A Great Baseball Story: Leo Durocher Mentors Willie Mays!

A Great Baseball Story: Leo Durocher Mentors Willie Mays!



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Willie with Giants’ owner Horace Stoneham and manager Leo Durocher

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A Great Baseball Story: Leo Durocher Mentors Willie Mays!

“Leo Durocher was like my father away from home.”–Willie Mays

“Leo Durocher has the uncanny ability to make a bad situation worse.”-Branch Rickey

A while back I wrote about Jackie Robinson and Leo Durocher. It always makes me sad whenever I think about how things might have been significantly better for Jackie if he had the bold and brash Leo Durocher leading interference for him back in 1947, the year Jackie broke the infamous color barrier.

Instead, Leo had been suspended for what many think were frivolous reasons by Commissioner Happy Chandler just as the season began; and so he was not around to protect jackie. In my opinion, Leo never would have let anyone get away with giving his star player grief. Had they done so, Leo would have given it right back…and they would have regretted it.

That got me thinking about Leo Durocher and Willie Mays, and how Leo acted as a mentor and father-figure for Willie during his rookie year of 1951. In the case of Leo and Willie Mays, we don’t have to speculate. We know what happened.

Leo had his faults…lots of them. As many players hated his guts as loved him. But, as I’ve been saying for a long time, in spite of what you might think about him, his greatest and most lasting contribution to baseball was taking a young, homesick Willie Mays under his wing and guiding him during his difficult transition into the major leagues. In doing so, Leo allowed Mays to blossom into arguably the greatest player in the history of the game. I don’t know if there was anyone else around at the time besides Durocher who could have done this. 

I always love to think about the wonderful scene in the Giants’ clubhouse after rookie Willie Mays got off to his disastrous 0-23 start. Giants’ coach Freddie Fitzsimmons saw Willie sitting alone in front of his locker crying. “Leo,” Franks said, “I think you better have a talk with your boy over there.”

What would have become of the Willie Mays if Leo wasn’t there to console him at this crucial time? I still get goose-bumps whenever I think about it. Leo went over to Willie and asked, “What’s the matter, son?” Willie turned to his manager and with tears streaming down his cheeks, replied:

“I don’t belong up here…I can’t play here…I can’t help you Missa’ Leo. Send me back to the minors.”

Leo smiled, patted Willie on the back, and simply said:

“Look son, I brought you up here to do one thing. That’s to play center field. You’re the best center fielder I’ve ever seen. As long as I’m here, you’re going to play center field. Tomorrow, next week, next month. As long as Leo Durocher is manager of this team you will be on this club because you’re the best ball player I have ever seen.”

The rest, as they say, is history. On his 24th at bat, Willie hit a homer over the left field fence off Warren Spahn who later joked, “I’ll never forgive myself. We might have gotten rid of Willie forever if I’d only struck him out.”

Years later, Willie was asked in an interview to expand on his relationship with Leo. Here’s what he said:

“I had such a good time with Leo. I met so many good people in Hollywood. Jeff Chandler used to come to spring training with me, Pat O’Brien, all the movie stars. Leo was like my father away from home. When I went to California I stayed with Leo in his house. His kid, Chris Durocher, was my roommate on the road. Chris would go to the black areas and stay with me. Leo trusted me. He knew that if his kid was going to stay with me, nothing was going to happen to that kid.”

Yes, Leo Durocher had his faults. He was “the All-American Out” as Babe Ruth so famously branded him. He was a scrappy, marginal player who couldn’t hit, but won three pennants and one World Series title as a manager. So you can debate back and forth whether he belongs in the Hall of Fame. To me, he’s a Hall-of-Famer just for the way he took care of a frightened and homesick rookie named Willie Mays. 

If only he had had the chance to do the same for Jackie Robinson!

Gary Livacari

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Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts edited from the Willie Mays Wikipedia page.

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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.

2 Comments

  1. Pat Kennedy · May 21, 2018 Reply

    I find Leo to be one of the true personalities in baseball’s history. Two books…Nice Guys Finish Last…and…The Prodigal Son…do a great job of bringing Leo’s story to life. He was at the center of a lot of baseball history. Member of the WS ’27 Yankees, Captain of the WS Gas House Gang, first successful manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers (while dealing with that lunatic Larry MacPhail), suspended by Happy Chandler (a joke), winding up with the bitter enemy New York Giants and leading them to a WS (while dealing with another pompous owner Horace Stoneham). All the while being a great tactician and disciple of Miller Huggins. The fact Leo had a great personality and that Hollywood types befriended him just made him that much more interesting. If his career stopped there…in my mind…he’s a lock for the HOF.

    • Gary Livacari · May 22, 2018 Reply

      Thanks Pat…you make a lot of great points here, and, as you might remember from our get-together, I agree with all of them about Leo, my favorite baseball personality!

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