Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 3, 2021, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A19
A 19SPORTS I MLBSUNDAY, JANUARY 3, 2021 ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
A TLANTA — If anyone should tell the story of Phil Niekro and the pitch that made him a Braves folk hero, it’s rightly
those former teammates on the receiving end
of his dancing knuckleball.
Niekro’s catchers made up a fraternity charged
with imposing order on a pitch that seemed to
have a mind all its own, that skipped from mound
to plate like a carefree schoolboy. They never
lacked mettle. And they may all have deserved
a medal. He went through plenty of them in 24
seasons, 1964-87, 21 of those with the Milwaukee
and Atlanta Braves.
Some are no longer with us, like the fellow who
caught Niekro’s no-hitter in 1973 (Paul Casanova).
Joe Torre’s still here, and he caught Niekro at the
beginning. Bruce Benedict caught him at the end.
They say no one corralled that free-spirited pitch
better — or for more games, 148 — than “Eggs”
Benedict. And no one had more fun with it than
Bob Uecker. He (in 1967) and Bob Didier (1969)
and the late Earl Williams (’72) led the league in
passed balls, a tribute to their working relation-
ship with Niekro and his unpredictable pitch.
All these years later, what else was there to do
but laugh about it? It was Uecker who made catch-
ing Niekro an important part of his famed self-
roast routine, coining the line that best way to
catch his knuckleball was to wait until it stopped
rolling and just pick it up. Among others.
■ Bob Uecker: “One day, he and his brother
were pitching against each other in Atlanta and
their folks were at the game sitting behind home
plate. (Chasing pitches that got away) I saw their
folks more during the game than they did the
whole weekend.”
These are their memories of their pitcher who
died the day after Christmas at the age of 81.
Some are funny. Some poignant. All of them fond.
■ Bruce Benedict: “I was talking to Dale
(Murphy, the two-time MVP who broke in with
the Braves as a catcher) a couple days ago. We
both said almost at the same time it was really an
honour to be a part of Niekro’s career that way. It
was such a privilege.”
In the beginning, Niekro broke in as a reliever
in Milwaukee in 1965.
■ Joe Torre: “Talk about a nightmare, knowing
he could pitch every game.”
What made Niekro’s knuckler unique was that
he threw it harder than most and still maintained
the lack of spin that made it so capricious. Some-
thing a Milwaukee minor league catcher learned
the hard way as both were coming up through the
system. And it continued to perplex catchers as
well as hitters from that point forward.
■ Uecker: “In triple-A, I’m warming him up in
the bullpen. He used to throw it so hard, and he
never knew where it was going to wind up and
neither did you. He hit me in the bare hand and
split my finger. That was my introduction to Phil’s
knuckleball one particular day.”
■ Vic Correll (who caught 67 of Niekro’s games
with the Braves between 1974-77): “Game in
Houston I caught him, I remember the last pitch
of the game, it was a knuckleball that did three
different things. I happened to catch it, and Ernie
Johnson asked me on the bus on the way back to
the hotel, how the hell did you catch that? I don’t
know, I told him, I guessed right. To me there was
no secret. You either caught ’em or you didn’t.”
After the Braves moved from Milwaukee to
Atlanta in 1966, Niekro was still working in relief.
Didn’t make it as a starter until the following sea-
son. The world was always slow to come around
to the son of an Ohio coal miner. Baseball people
often didn’t know exactly what to make of his
signature pitch, and what they were uncertain of,
they mistrusted.
But upon breaking through as a starter, Niekro
wanted to practically build a home and plant a
garden on the mound. He is fourth all-time in
innings pitched, 5,404. He put up 245 complete
games on the way to the 318 career wins that as-
sured his entry to the Hall of Fame.
How about this mind-blowing three-season
stretch, between 1977-79, at the end of which
Niekro was 40 years old, when he averaged 335
innings pitched and totalled 65 complete games?
Torre would see Niekro from two different
perspectives, as his catcher and, from 1982-84, as
his manager with the Braves. He underestimated
Niekro’s resilience in the 1982 National League
Championship Series, after his Game 1 start
against St. Louis was rained out just short of an
official game, Niekro shutting out the Cardinals
to that point. And regrets it still.
■ Torre: “Looking back I probably should have
pitched him in the next game after we got rained
out. I know he wanted to pitch, and I don’t remem-
ber exactly what happened. I’m sure I talked it
over with (coaches) Bob Gibson and Rube Walker,
and we decided to make sure when he makes his
next start, he’ll have some kind of rest anyway.
Knowing Knucksie he could have pitched every
day and never b----- about it.”
Pascual Perez was shelled in the Game 1 redux,
while Niekro pitched strong in Game 2, leaving
with the lead in a game the Braves would lose.
Just because Niekro threw an exotic pitch
didn’t mean that he was any less a proud athlete.
He won four Gold Gloves for fielding his posi-
tion. He hit seven career home runs, his last in
1982 during an October victory over San Diego in
which he also threw a three-hit shutout. When he
won his 300th game as a Yankee, the story goes
that he didn’t throw his first knuckleball until the
last hitter, striking out Jeff Burroughs on three of
them. Just to prove that he could.
■ Uecker: “He used to love to do that, not
because guys were going to hit his knuckleball.
Some games when he went out there, if he kept
shaking you off and you didn’t put down some-
thing else other than a knuckleball, he’d throw
whatever he wanted to throw anyway. ... He liked
to be a regular guy every once in a while.”
But never forget it was the knuckleball that
made him special and turned opposing hitters
inside-out.
■ Benedict: “I remember opposing hitters com-
ing up to me and saying you know what, we only
face him three or four times a year, I’m not going
to mess my swing up trying to hit this thing. I’m
just going to swing as hard as I can. If I hit it, I
hit it. If I don’t, I don’t.”
Niekro’s playing journey ended when at 48, he
was brought back by the Braves, having been re-
leased by Cleveland, for a one-game encore Sept.
27, 1987. He went three innings, gave up five runs.
■ Benedict: “I remember for four or five games
before that I dreaded it. I got the big glove out
again and was full of angst, I can tell you that.
You don’t want his last game to be missing half
of his pitches. And I remember what a proud mo-
ment it was for everybody. For anybody to be a
part of that was special.”
Common to all those who caught Niekro and
knew him best as a ballplayer was just what a fine
teammate and decent fellow he was.
■ Dale Murphy (who was called up in 1976 as
a catcher, and caught Niekro 23 times before his
move to the outfield): “It was ’76. I’m catching.
This is my first call-up. He takes a no-hitter into
the ninth. We got until one out in the ninth with
a no-hitter. And Cesar Geronimo got a hit. I was
just a kid. I’m just trying to stop the knuckleball.
I don’t even know what I am doing, and here I am
going out into the ninth inning and Knucksie has
got a no-hitter going. Over the years, Knucksie
would say, ‘Hey, Murph, remember that day in
Cincinnati?’ Invariably, he’d say, ‘I felt worse
for you than I did losing the no-hitter because
I thought it would have been so cool for you as
rookie to catch my next no-hitter.’”
Three days before he died, in hospice care for
the cancer that would take him, Niekro made one
last call to his catcher. The one who always made
the world laugh when talking about his adven-
tures with the knuckleball. Now it was a serious
as it could get for a friendship that stretched back
more than 50 years.
■ Uecker: “He told me that he was ready. I
talked to him for about 15 minutes. He was strong
enough that I understood everything that he was
saying. He wanted to say goodbye to me.
“He called me The Chaser and I called him The
Thrower. That was our nickname for each other.
He told me, ‘Chaser, I’m getting tired, and I think
I’m going to go to sleep for a while.’”
— The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
A bunch of knuckleheads
Phil Niekro’s catchers fondly remember the baseball icon
STEVE HUMMER
‘Talk about a nightmare, knowing he could pitch every game’
— Joe Torre on the prospect of facing Niekro in consecutive games
JOHN RAOUX / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Hall of Famer Phil Niekro waves to fans before a 2017 spring training game between the Atlanta Braves and the Pittsburgh Pirates in Kissimmee, Fla. Famous for his knuckleball, Niekro was also known as a bit of an oddball.
CHARLIE RIEDEL / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Bob Uecker and Dale Murphy (below) got unique perspectives of both the knuckleballer and the man.
A_19_Jan-03-21_FP_01.indd A19 1/2/21 5:46 PM
;