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The Journal of San Diego History
Winter 1995, Volume 41, Number 1
Contents of This Issue
Pacific Coast League Padres ~
Index to Players ~
Hall of Famers
Jack Graham, first base and outfield
Born: 12-24-16
Padres: 1948, 1950-52
Jack Graham, first base and outfield. Born: 12-24-16 Padres: 1948,
50-52
Tony Lazzeri hit sixty home runs for Salt Lake City in 1925 to
establish the Pacific Coast League record. In 1948, Jack Graham,
son of former big leaguer Peaches Graham, was on a pace to shatter
that mark. On July 25, Jack had already hit forty-six round
trippers, but he was beaned in Los Angeles. He ended up with forty-
eight for the year and was named the leagues's Most Valuable
Player. Jack was third in the American League for homers in 1949.
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[Jack Graham, interview by Bill Swank and Bills Capps, 15 February
1995, transcript notes.]
When I was a kid, my Dad would take me to ballgames, but I
preferred to watch the planes at a nearby air field. I'd help
around the planes and some of the pilots would take me up. I wanted
to be an Army aviator. In '33, when I started high school, I got
interested in baseball, but I learned to fly, too.
I came to San Diego as part of the Jack Harshman deal. You
know when you're in the process of doing something, you don't even
realize how important it might be. That was probably my greatest
claim to fame. I had forty-siz [home runs] in July and it was a
Sunday in L.A. It was the second game of the double header and the
ball would go into the shade. The hitters were in the shade and the
pitcher was in the sun.
The pitcher knocked me down, but didn't
knock me out. Earl Keller [sportswriter] told me that I would be
the MVP if I came back, but I had a hemorrhage in my middle ear.
Every time I'd look at the ball, I'd get a little dizzy. He [Red
Adams] didn't throw that hard. He pitched me high and inside to
keep me off the plate. The funny story behind that was that Rip
[Collins, manager] approached me, because I got hit twice earlier
up in San Francisco. He said that he noticed I was getting tired.
He told me to take off and just visit my family in Long Beach. I
could get some rest and I'd be OK. The reflexes weren't working and
he noticed it, but I vetoed it. You wanted to play in L.A. If you
couldn't hit a home run at Wrigley Field, you couldn't hit 'em
anywhere! Every player has his year and that was mine.
I got my glasses in 1950, because I was either landing [my
plane] two or three feet above the ground or bouncing it. With
glasses, everything was great. But, when I put them on to play
baseball, I had to change everything. The ball had been fuzzy but
now it became smaller. I just lost my stroke and couldn't get
around on the inside pitch. But, it was great for me to hit in San
Diego. I was a dead pull hitter and the wind blew off the bay to
right. They'd fly out.
Bill Starr was a pretty astute guy. In '51, I think it was, he
sent me a contract. I said I wasn't going to sign it; I needed more
money. I said, "Give me $25 a month more." He said, "Sign it or
not!" He knew I couldn't do anything about it, so I just signed it.
But, in '48, when I came from the Giants, I had a $6,000 guaranteed
major league contract. Because we played the longer schedule in the
PCL and I won the MVP, I made more money than if I'd been in the
majors. It really worked out good for me that time.
I was rooming with Max West in 1950. I liked to get up early
and go for breakfast. I loved that crispy bacon, but I can't eat it
now. Max said, "What the hell you doin that for? Call room
service!" So, I did and they wheeled it in. I said, "This is
great!" And that's what I did from then on.
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