Another Edition of “Baseball’s Lopsided Trades”: Frank Robinson for Milt Pappas!

Another Edition of “Baseball’s Lopsided Trades”: Frank Robinson for Milt Pappas!



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Another Edition of

“Baseball’s Lopsided Trades”:

Frank Robinson for Milt Pappas




Today in my ongoing series on lopsided trades, I’d like to highlight the December 9, 1965 trade of the great slugger, Frank Robinson, from the Reds to the Orioles for Milt Pappas, Jack Baldshun, and Dick Simpson. The trade is generally regarded as one of the worst in baseball history, especially considering that Robinson was only 30 years old and appeared to have many productive years ahead of him. The skeptics were proven right: he did indeed have many productive years ahead of him!

“Not a Young 30…”

Reds’ GM Bill DeWitt, the architect of the trade, attempted to downplay the fiasco when he uttered one of baseball’s most infamous lines, referring to Robinson as “not a young 30.” Outrage over the deal made it difficult for Milt Pappas to adjust to his new team, and he was traded out of town after only three seasons.

Frank’s great 1966 Triple Crown season, one of the best individual offensive seasons ever, immediately followed this ill-advised swap. It’s actually frightening to speculate just how good the “Big Red Machine” of the early 1970s would have been if this deal had never been made.

Frank Robinson’s Career Stats Are Staggering!

Check out these numbers:

Frank Robinson played for five teams from 1956 to 1976 and is the only player to win league MVP honors in both the National League and American League. Over his 21 seasons in the majors, Robby compiled a .294 batting average, with 2943 hits, 1829 runs, 528 doubles, 72 triples, 588 home runs (currently tenth all-time), 1812 RBIs, .389 OBP, .537 slugging average, and a 154 career OPS+ (100 being the major league average).

Other career highlights include: 14-time All-Star, Triple Crown winner (1966), two World Series championships (1966 and 1970), World Series MVP (1966), Rookie of the Year (1956), and All-Star Game MVP (1971).

Frank Robinson played in the game

In his rookie year, 1956, he tied the rookie home run record (38) and received Rookie of the Year honors. Although the Reds won the National League pennant in 1961 and Frank won his first MVP that year, he had arguably an even better offensive year in 1962 when he hit .342 with 39 home runs, 51 doubles, 208 hits, 136 RBIs, and 134 runs. It’s hard to understand how a player of this caliber could soon end up on the “trading block,” but that’s exactly what happened a couple years later.

Frank Robinson’s Great 1966 Season

In Robinson’s first year in Baltimore, following the 1965 trade, all he did was win the Triple Crown, leading the American League with a .316 batting average, 49 home runs, and 122 RBIs. But that hardly tells the story of this remarkable season. He led the American League in virtually every offensive category: 122 runs, 367 total bases, .410 on-base percentage, an incredible .637 slugging average, 1.047 OPS, and a Ruthian 198 OPS+. It was definitely a season for the record books.

With Frank Robinson leading the way, the Orioles went on to win the 1966 pennant and World Series, and Frank was named the World Series MVP. In the Orioles’ four-game sweep of the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers, Robinson hit two home runs, the first in Game One, which Baltimore won 5–2; and the second in Game Four, the only run of the game in a 1–0 series-clinching victory. Both home runs were hit off Don Drysdale.

A Historic Baseball Figure

Frank Robinson and Jackie Robinson

Following his playing career, Frank managed for 16 seasons in the majors for the Indians, Giants, Orioles, and Expos/Nationals, and was named American League Manager of the Year in 1989. A truly historic baseball pioneer, he became the game’s first black manager when he took the Indians’ helm in 1975.

Milt Pappas Was a Fine Pitcher

Although there’s no doubt that the Orioles got the better end of this deal, what’s often overlooked is that Milt Pappas was a fine pitcher with a 17-year Big League career (1957-1973) during which he went 209-164 (.560), with a 3.40 ERA. He’s one of only a handful of pitchers to win 100 games in both leagues.

Prior to the trade, he had spent nine seasons with the Orioles, posting an outstanding 110-74, 3.24 ERA record. His tenure in Cincinnati was short-lived, but he still had some productive years ahead of him. After three

Milt Pappas

mediocre seasons with the Braves, he had four solid years with the Cubs, going 51-41, 3.33 ERA. It’s a shame that most baseball historians remember Milt for being on the wrong side of this Bill DeWitt orchestrated trade. He deserves much better.

So today, we’re glad to shine our baseball spotlight on one of the game’s all-time greats, Frank Robinson, as we recall a lopsided trade that definitely went the Orioles’ way. Frank’s #20 has been retired by both the Reds and the Orioles. He received his well-deserved plaque in Cooperstown in 1982. Frank passed away on February 7, 2019.

Gary Livacari 

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Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts edited from Frank Robinson Wikipedia page; Stats from Baseball Reference.com

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I'm a baseball historian who also enjoys writing. My forte is identifying ballplayers in old photos, and my special interest is the Dead Ball Era.

5 Comments

  1. Paul Doyle · December 11, 2021 Reply

    I agree, Gary.
    Unfair that Pappas had to live down that trade. Hewas one of the few who won 100 or more games in each league.
    Always remember the tragic disappearance of his wife who was subsequently was found five years later submerged in her car in a pond. It was ruled accidental,
    but I remember the whisperings as to whether Pappas was involved somehow. Tragic thing to live with.

    • Gary Livacari · December 11, 2021 Reply

      Thanks Paul. I certainly remember him very well with the Cubs and he put together some fine years. I thought he was a pretty good pitcher. I was surprised to learn his career stats. I don’t think he’s HOF material, but his stats are better than some who are in there. I also remember the incident with his wife. It occurred in Wheaton, not too far from where I live. Very tragic.

      No guesses on the mystery player from you??

  2. Joe Zanko · December 11, 2021 Reply

    From that era the dream outfield. Robinson, Mays And Aaron. Musical moves to first base.

  3. kevin barwin · December 12, 2021 Reply

    I believe Robinson was also the first black manager in both leagues, Indians (1975) and Giants (1981). On opening day of that first year as player-manager he homered in his first at-bat making him the first and maybe the only black manager to homer.

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