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Pangaea Baseball League 1979
 

Pangaea Baseball League 1979

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Lead Story - 1/25/2023

League History (1975-1977)

Story Photo
Brandon beat Hamilton in the '76 Pangaea Cup Final with help from this Junior Barnes catch in Game 7
1977 - Golden Bears over Dukes Again - Same Result, Different Hero
In '76 it was Junior Barnes making a home-run saving catch to win the World Series for the Golden Bears. A year later, Barnes had been traded to the rival Dukes, but it was the same two teams meeting up for the championship. More about that later. Early in the season, it looked very much like there might be a 3rd team joining Brandon and Hamilton as a contender for the playoffs. In their 27th game of the season, the Oshawa Barons defeated the Hamilton Dukes to sneak into first place, half a game ahead of both the Dukes and the Golden Bears. Even at the quarter mark of the season, the Barons were in playoff position in second place. Speaking of hot starts, Junior Barnes, who was traded from Brandon to Hamilton before the season started, was hitting a remarkable .444 after 25 games. The Nova Scotia Voyageurs had a nice start too, boasting a winning record (21-20) at the quarter point of the schedule, and just a single game out of second place. Meanwhile, the Hamilton Dukes found themselves uncharacteristically in 4th place, with a losing record of 19-21 after 40 games. It got worse for the Dukes as they won just 3 of their next 10 games for a 22-28 record, and sole possession of last place, after 50 games. Their ace pitcher, Goose Goslin, was also struggling, with a 4-6 record, but there were brighter days ahead for the Goose. At the midway point of the season, the Dukes still had a losing record, 40-41, good for 4th place. Oshawa was still going strong at 42-39 and hanging onto second. The Voyageurs were tucked in between the two with a 41-40 record. Even the Saints could smell the playoffs from 5th place with a 37-42 mark, only 4 games out of 2nd. Meanwhile, Brandon was cruising in top spot, ten and a half games ahead of the Barons.

There were other exciting races in 1977 besides the playoff race. At the half way mark, Nicholas Czech (Saints), Joe Cronin (Dukes), and Gus Baron (Barons) were top 3 in homers with 29, 27, and 25 respectively. Meanwhile Ricky Cooney (.354) held a 10 point lead on Ricky Porcoli (.344) for the batting title race.

At the All-Star break, Brandon still held a 7 1/2 game lead over the surprising Voyageurs and Barons, who were both three games ahead of the 4th place Dukes. Could there be a new playoff team this season? After 105 games, the Voyageurs had moved into 2nd place, a single game ahead of Oshawa and three up on the Dukes.

At the three-quarter mark (121 games), it was still incredibly tight at the top - Brandon with a 5 game lead on Oshawa, who were just one game ahead of both Hamilton and Nova Scotia. The Voyageurs had been in second for a couple weeks but started to sputter a bit when faced with a tough part of the schedule. Just after the three-quarter point of the season the Dukes finally moved into second place after a four game sweep of the Voyageurs. With 23 games left to go, the Voyageurs were in the middle of a 7-game losing streak and were falling out of the race, 5 and a half out of the Wild card. The Dukes had fallen 2 games behind Oshawa but then took 3 of 4 from the Barons to pull into a tie for 2nd. Brandon was 10 games ahead, pulling away and in the midst of an 11-game winning streak.

Down the stretch, the Barons fell apart, losing 14 in a row at one point to finish off their chances. The Dukes pulled ahead in the Wild Card and ended up with a 9-game lead over both Oshawa and Nova Scotia, who both finished with 79-83 records. The home run race was exciting to the end, with Gus Baron setting a league record with 58. Czech and Cronin were close behind, with 54 and 53. Duke Longley had a very strong second half to catch and pass Ricky Cooney for the batting title, finishing at .352. Longley also led the league in hits and took home MVP honours. Goose Goslin was incredible after his terrible 4-6 start. He went 14-6 the rest of the way to finish at 18-12, first in WHIP, 3rd in ERA, first again in strikeouts, and he took home his first Cy Young Award. The Rookie of the Year Award went to Voyageurs shortstop Christian Rousseau, who had a mediocre season at the plate, but a very good year defensively, with a remarkable 51 Dwar.

The playoffs saw the same match up as the first two seasons, with Hamilton traveling to Brandon for the first two games. Game one saw Chico Morton taking the mound for the Golden Bears against the Dukes' Dave Philley. Brandon started off with a bang, going deep three times in the first inning thanks to Longley, Tank Bellows, and Lou Davis. The Dukes were unfazed though, coming back to take the lead 6-4 after five innings. It remained that way until the bottom of the eighth, when Brandon struck for five runs and hung on for a 9-7 win. Brandon took the second game as well, 5-3, behind a strong pitching performance from Alexander Duke. Game three saw Goose Goslin get the Dukes back on track and back into the series. Goslin bested Brandon's Ace Perry, going the distance in a 5-4 win. The Dukes tied the series in Game 4, thanks to a strong start by Bill Lee and a two-RBI game by former Golden Bear Junior Barnes. Game 5 saw a repeat of the Morton-Philley matchup, but this time the pitchers duelled and the bats were relatively silent, with Philley allowing just two earned runs for a 3-2 victory and a 3-2 series lead for the second-place Dukes.

Going back to Brandon for Game 6 with their backs against the wall, the Golden Bears hoped that home field advantage would help their cause. It certainly looked like that was the case early on, as Tank Bellows hit a first-inning Grand Slam to give the home team a 4-0 lead. But two innings later, Hamilton had stormed back and led 5-4. It was a see-saw, offensive affair, with the Dukes tying the game at eight in the top of the 9th on Joe Cronin’s third home run of the game. The game would become a KBL classic, going 14 innings before Cesar Franklin would walk it off with a single, scoring Buck Taylor and tying the series at three. Another Game 7 between these two great rivals awaited.

Game Seven lived up to its billing and matched the 1976 version in every way. First of all the pitching matchup was as good as you could get, with Goose Goslin going against Ace Perry, this year's Cy versus last year's Cy. With both bullpens decimated by the previous night's 14-inning marathon, both starters would need to go deep in the game. It was scoreless through three innings, until Mickey Vernon singled home Duke Sims to give the Dukes a 1-0 lead through four. In the bottom of the 5th, Brandon would tie the game when Blacky Crystal scored on a Lucas Duke sac fly. The two aces were stingy until the top of the 8th, when Hamilton scored two runs against Perry. Three consecutive hits by Lou Boudreau, Mickey Stanley and Duke Sims made the game 2-1 Dukes, followed by a Joe Cronin sacrifice fly giving Hamilton a 3-1 lead. Goslin retired the Bears in order in the bottom of the 8th, and it looked like the Dukes were on the verge of another World Series upset. Ace Perry, still battling in the 9th, got the Dukes to go three up, three down in the top of the 9th, setting the stage for the bottom of the 9th. Tiger Lewis doubled to lead off, and Goslin began to falter. He walked the next two batters to load the bases. A wild pitch scored Lewis, and then Tank Bellows beat the throw home on a Cesar Franklin ground ball to tie the game at three. With just one out and a runner on third, Goslin struck out Blacky Crystal and got Louis Lewis to ground out to end the inning. Another extra inning game, but this one was Game 7 - winner take all! In the top of the 10th, Ace Perry started the inning with a walk, but got Lou Boudreau to hit into a double play. Ace was finished though, and Cap Bailey was called in from the bullpen. Bailey got Mickey Stanley to fly out to end the Dukes' half inning. In the bottom of the 10th, Goslin dragged himself out of the dugout and took the mound. He got the first batter, Lucas Duke, to ground out, but it was apparent that the tank was empty. Dave Houston came in to face the regular season MVP, Duke Longley. Longley drove Houston's fourth pitch over the wall in left-centerfield for a walk-off Game 7, extra-inning, World Series winning home run. Longley was awarded the World Series MVP, and the Golden Bears had their second championship. What a great finish! Same two teams, same time next year? We shall see.

1976 - Golden Bears beat Dukes in Classic Game 7 Thriller
Similar to 1975, the Brandon Golden Bears won the President's Trophy, finishing first in the Regular Season's Standings by 18 games over the second place Hamilton Dukes, this time with a record 123 wins, up from the 110 they recorded in the inaugural season of the league. In 1975, the Dukes had finished 11 games back but had shocked the Bears in the Pangaea Cup four games to one. In 1976, Brandon was looking for revenge. Brandon won game 1 of the '76 Series with an 8-4 victory, but lost its home-field advantage in Game 2, falling to the Dukes by a 6-4 score. Back in Hamilton, Brandon took Game 3 by a 5-3 score behind a strong performance by starting pitcher Alexander Duke, but then the Dukes stormed back with two very convincing wins (7-3 and 9-2). Brandon again had their backs against the wall and were on the verge of seeing another dominant regular season wasted. Game 6 was a thriller. The Dukes looked destined to repeat their 1975 victory when they scored five runs in the second inning off Red McCloud, but the Bears got one back in the bottom of the second and then tied it up in the bottom of the sixth. The Dukes took the lead again with one in the 7th and one in the 8th before Bull Martin hit a 2-run homer in the bottom of the 8th to tie the game and Lou Davis hit a go-ahead solo shot. In the top of the 9th, the Dukes put runners on the corners with one out when Richie Ashburn scorched a ground ball down the 3rd base line. Bears' 3rd baseman Duke Longley dove to his right to make the stop and threw out Junior Gonzalez at home plate to preserve the one-run lead. Brian Terican then got Bernie Allen to pop out to send the series to a Game 7.

Game 7 was another thriller, but it was the starting pitchers who stole the show. Goldy Twain of the Dukes was spectacular, giving up just 2 hits through his eight innings of work, although one of those was a 4th-inning home run by Tiger Lewis, his third of the series. Alexander Duke of the Golden Bears matched Twain's performance, scattering three hits over nine innings to get the shutout victory and the Golden Bears' first title. Junior Barnes made two huge defensive plays in center field for the Bears, first robbing Richie Ashburn of extra bases with a diving catch in the 4th inning, and then, on the final play of the game, leaping up at the fence to rob Duke Sims of a game-tying home run. Barnes ran at full speed to the left-centerfield wall, leapt up, pulled the ball back over the wall, and continued running right into the arms of his teammates as they celebrated. What a finish to a thrilling seven-game series. Alexander Duke was named MVP with 2 victories in the Cup final.

The non-playoff teams, similar to 1975, were never really in contention and jockeyed for positions three through six throughout the season, all finishing with losing records. The exception was the Oshawa Barons, who did have a good start to the season and were right with the Dukes and Golden Bears through the first quarter of the campaign. Oshawa hung on to 3rd place, an improvement from their 5th place finish in 1975. Saskatoon dropped from third in '75 to fourth in '76. Nova Scotia moved up from 6th to 5th, while Victoria had a very disappointing second season, dropping from 4th place in '75 to dead last, setting a record for losses in the process with a 56-106 record. The Vikings found themselves out of the race early thanks to a 14-game losing streak in April.

Duke Longley won the batting title. He was hitting .400 after 50 games before settling down and finishing the season at .341. Bull Martin won the regular season MVP while leading the league in Home Runs and RBI. Dave Brodie of the Voyageurs led a strong crop of rookies and took home Rookie of the Year. Ace Perry of the Golden Bears won the Cy Young Award leading the league in Wins (24) and ERA (2.91), while Goose Goslin again led the league in Strikeouts and Brian Terican earned the most Saves for the second straight season. Goslin had been a perfect 10-0 at the 45 game mark and finished with a 21-7 record.

1975
Hamilton Dukes win the Inaugural Pangaea Cup Trophy
The KBL's first season saw six teams take to the field - from west to east: the Victoria Vikings, Saskatoon Saints, Brandon Golden Bears, Hamilton Dukes, Oshawa Barons, and Nova Scotia Voyageurs. All six had high hopes of taking home the first ever Pangaea Cup Championship Trophy as Spring Training began. In the first few weeks of the season, two teams began to emerge as favourites, and that stayed true throughout the season. Brandon and Hamilton were both strong from start to finish, Brandon finishing on top with 110 wins, with Hamilton in second place with 99 victories. Third place Saskatoon was 23 games behind the Dukes, so the championship matchup was settled pretty early in the season. Brandon seemed to have an edge on offense, while the Dukes boasted a formidable starting rotation. The regular season Major Awards were swept by the Golden Bears - MVP: Tiger Lewis, Cy Young Award: Red McCloud, Rookie of the Year: Duke Longley. For the inaugural season it was decided that the runner-up in MVP voting would be granted the Rookie of the Year award. Other first-season stars included the Saints' CF Ricky Cooney, who won the batting title and led the league in hits and stolen bases, Goose Goslin of the Dukes who led the league in strikeouts, and the Golden Bears' Brian Terican who was the Season 1 Saves leader. There were four no-hitters thrown in 1975, including a perfect game by McCloud. Grant Foggie of the Barons threw a no-hitter in his first ever start, the team's 3rd ever game. The others were thrown by Blake Crowder, also of the Barons, and the Golden Bears' Alexander Duke.

The Championship Series looked to be a battle of the titans, with the Golden Bears the favourites. The Dukes' starting pitcher for Game 1 had other ideas and shut down Brandon's offense, taking game 1 by a score of 7-1. Brandon's Alexander Duke turned things around for the Golden Bears, shutting down the Dukes' offense and helping Brandon even the series with a 2-1 victory in Game 2. The series moved to Hamilton for the next three games, and the Dukes dominated the favoured Bears at home, taking all three games, 10-4, 4-2, and 7-2, winning the first ever KBL Pangaea Cup four games to one. Goose Goslin won the clinching 5th game and was named co-WS MVP along with third-baseman Duke Sims. Goslin gave up only three runs in two complete game victories and struck out 10 Brandon batters. Sims went 8 for 18 for a .444 Avg with 7 RBIs in the series, three of which were game-winners. The Golden Bears' bats never did get on track, but in a short series, good pitching can beat good hitting, and that was certainly the case as the Dukes' starters shone brightly. Along with Goslin, Dave Philley and Bill Lee also collected victories, while Goldy Twain pitched well in Game 2 but didn't get the same run support as his fellow starters.

1/25/2023

Pangaea Baseball League Origin Story

Story Photo
Lou Morton hit the first HR in Pangaea league history for the Voyageurs
The Pangaea Baseball League has been played inside my head since I was 6 years old (I have a really good imagination). It starts with just 6 teams but will end up with 32 eventually. All fictional players, although some names might sound familiar. For example, when I was a kid, I liked some of the names of the historical baseball players I read about so those guys would end up on one of my made-up teams - guys like Mickey Stanley and Mickey Vernon, Lou Boudreau and Larry Doby, Joe Cronin (who I thought sounded like a first baseman, so he plays 1B in this league), and Goose Goslin (who I thought sounded like a pitcher, so he's a very good SP here in Pangaea! Lol)

All Canadian teams. All created and owned by me, Gus.
That's it for now. Now if you'll excuse me, I've got some important PC stuff to do!
Gus

Longley powers Golden Bears to win over Dukes

Duke Longley blasted 2 homers, lifting the Golden Bears to a 7-4 win over Hamilton. | Box

Golden Bears can't contain Stanley, fall 8-2

Mickey Stanley was on his game, knocking in 3 runs in Hamilton's 8-2 victory over the Golden Bears. Stanley also had 3 hits in the game. Goose Goslin struckout 8 Brandon batters in the contest. | Box

Bellows unloads, Golden Bears still lose

Tank Bellows blasted 2 homers, but it wasn't enough to lift the Golden Bears over the Dukes. Hamilton won by a score of 10-8. Cesar Franklin recorded 4 hits. | Box


WHO'S HOT - Last 5 Games

D. Longley, Golden Bears.4713 HR7 RBI
D. Sims, Dukes.3001 HR8 RBI
M. Stanley, Dukes.3911 HR6 RBI
J. Cronin, Dukes.2003 HR5 RBI
M. Vernon, Dukes.4090 HR5 RBI

WHO'S NOT - Last 5 Games

G. Hisle, Dukes4 for 22 (.182)
L. Davis, Golden Bears3 for 19 (.158)
L. Knight, Golden Bears2 for 17 (.118)
B. CrystalB, Golden Bears4 for 20 (.200)
B. MartinB, Golden Bears3 for 19 (.158)

Leaders: HR

J. Cronin, Dukes 51
B. MartinB, Golden Bears 47
B. Hooper, Vikings 42
G. BaronG, Barons 42
T. LewisT, Golden Bears 40

Leaders: SO

G. Goslin, Dukes 205
D. Philley, Dukes 161
A. Perry, Golden Bears 158
A. TaylorA, Voyageurs 152
B. Lee, Dukes 150

9/28/2023

Golden Bears Win Second Straight Title

Story Photo
Golden Bears' 2nd Baseman Lucas Duke was an All-Star for the 3rd straight season
The Brandon Golden Bears finished first in regular season wins for the third straight season with 104 wins. They cruised to an early lead in the standings and held that lead throughout the season. The only question was who their opponent would be in the World Series. Four teams were in the running through most of the season, with three different teams taking their turn in second place, but finally, it was the Hamilton Dukes claiming the second playoff spot for the third straight season. Similar to the 1976 finals, Hamilton was up 3 games to 2 going into the final two games in Brandon, and in a repeat of '76, Brandon took the final two games, both by one run. Duke Longley hit the game-seven winning home run off Dave Houston and was named WS MVP. Longley was also the regular season MVP and made the All-Pangaea team, joined there by teammates Brian Terican, Lucas Duke, and Tiger Lewis.

2/25/2023

1978 - The Season So Far

Hasn't started yet. Dukes have traded Lou Boudreau to Nova Scotia for Billy Smith and draft picks.

1/25/2023

Vikings Slip to 6th Place, Finish with 106 Losses

Story Photo
Keith Collig led the Vikings with 13 Wins in '76
The Victoria Vikings finished in 4th place in Season 1, but slipped to 6th in '76, finishing with a record 106 losses. Keith Collig finished the season with a 13-13 record, Fenn Hardy finished 3rd in Strikeouts with 151, but the rest of the pitching staff struggled. The offense was led by Ben Hooper, Sam Radley, and Jack Wayne. Those three will need some more help if the Vikings plan on getting out of the basement in '77.

1/25/2023

Oshawa Improves in '76, Finishes Third

Story Photo
Grant Foggie was one of two Barons (along with Blake Crowder) to throw a no-hitter in Season 1
The Oshawa Barons improved on their first season, moving from 5th place to 3rd place, but still failed to reach the .500 mark on the season, finishing with a 73-89 record. Gus Baron, Roman Cote, and D.J. Bodger had strong offensive seasons for the Barons, while Bobby Cooney earned a Gold Glove at 1st Base. Randy Fox finished second in stolen bases, and John Mocker led the relief corps in Saves, but the starting pitching staff had a rough season, with no starter finishing with an ERA under 4.00.

Infielder Joe Ottey, and pitcher Shadow Weese had promising rookie campaigns and will be looked upon to help the club take the next step.

1/25/2023

Dukes Make it Back to WS But Settle for Runner-Up

Story Photo
Hamilton had another great season, but lost to the Golden Bears in the World Series
The Hamilton Dukes had another great season in 1977, finishing in second place in the regular season for the 3rd straight season. Their main rival, the Brandon Golden Bears, finished atop the standings again, and the two faced off for the World Series in what is becoming a PBL tradition. The Dukes' starting pitching was again their strength, with Goose Goslin leading the way. Dave Philley, Goldy Twain, and Bill Lee also had strong seasons, as well as Don Brewer out of the bullpen. Manny Mota and Mickey Vernon had strong seasons at the plate, as did Duke Sims and Joe Cronin, although shortstop Lou Boudreau was the lone Duke to make the All-Pangaea team. In the World Series, the Dukes pushed Brandon to a 7th game, and actually outhit them all series long, but couldn't finish them off, losing a thrilling 7th game by a score of 1-0. The Dukes will look to wrestle back the title from the Bears in 1977.

1/10/2022

Voyageurs Show Promise in '76 But Still Struggle

Story Photo
Dave Brodie of the Voyageurs was the 1976 Rookie of the Year
Nova Scotia did move up one place in 1976 from 6th to 5th, but still finished with over 100 losses. In fact they had identical records of 58-104 in both of their first two seasons. Lou Morton, Hank Mikovitch and Frank Kovac all had over 20 home runs, but rookie Dave Brodie was the big story of the offense with over 200 hits. Brodie was named to the All-Pangaea team and also won a Gold Glove. A. James Rennie was the ace of the staff, leading the league in WHIP, while finishing second in strikeouts and third in ERA. Randy Robb was the best reliever on the team for the second straight season. The additions of Mikovitch and Brodie give the Voyageurs some hope for the future, but they'll need to fill some more holes if they hope to avoid another 100 loss season.

1/10/2022

Cooney and the Saints Push for Playoffs in Season 3

Story Photo
Saints' All-Star center fielder Ricky Cooney was again an offensive force in 1976
The Saints slipped a bit in the standings in 1976, falling to 4th place with a record of 71-91. They did get All-Star seasons from Ricky Cooney and Jasper Barron, but it wasn't enough to keep them in the top half of the league. Johnny Peppas had a gold glove season at 2nd base, while Keith Gericke was their best reliever. Ted Landry and Grant Barron led the rotation.

The Saints will need to find some more help for Ricky and Jasp if they want to make a serious run at a playoff spot in Season 3.

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Story Photo
Speedster Ricky Cooney stars for the Saskatoon Saints
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