Me and Julio
Just a quick tip of the cap to one of our longtime favorites, Julio Franco, who retired at age 49 yesterday, ending a 31-year-career in professional baseball. Yep, that's correct - Franco was paid to play baseball for 31 years, 23 of which were spent in the big leagues. We give you a few moments of note from a truly distinctive - and quirky - career:
He signed with the Phillies in 1978 and made his major league debut four seasons later in Philly, where his teammates included Mike Schmidt, Steve Carlton, Pete Rose, Tug McGraw, and of course, Porfirio Altamirano . . . was swapped to Cleveland in the infamous five-for-one Von Hayes deal in December '82 . . . was an established star with the Indians in '84 during the inaugural season of my beloved Maine Guides, the Tribe's Triple A team which has been defunct for 20 years . . . played with fellow 29-year-old Terry Francona and 25-year-old John Farrell on the '88 Indians . . . earned the All-Star Game MVP award in '90, getting the winning hit off "Best Damn Sports Show" drooler Rob Dibble . . . won a batting title with the Rangers in '91 . . . went to Japan after the '94 strike, and later batted .423 and .437 in two years in the Mexican League . . . in 1997, was already one of the 10 oldest players in the league according to baseballreference.com . . . compiled over 4,200 hits in the US majors and minors, Japan, Korea, the Dominican, and Mexico . . . hit .309 with a 111 OPS+ for the Braves at age 45 . . . on one legendary road trip to L.A., hooked up with all four of the Golden Girls, including Rue McClanahan twice . . . became the oldest player to homer in the majors when he took a young whippersnapper named Randy Johnson deep a year ago today . . . was the last active player to face a pitcher who also faced Ted Williams (Jim Kaat) . . . said his goal was to collect a paycheck and a pension check from a team in the same year, which would have happened had he stuck around until age 50 . . . retires with a .298 average, 2,586 hits, and 173 homers in the majors . . . according to Wikipedia, which is never wrong, many of his early bios have his birthdate listed as 1954, which would make him 54 - but very likely still a couple of years younger than Miguel Tejada.



And who can forget Julio's early years, when he formed an unforgettable keystone duo with the great Honus Wagner? And his epic duels with Christy Mathewson? He always seemed to have Matty's number in crucial spots.
Them's was good times...
Just the visual of ANYONE shacking up with Bea Arthur? Yecchh!!
Remember when Von Hayes was THE hot phenom in baseball? Someone went so far as to compare him with Ted Williams!
Franco has gotta be at least 55 right?
by the way, a little throw back to your last column:
An even better and under-appreciated Guns n Roses song is "Rocket Queen" followed closely by "Nightrain"
Did Julio Franco ever win a World Series?
Worst of all, Von Hayes was named after a Nazi!
Nighttrain. Another favorite. The first verse is great.
Don't think Franco ever even played in a World Series. The Phillies traded him the year before they got there. Closest he probably got was with the Mets or Braves, I'd guess. The '94 White Sox were pretty good, too.
Von Hayes was a phenom, no doubt. In the early '80s, I remember the can't-miss prospects being him, Cal Ripken, Tom Brunansky, and some kid named Francona.
And was lucky enough that he didn't get his stuff from Radomski or McNamee. It had to be said
Can't say that didn't cross my mind as I was writing this.
This blogger might want to review your comment before posting it.
Irreverence and insight from Chad Finn, a Globe/Boston.com sports writer and lifelong and incurable sports nut. Yes, he realizes how lucky he is. You can e-mail him at chadfinn4@yahoo.com.
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