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The Grand Junction Eagles semi-pro team
was playing its final game of the season that first
night. The star center fielder, Sam Suplizio, hit a late
two-run homer to tie the game and an 11th-inning three-run
home run to win the 17-14 slugfest from the Raleigh, NC,
Tigers.
Retiring Sports Editor Joe Much
introduced me to Sam after the game as Joe sought out some
comments from the star for his game story. I was informed
that Sam was to become the manager of the team the following
year. I told Sam if I took the job I would contact him
about a story to that effect as soon as I got to work.
I took the job and arrived about August
30 of '61. A few days later Sam and I went to lunch, and I
did the article. But, much more happened in that diner.
Sam and I hit it off immediately and he took on the aura of
"teacher" as he discussed many things about selling
insurance (his real job) and life in general. It was that
day that Sam hooked me on amateur baseball and I am still at
it today.
I will digress here to talk a little of
Sam's talent. It can not be overstated. The story is
legend. He was on call near the end of the 1956 season to
join the New York Yankees' outfield (the REAL Yankees).
Seven days from New York he slid into second base in an AA
game and snapped his right wrist when contacting Charley
Neal as he attempted to break up a double play. He was so
valuable the Yankees paid for three operations, all
unsuccessful. In the winter draft the Brooklyn Dodgers
snagged him. He coached and managed for them while several
other operations were tried.
All operations failed and Sam - on the
way to replace Joe DiMaggio and to precede and nullify the
need for Roger Maris - was left disabled with a locked
wrist.
The sad state of affairs left him to
return to Grand Junction in 1958. While he talked many
times about the unfortunate turn of events in his baseball
life, I do not remember him one time cursing his luck.
His outlook was always bright.
He returned to Grand Junction where he
had played for the Eagles in 1952 out of the University of
New Mexico (where the DuBois, PA, native was an All-Skyline
Conference quarterback) and he met his first wife, Lonnie,
at Lincoln Park (now appropriately Suplizio Stadium). Sam
once told me the teenager, Lonnie Sullivan, would sit on the
center field fence and heckle him, even tossing pebbles at
him. It worked for her and four children resulted from the
union, Carter, Cindy, Tommy and Sammy.
The return to Junction in '58 found Sam
joining Home Loan and Investment Co. (which he would later
own) as an insurance salesman. The head of Home Loan at
the time was a fine gentleman named D. S. Dykstra. Dykstra
is important in that he was the head of a group including
Sam, Jay Tolman and Dale Hollingsworth trying to bring the
National Junior College Baseball Tournament to Grand
Junction from its home in Miami, OK. They succeeded in 1959
and Sam served as director for 33 years as the tournament
grew to the major baseball attraction it is today.
Sam played for the Eagles in 59-60-61
before becoming the field manager. It has been said he
never hit under .400. Not quite true, but who is
counting. In 1959 it was an unbelievable .464. In 1960
he 'cooled' off to .403 but in 1961 he hit .349 while
another ex-pro, Lee Dobyns, led the club at .418. Sam
rebounded at .402 in 1962 and .415 in 1963.
| If those batting
averages don't wow you, consider this:
In the 48 seasons the
Alaska Goldpanners have played in the same brand
of competition the .400 mark has been reached
only six times - and by six different players.
For the record they were Adam Kennedy .432;
Steve Kemp .425; Bob Boone .405; and at an even
.400, Bill Dunckel, Bobby Jack and Alvin Davis. |
Don't forget, the man had a locked
right (throwing) wrist. Not only did he work around that to
perfect his swing, but he developed an overhand throw (much
like an old-style pitching machine) from the outfield that
cut down base runners with regularity. And, maybe his
strongest suit was is uncanny ability to get a jump on a fly
ball - no matter how hard driven - and make nearly
impossible catches appear barely more than routine.
After 1963 Sam played a less-than-full
time role but continued to post high numbers as he switched
the team from its mix of old pros and youngsters to an
all-college age aggregation. It was here Sam shined the
most as coach, teacher, guidance counselor and friend. He
must hold the world record for the number of former players
he helped in their personal lives as well as in their
professional pursuits. Truth is he touched so many lives
in and out of baseball that no complete listing will ever be
made.
To wrap up the talent part let it suffice
to say one only needed to witness Sam in one game, maybe one
at-bat or inning, to realize his spectacular talent.
I worked closely with Sam and the Eagles
and we spent many an hour together. Seven years my senior,
he was a true mentor. We roomed together on many, many road
trips, we had coffee at 9 a.m. at Bud Buthorn's LaCourt
Hotel virtually every day, we fished together on dozens of
occasions, had our weekly poker club, and served on many
boards and commissions together.
After I left Grand Junction, first
returning to Pueblo, CO, and then landing in Fairbanks, we
stayed in very close touch. Since word of his death I have
poured back over the files full of his letters (penmanship
might have been his only weakness) and have to admit his
loss leaves me shaken.
The personal loss is enormous for his
present wife, Caroline, his associates in major league
baseball, his associates and friends in amateur baseball,
his associates and friends in Grand Junction, his extended
family, and those of us on the perimeter.
I could fill countless pages just writing
about Sam's involvement with amateur baseball - and
hopefully will someday. I am a hardened ex-newspaper editor
who has seen many tragedies first hand. I've written dozens
of editorials and obituaries about dignitaries. None before
ever created the pounding heart and sadness I feel writing
about my friend Sam. I am just one of dozens left unable
to really grasp losing this dynamic personality.
I'm left to believe that what is in the
heart is the only true way to encompass the life and times
of Sam Suplizio.
By Don Dennis
General
Relativity

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