Card thoughts: This picture looks like it could have been taken in 1910. LeMaster bears a striking resemblance to many of the players featured on the “Old Judge” Tobacco cards. LeMaster also hit like a shortstop in the teens. It is pretty lucky that Topps got him in a Pirates uni, as it was the third team he played for that season (all finished last).
The
player: How does a player like LeMaster play
for 12 years in the majors, many of them as a starter? He hit only .222 in his
career (and got on base at a morbid .277 clip while “slugging” .289), and had
many seasons when he barely hit .200, despite getting over 400 plate
appearances. But in the pitching dominated late 60s/70s/early 80s, it wasn’t
expected that shortstop produce much with the bat, only that he could make the
plays.
Some still believe Johnnie was one of the worst players ever. Conversely, there is a Giants site named "The Sons of Johnnie LeMaster."
Some still believe Johnnie was one of the worst players ever. Conversely, there is a Giants site named "The Sons of Johnnie LeMaster."
LeMaster played 11 seasons for the Giants during
their most fallow period ever, when it came to post-season appearances. His
first plate appearance would fool Giants fans into thinking that this was
an exciting player. LeMaster tied a major league record by hitting an inside the
park home run in his first at bat.
After showing absolutely nothing with the bat
between 1975 and 1977 (low light: .149 in 135 at bats in 1977), the Giants
inexplicably handed LeMaster the starting shortstop job in 1978. He soon became
known as “Johnny Disaster” as he had a penchant for committing costly errors in
close games. As such, LeMaster was soon a target of derision by the few Giants fans that
were showing up to Candlestick in the late 70s. Showing he had a sense of
humor, he wore “Boo”
on his back in a game in 1979, mocking his detractors.
Despite rarely hitting above .215 and being an
average to below average fielder, LeMaster continued to man the shortstop
position for the Giants until 1985. Low lights include a .533 OPS in 1982, and
not being able to manage over 100 hits until 1983, despite being a starter for
much of that time. Although a terrible player, LeMaster had one brief moment
when he was actually average. The Giants inserted him into the leadoff spot in
1983, and he responded with career highs in just about every offensive
category. LeMaster even stole 39 bases, good for 7th in the league
(he also scored 81 runs, almost 40 more than his next highest total).
Unfortunately, that success didn’t last. LeMaster
slumped to a typical .217/.265/.282 line in ’84, and he was traded to the
Indians early in the 1985 season (after going hitless in 16 at bats) for Mike
Jeffcoat and Luis Quinones. LeMaster wasn’t much better for the Indians. He
wasn’t versatile enough to become a utility man, and he wasn’t much use as a
backup shortstop considering his below average fielding. A .150 average in May
convinced the Tribe to quickly get rid of LeMaster, and they actually got a
useful player from the Pirates for him (which just goes to show that poor
personnel decisions are not just a modern Pirate phenomenon). He “raised” his
average to .155, but even given how terrible the Pirates were at shortstop that
season (Sam Khalifa and #48 Bill Almon also started a bunch of games at
short), there was no way the they were going to retain his services after the
season.
LeMaster ended up hitting .128 in 1985, including
his last home run, an inside-the-park job like his first one. After a couple of
years in AAA with the Expos, White Sox, and A’s, LeMaster resurfaced one last
time in 1987 with the A’s and drowned in a .083/.120/.083 line.
LeMaster is an elder in the Church of Christ in his hometown of Paintsville, KY. He's a bit of a zealot, apparently, as he got the town to go dry. LeMaster tried to run for mayor as a write in candidate a couple of times but lost.
Rear guard: Most kids seeing these stats on the back of a card when opening a pack in 1986 would have immediately stuck it in the spokes of their bike. Me, I was a collector, so I valued any card I didn't yet have, no matter how crappy the player was (hence, the near mint condition of this card!).