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The Top 100 Cubs Of All Time - #21 Kiki Cuyler


Chicago Daily News negatives collection, SDN-069314. Courtesy of the Chicago Historical Society.

Hazen Shirley (and if those were your given names, wouldn't you rather be called "Kiki", or maybe ANYTHING else?) Cuyler was born on August 31, 1898 in Harrisville, Michigan. After briefly attending the US Military Academy at West Point, Cuyler returned to Michigan, married his high school sweetheart, and worked, as so many people did in that part of the country in those days, in the auto industry for General Motors. Playing for a company baseball team, his talent was noticed and he actually changed positions in the company, moving from Flint to Detroit, so he could play in a "faster" league, from whence he was signed by the Pirates in 1920.

Cuyler spent most of the next three years in the minors, finally cracking the Pirate starting lineup in 1924, when he hit an impressive .354/.402/.539. The following year, he did even better, .357/.423/.598, scoring 144 runs in 153 games, and led the Pirates to the 1925 NL title and World Series championship, driving in the Series-winning run with a two-out, two-run double off Walter Johnson in the eighth inning of game seven. During that 1925 season, he had a career-high 18 HR, including two inside-the-park home runs on August 28 at the tiny Baker Bowl in Philadelphia. In all, Cuyler hit eight inside-the-park jobs in 1925. It took until 1979 -- when Willie Wilson had five -- for someone to have even close to that many in a season. He'd have won the MVP award easily (he finished second in the voting), except that Rogers Hornsby chose that year to hit .403 with 39 HR and 143 RBI, winning the Triple Crown and thus the MVP. The voting was close -- Hornsby had 73 points and Cuyler finished second with 61.

From there, though, it was all downhill in Pirate-land for Cuyler. Cuyler and the Pirates had a contract dispute before the 1927 season, and then new Pirate manager Donie Bush asked him to play center field and bat second; Cuyler felt himself more effective hitting third (and who wouldn't, after three monster hitting seasons in that slot under the previous manager, Bill McKechnie?) The feud came to a head when Cuyler didn't slide into second base to break up a double play late in the year. Bush benched him for the rest of the season and for the entire World Series as well -- something that clearly didn't help the ballclub, although it isn't likely that any team would have defeated one of the greatest teams of all time, the 1927 Yankees.

Knowing that Cuyler was persona non grata with the Bucs, the Cubs got him for virtually nothing on November 28, 1927, sending a journeyman infielder (Sparky Adams) and outfielder (Pete Scott) for a 28-year-old career .300 hitter who had already been in the top 10 of MVP voting results twice.

Returned to his normal batting and fielding slots as a Cub, Cuyler had a decent .285/.359/.473 year in 1928, and then exploded in 1929; he hit .360/.438/.532 and led the National League with 43 stolen bases (one of four times he led the NL in steals), and the Cubs won the pennant. The stolen base number is even more impressive given that SB were becoming less important in an era given over to power hitters. The next NL player to steal more than Cuyler's 43 in 1929 was Maury Wills, with 50 in 1960.

He suffered a broken foot during the 1932 season, causing him to miss a third of the year. When he returned, he put the entire ballclub on his back and almost singlehandedly carried the Cubs to the pennant. He hit .365 from August 27 to the end of the season -- a Sosaesque performance, and the bedrock of his Cubs reputation. He hit a walkoff homer in one of the most dramatic games in team history on August 31. Bill Veeck said it was the best game he ever saw in person. For a while it held the reputation of being perhaps the greatest single Cubs moment, then Gabby Hartnett's "Homer in the Gloamin'" came along six years later, and Cuyler's game is now forgotten except by history buffs.

Check out what Cuyler did in one week in late August and early September after returning from his injury:

8/27, first game vs. Giants. Three-run homer, Cubs won, 6-1, eighth win in a row. Second game, single and run, nine straight wins.
8/28, vs. Giants. Three hits, 8th inning homer, game-winning sac fly, Cubs won 5-4, 10 straight.
8/30, vs. Giants. Two hits, two RBI, 8th inning homer, 5-4 win, 11 straight.
8/31, vs. Giants. Four hits. Singled in a four-run ninth that tied the game at 5-5. Giants scored four in the top of the tenth, taking a 9-5 lead. In the last of the tenth, after the first two men are out, the Cubs score two and have two on for Cuyler, who hits a walkoff HR for a 10-9 win, their 12th straight.
9/2, vs. Cardinals, homer, fifth in six games, 8-5, 13 straight.  The Cubs' winning streak reached 14, then halted on a day Cuyler was hitless; perhaps that wasn't a coincidence.

Here's what Bill Veeck wrote about the August 31 walkoff in Veeck as in Wreck:

I saw him (my father, Wm. Veeck Sr., Cubs president) forget his dignity only once. He was entitled to this one fall, for it came at the end of the greatest ball game I have ever seen...

Late in the season, we were playing the Giants to break a tie for first place, a game of such importance that we found Judge Landis sitting with my father. The Giants seemed to have the game sewed up right into the ninth inning when the Cubs scored four runs to tie it up. The Giants bounced right back with four runs in their half of the tenth.

In our half, the first two batters went out. Mark Koenig kept us alive with a home run. The next three batters got on to load the bases. Up came Kiki Cuyler, representing the winning run. And Cuyler belted one. The ball was still climbing over the fence when William Veeck, Sr. let out a rebel yell and vaulted over the railing. Marsh (Bill Jr.'s friend) and I had leaped out toward the railing, too, but we were somewhat delayed because we had to untangle ourselves from the harrumphing Commissioner. By the time we got onto the field, my father was in the very center of a mob scene, grabbing for Cuyler's hand.

As in his Hack Wilson story, Veeck didn't get it quite right -- it wasn't a grand slam, it was a three-run walkoff -- but that can't ruin this great story.

And finally, as a fitting climax to this run, five years after they had unceremoniously dumped him, Cuyler finally got his revenge on the team that had cut him loose. On September 20, 1932, in the first game of a doubleheader, he stepped to the plate in the seventh inning against the Pirates with the game knotted at 2. He smacked a bases-clearing triple which broke the game open and clinched the pennant for the Cubs, their second pennant in four seasons (now doesn't that sound great? "Second pennant in four seasons." -- oh, well.).

He broke his leg during spring training in 1933, which caused him to miss half that season, and his production began to decline. In 1935, slowing down at age 36, he was released in mid-season and picked up by Cincinnati, finishing his career with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1938. He finished with 2299 hits; if not for the injuries, perhaps the Cubs would have kept him and he might have approached a 3000-hit career.

Cuyler's best overall year with the Cubs was probably the aforementioned 1929 season, but an argument can be made for his 1930 campaign, where he scored an eye-popping 155 runs in this season (good for 24th on the all time single season list), batting often in front of Hack Wilson as Hack drove in a record 191 runs. Cuyler drove in 134 himself, ranking a distant second on the club. Naturally, all 1930 stats have to be looked at with a somewhat skeptical eye due to the "juiced" (to use present-day vernacular) nature of the ball that year. During that 1930 season, he hit an extra-inning walkoff HR in the most attended single game in Wrigley Field history, the June 27 Ladies Day game, seen by 51,556. In those days, there were more seats to begin with, and they used to cram people in the aisles; this practice went on until the 1970's, when the Fire Department put an end to it. To this day, you can see the fire code signs around various areas of the ballpark, stating the maximum safe capacity of each area.

Off the field, Cuyler was regarded as a gentleman during a time where many players were thought of as somewhat barbaric. He became an idol to women, and as a devoutly religious man, he prayed and crossed himself during games, perhaps the first player to do this in public. His nickname of "Kiki" is derived from the sound of the first part of his last name, so it is pronounced "Cuy-Cuy" and not "Kee-Kee".

After retiring as a player, Cuyler stayed in baseball, managing in the minor leagues (winning the Southern Association pennant in his first year managing, in 1939 at Chattanooga), and then returning to the major leagues as a Cubs coach. He eventually wound up as a coach for the Boston Red Sox, and he was working for them when he suffered a fatal heart attack shortly before he was to depart for spring training in 1950, dying on February 11, 1950 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, aged only 51. He's buried in his hometown of Harrisville, Michigan, a small town about 150 miles north of where he began his journey into baseball in Flint.

Cuyler was given baseball's highest honor posthumously in 1968 when the Veterans Committee made him a Hall of Famer. His death at a young age, more than fifty years ago, makes him one of the most forgotten Cubs of a great era in team history.

Kiki Cuyler's career stats at baseball-reference.com

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Commissioner Landis
He has come up a few times in these articles.  I know that he played a part in the origin of a judicial rule of ethics, as he thought it entirely proper to maintain his seat as a federal judge even while the commissioner of baseball.  Anyone know of a good biography on him?  This is the only one that pops up on Amazon:

Judge and Jury: The Life and Times of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis (Hardcover)
by David Pietrusza

by TC Cubby on Jan 29, 2007 9:15 AM CST   0 recs

I saw...
... you posted this in the Wilson story, too.

I have not read this book, but I do know that David Pietrusza is a respected baseball writer. If anyone else has read this, please let TC Cubby know how it was.

"[BCB] is much better than... well, everything." -- gravedigger, January 21, 2007

by Al on Jan 29, 2007 9:17 AM CST to parent up   0 recs

Thanks
If no one has read it, maybe I'll have to ghost-write a book report for you to post next off-season

by TC Cubby on Jan 29, 2007 9:34 AM CST to parent up   0 recs

If you read it..
... soon, and want to write a review, feel free to send it any time.
"[BCB] is much better than... well, everything." -- gravedigger, January 21, 2007

by Al on Jan 29, 2007 9:36 AM CST to parent up   0 recs

Cuylers's NIckname came about...
or so I read somewhere because he stuttered, and when asked his name, he responded,"Kie-kie-Cuyler."

Don't know how accurate this story is, but given all the "Rubes" at the time, it doesn't seem farfetched.

"That 2003 season, that was the first year ... that we saw the ivy change color. We had never been here that late in October." Ole Lyse, Wrigley usher.

by aisle209 on Jan 29, 2007 9:26 AM CST   0 recs

I've heard that story too
But it seems to be an urban legend.  The real story seems to be  his teammates in the minors would yell "Cuy! Cuy!" at him to tell him the ball was his on plays to the outfield.  The fans picked up on it as a chant.

I haven't seen a reputable source say that Cuyler stuttered.  I've never heard an old teammate refer to his being a stutterer.  The press quoted him without mentioning stuttering.  I'm pretty sure it's an urban legend.

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

by Josh77 on Jan 29, 2007 1:19 PM CST to parent up   0 recs

I have not read it...
But I read David Pietrusza's book on Arnold Rothstein and thought it was really good.  As expected, it deals a bunch with the 1919 World Series and how the Cubs were indirectly involved in the story coming to light.

I believe Rothstein and Wriley Field builder Charley Weeghman were associated.  Weeghman even testified at the trial.  

Recommend reading for anyone interested in the scandal.
 

by goody14 on Jan 29, 2007 10:17 AM CST   0 recs

It's really amazing....
that the Cubs of this era never won a world championship.  From 1929 to 1938, an era in which they won four pennants, they were absolutely stacked from top to bottom.  How they went a combined 3-16 in those four World Series is at least half a mystery.  The two sweeps at the hands of the Yankees in 1932 and 1938 were pretty much hopeless situations.  But the fact that they lost in both '29 and '35 with the teams they had is amazing.  I think this was an era much like today.  As good as the National League was, the Yankees, Tigers, and A's were always better.  
"Don't complain to me about the stormy weather, boys. Just bring the ship into port." --Steve Stone, September 2004

by ctcoff99 on Jan 29, 2007 6:57 PM CST   0 recs

The Athletics
were an incredible team in 1929.  Some have claimed that they were the equal or better to the 1927 Yankees.  (Their pitching was certainly superior and they had a better lineup top to bottom.  They didn't have Ruth or Gehrig though.)  So losing to them isn't that out of line--it would have been a big upset for the Cubs to win.

Really, only the 1935 loss to the Tigers is one that they should have won.

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

by Josh77 on Jan 29, 2007 9:30 PM CST to parent up   0 recs

1929
Well, first of all, Connie Mack pulled the move of the Series when he went against all conventional wisdom and did not start Lefty Grove in Game 1 as everyone expected.  He went with a supposedly washed up veteran named Howard Emkhe who threw the Cubs all-right-handed lineup totally off with a bunch of slow junk, as opposed to Grove's fireballing.  Then giving up a 10-run seventh to blow Game 4 pretty much eliminated all hope of the Cubs winning the Series.  If you compare the teams, it's a pretty even matchup, but the Cubs were simply outplayed and outcoached.  
"Don't complain to me about the stormy weather, boys. Just bring the ship into port." --Steve Stone, September 2004

by ctcoff99 on Jan 29, 2007 10:04 PM CST to parent up   0 recs

Huh?
Even matchup?

The Athletics were 104-46.  They beat a Yankee team that still had Ruth and Gehrig by 18 games.

The Cubs went 98-54.    That puts the Athletics  seven games better in the standings in what is generally acknowledged as the superior league.  Pythagorean stats knock four wins off of both teams. so the win difference is still seven.

The Athletics star pitcher was Lefty Grove, who was easily one of the best five pitchers to ever take the mound.  The Cubs best pitcher was Charlie Root, who was not one of the best five pitchers to take the mound.  In fact, Charlie Root was about as good as George Earnshaw, Philadelphia's number two pitcher.

The Cubs best hitter was Rogers Hornsby, one of the best hitters in baseball history.  The Athletics best hitter was Jimmie Foxx, who is one of the few hitters in baseball history better than Rogers Hornsby.

Add Mickey Cochrane, who was better than any Cub other than Hornsby (or the injured Harnett) and Al Simmons, who was probably a little better than Cuyler.  I could compare the rest of the lineup, but they stack up pretty evenly the rest of the way.  With Foxx and Cochrane, I'd say the Athletics had a slight edge in hitting and a massive edge in pitching with Grove.

Yes, I know all about Ehmke and the ten run inning in Game four.  I'd argue the fact that the Cubs couldn't hit Ehmke is a pretty damning statement that the Cubs weren't as good as the Athletics.  I mean, if in the 2004 World Series, the Red Sox had started Frank Castillo instead of Curt Schilling against the Cardinals and the Cardinals lost 3-1, would anyone take that as evidence that the teams were evenly matched?  No--I'd take that as evidence it didn't matter much who the heck the Red Sox threw up there.  Same with blowing an eight run lead.  That's not usually the sign of an evenly matched team.

The Cubs had a great team that year, but the Athletics had one of the greatest teams of all-time.   Maybe if Gabby Harnett had been healthy that season, the teams would have been closer.  But I don't see any rational analysis that would rank the teams as "pretty even."

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

by Josh77 on Jan 30, 2007 6:01 AM CST to parent up   0 recs

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