Showing posts with label John Cattanach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Cattanach. Show all posts

Monday, March 19, 2012

John Cattanach

John Cattanach

John Cattanach pitched in three games in the major leagues, all in 1884.  He went 1-1, with an ERA+ of 84 in 22 innings.  Interestingly, Cattanach pitched for two pennant winners that year, the Providence Grays of the NL and the St. Louis Maroons of the UA.

A tall, strong, and graceful athlete who was raised on Providence's East Side, and a champion rower with the Narragansett Boat Club, Cattanach had been training all spring under [Fred] Bancroft's tutelage to made the difficult leap to professional baseball.  With his muscular arms and thick upper torso, he could throw the ball impressively hard, but like many novices he had serious trouble finding the plate, and Bancroft did not entirely trust him at the major-league level...[On June 5, Bancroft] had little choice but to send to the box his not-yet-ripe spring project, the champion rower John Cattanach-risky business, because the twenty-one year-old was still suffering control problems.  Sure enough, before a slender crowd of four hundred at Messer, the tall, barrel-chested rookie proved nervous and wild, surrendering seven runs to the Phillies in little more than four innings.  Sweeney, whom Bancroft had prudently stowed in right field, traded places with the flustered rower.  But even banished to the outfield, Cattanach proved a detriment, contributing a costly error to the Grays' 9-8 defeat.  "Cattanach needs practice, but it ought to be with a semi-professional nine," the Evening Press jabbed.
 -Fifty-Nine in '84

Ed Achorn went on to write that after Radbourn had proved, once again, that his tired arm could withstand the strain of a heavy workload, Bancroft released Cattanach on June 16.  I found a notice of his release in the Cleveland Herald on June 20 but can't seem to find any record of the Maroons signing him.  One has to assume that he was signed sometime around the same time as the Maroons were signing Boyle and Ryder.  Regardless, Cattanach was the first former Gray to pitch for the Maroons in 1884 but he would not be the last.     

Sunday, March 18, 2012

The 1884 Maroons: A New Pitcher (But Not The One You're Thinking Of)


Only a passed ball saved the St. Louis Unions from a whitewash to-day.  Shaw, formerly the Detroit pitcher, made his first appearance as a Union Association player and pitched so effectively that the boys from St. Louis could do nothing with his delivery and made but three scattered hits.  The Boston's also found Cattanch's curves very deceptive, and sized them up for only seven singles.  Brown made his first appearance since his reinstatement and caught Shaw in fine style.  The fielding on both sides was remarkable, the Bostons making no errors outside of the battery and the St. Louis nine but two.  Boston earned two of three runs in the first inning, on singles by Hackett and Brown, a base on balls, a passed ball, good base running by Murnan, and Butler's sacrifice.  In the third, base hits by Hackett and Murnan, with Brennan's fumble, gave another run.  The last Boston run was earned in the seventh on a hit by O'Brien, a put out, and Crane's single.  The visitors reached first base but five times during the game.  In the eighth Quinn's base hit, Brown's poor throw and a passed ball gave St. Louis its only run.  Quinn played a great game at first.  Attendance 1,200.
-St. Louis Globe-Democrat, July 17, 1884


I'll have more information tomorrow on the Maroon's starting pitcher in this game.