.  Maybe Raffy would have never been a power hitter without help.

by Tarzan Joe on Nov 16, 2006 10:59 AM CST up reply actions  

Mitch the Pitch
My favorite Mitch Williams stat - his career fielding percentage was .840

by Tracy on Nov 15, 2006 1:35 PM CST reply actions  

Williams had 5/6
of a great season here.  By September he was running on fumes and his fastball was getting up there in the high 80s and his ERA for the month was over 8.00.

Hell, I don't care if he struck out everyone he faced in '89.  It's still sad that a team that's been around for a century and a quarter would have, in its top hundred of all time, a guy who, as you say, had a great year.  I don't blame you for having him there, I just think it's sad the team's been so bad that he can even be considered.

by TR on Nov 15, 2006 2:20 PM CST reply actions  

Remember...
... it's not just stats being considered here. It's popularity, it's the impact he had on the franchise. For one magical season, he was the "Wild Thing". That's worth remembering.

by Al Yellon on Nov 15, 2006 3:14 PM CST up reply actions  

Williams
Best quote ever..."Williams pitches like his hair is on fire."  He was a better cartoon character than he was pitcher.  Sad actually that he makes the top 100 list.  
Rommel, you magnificent bastard, I READ YOUR BOOK !!!

by BlueMike on Nov 15, 2006 4:30 PM CST reply actions  

One of my favorite Mitch moments...
is -if I'm remembering this right- when Mitch picked up a save without ever throwing a pitch. If my memory serves me correctly, that was against the Expos in Montreal. "Popeye" brought him in during a jam in the 9th with 2 outs, and Mitch whirled around and picked the runner off of 2nd.

Another one is when Mitch was pitching to Andy Van Slyke with 2 down in the 9th. He almost hit Van Slyke 2 or 3 times, and every time he's come back with a strike on the next pitch. After the game, Van Slyke declared, "If everybody pitched like him, I'd quit." Haha. Classic "Wild Thing."

Everybody remember when he took a Jeff King liner off of his left ear because of that crazy follow-through?  

'89 was my first year as a Cubs fan, and I was 10. My dad, a Cub fan since 1945, turned me into a huge Cubbie fan that year. Starting that spring, I ate, drank and slept Cub baseball. Dunston to Sandberg to Grace. Jerome Walton and Dwight Smith. Maddux, The Red Baron, Bielecki, Sanderson, and Kilgus. The Hawk. Man, they were a fun bunch to watch.

by Mark H @ Bleed Cubbie Blue on Nov 16, 2006 12:15 AM CST reply actions  

Great Bio, Great memories
if not most nervous moments in Cubs history!

Can't recall the exact game, but probably in a September home game, my daughter and I played hookey from school and work.  We sat in field boxes near first base.  To end the game, Williams had thrown to first base several times in pick off attempts.  

Then, the gods decsended on Wrigley!  The hidden ball trick caught the runner off first base to end the game!  A more than perfect way to end our truancy!

Anyone recall this play or game?

Thanks for the memories!

KEEP THE FAITH:SOMEDAY...

by hellfreezesoverwaittillnextyear on Nov 16, 2006 7:58 AM CST reply actions  

The game you are both remembering...
... is this one against the Expos. He picked off the runner at first base to end the game.

Irony: the runner was Jeff Huson, future Cub.

by Al Yellon on Nov 16, 2006 8:21 AM CST up reply actions  

I remember that
The most remarkable end to a Cubs game I've ever seen. I believe Huson and the first base coach made a big stink to the umpire, arguing that first baseman Grace hadn't been holding on the runner, and saying because of that it should have been called a balk on Williams (Grace did sneak behind Huson at the last minute). But the argument was to no avail, as the Cubs were already celebrating victory.

by danimal15 on Nov 16, 2006 9:10 AM CST up reply actions  

Sept. 18, 1989
I notice the Cubs' starting pitcher that day was Paul Kilgus, who lasted just 3 innings. He and guys like Glendon Rusch make the best arguments for going back to 4-man rotations.

by danimal15 on Nov 16, 2006 9:08 AM CST reply actions  

If the myriad rumors are true,
Palmeiro had bigger problems with the Cubs than not being able to play left.  

by TR on Nov 16, 2006 9:37 AM CST reply actions  

At the time
I couldn't figure out why they wanted to trade such a fine young hitter. Imagine the uproar had this chat board existed back then!

by danimal15 on Nov 16, 2006 10:54 AM CST up reply actions  

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