Zoilo Versalles was the leadoff
batter in the first-ever Minnesota Twins home opener. Most of us can't imagine
a time when there were no Minnesota Twins. Or Vikings. I was six years
old when the transformation happened. It was on Friday, April 21, 1961,
when the significant new chapter opened. Versalles was the shortstop. Don Mincher was at first, Billy Gardner played second and Reno Bertoia was at third.
"There is something about an Opening Day that puts a stamp of legitimacy on a big town," Joe Soucheray wrote in a reflective piece years later.
It was as if we got "plugged into the national circuitry," Soucheray continued, "as though we had just achieved telephone service or a first television set."
Versalles
was the first Twin to have his name announced as batter, on that day of
gala bunting and festivity at "the Met." The Twins had vacated Washington
D.C. at the end of the previous season. Soucheray reported that the weather was clear at game-time, sunny and 63 degrees.
We must add that no mania had taken hold. Perhaps
many Minnesotans didn't quite know what to make of this attraction.
They were used to getting excited over the U of M Gophers, especially
the football team. The fan turnout was 24,606. The Twins lost 5-3 to the
"new" Washington Senators. Wind built up from the west, which Soucheray said aided the home runs off the bats of Mincher and Lenny Green. The obscure Pete Whisenant, pinch-hitter, struck out on three pitches from Dave Sisler
with two outs and the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth. Fans
were treated to those anxious moments of possibility at the end. It was a
prelude to much more excitement.
Versalles would be at
the fore of that excitement. Typical of supremely talented people,
Versalles' story would end up a mixture of triumph and tragedy. Also
typical of such people, he "entered the arena" and accepted the highs
and lows, the exhilaration and heartbreak, that comes with competition
at the highest level, where countless eyes are trained on you.
As sports heroes go, Versalles
was not a big man: five feet ten and 160 pounds. He used that frame to
amaze in 1965. He led the American League in total bases, doubles and
runs scored. He won the Gold Glove as shortstop, showing considerable
range with his cat-like reflexes. He was No. 3 in the A.L. in stolen bases.
My APBA (simulation game) baseball cards
reported that his nickname was "Zorro." Cute, however I don't recall
broadcasters ever using this nickname. It was new to me when I first saw
a reference to it.
"Zorro" won that MVP honor amidst debate about whether Tony Oliva should have gotten it instead. Oliva won the batting title. How those Cuban players thrilled us.
Versalles was born in the Vedado
neighborhood of Havana. He didn't adapt well to the U.S. The language
barrier was a problem, we learn, and he experienced homesickness. He had
psychological quirks that I might suggest are associated with those
supremely talented people. He had an unusual fear of failure. And yet as
he came up through the minors, he got a reputation as someone so
supremely confident, he had trouble taking instruction.
Coaches did
recognize the talent. Zoilo's fielding could be both brilliant and
erratic. His errors sometimes happened with disturbing frequency. We
might assume he made errors on balls that other infielders couldn't get
to. It was hitting that kept him in the big leagues while he developed
further.
The young Twins infielders like Versalles were
the reason the team obtained Vic Power for the 1962 season. Power was a
tremendous and flashy first baseman who could handle errant throws. We
might forget that Power upstaged many of his fellow Twins in '62 - he
was more than just stabilizing. We finished in second place in '62 as we
challenged the Yankees who had baseball god Mickey Mantle. Indeed, the Minneapolis
Millers days were long gone. Pinocchio had become a real boy.
Versalles
played 160 games in 1962 and hit 17 home runs. He led the league in
assists with 501. He even got a smattering of MVP
votes.
In 1963 we saw Versalles up his batting average
to .261, and he led the league in triples with 13. He was voted to his
first all-star team. He started in the July 9 All-Star Game - he singled
and was hit by pitch in two plate appearances.
Zoilo continued having
some problems with errors in '63. Of course, his position of shortstop
subjected him to lots of work handling balls. He made five errors in a
July 5, 1963, doubleheader against Baltimore! However, his competence
was affirmed totally by winning the A.L. Gold Glove. Again, he was
"in the arena." Such a player isn't going to agonize over having a "bad
day" like in that doubleheader. These guys come back renewed the next
day.
Versalles went on and on until physical difficulties caught up to him. In July of 1966 the talented man was treated for a hematoma in his back. This led to a lifelong condition.
In 1964, Versalles
was still on the way up and he thrilled us Minnesotans with 20 home
runs, 64 RBIs and 14 stolen bases. He topped the league in triples with
ten.
Talent at its apex in 1965
In '65 the stars all got aligned for this fascinating Cuban fellow.
Billy Martin had sort of taken Versalles under his wing. Under intense tutelage, we saw "Zorro" at his best, never mind I never heard that nickname.
Versalles'
MVP season of '65 was that glorious time when the Twins knocked the
full-of-themselves Yankees off their perch and won the pennant. It was
just the Twins' fifth season. Most of us were mesmerized. There is
always an element of the population that stays sober about sports. My
sixth grade teacher at East Elementary in Morris was one. I won't type
her name here. She's deceased. Any time a member of the class wanted to
bring up sports as news, she totally sniffed as if she had been insulted
personally.
"It's just money-making," she'd say. I remember the
look on Dean Anderson's face one day when she said this. There are
always sticks in the mud amongst us. However, I think that by the time
the 1994 baseball strike was over, I wasn't so averse to her thinking
anymore.
Back in '65 we didn't want to think that money had anything
to do with it. We would have resented any talk of money. It was all
about the sheer exhilaration of seeing our still-new Twins overcome
those heralded Yankees from Gotham. Roger Angell wrote
about us in a rather condescending way, suggesting that maybe a lot of
us were rubes. I recall him describing the atmosphere around our Met
Stadium as being "like a big family wedding." Well OK then. He also
seemed to assume we were going to lose Game 7 against the Dodgers. I
guess Sandy Koufax was just that good.
I'll remind you that Koufax
became a great pitcher partly if not largely because umpires starting
calling the high fastball a strike. David Halberstam
reported about this in a book. The game began to favor pitching in a way
that climaxed in 1968. After that, adjustments were made.
Versalles
and his Twins mates couldn't repeat the magic in 1966. All the big
names were still here. But it was like air going out of a balloon. Maybe
it was because owner Calvin Griffith couldn't open up his wallet well
enough after the pennant-winning season. He did have that reputation.
Versalles
did get a raise to $40,000 annually. That's right, I'm saying a raise
to $40,000, not a raise
of $40,000. Unbelievable! That was a decent
professional salary at that time, but not the kind of windfall all major
leaguers get today, where they can be independently wealthy.
Versalles
declined to a .249 average in '66. We still saw signs of those magical
early Twins years like on June 9, when, against Kansas City (the
Athletics, not the Royals), Versalles was one of five Twins to hit home runs in the seventh inning. Harmon Killebrew joined "Zorro" in that parade. So did Mincher, Oliva and Rich Rollins. We did finish in second place in '66 but we were nine games behind the Orioles.
His Twins days conclude
Versalles was traded to the Dodgers with "Mudcat" Grant in November of 1967. In exchange we got relief pitchers Bob Miller and Ron Perranoski and catcher John Roseboro.
Versalles
struggled in Los Angeles. He got exposed to the 1968 expansion draft.
He was chosen by San Diego but never played for them. Instead he got
signed by Cleveland. In July of '69 he was purchased by the Senators. He
managed to hit .267 in limited action and got invited back for spring
training in 1970. But he got released on April 6. He played for a time
in the Mexican League. He then got another shot in the majors, with
Atlanta, but the glory days were clearly over. He played 66 games in
1972.
Zoilo finished his playing career with the Hiroshima Toyo Carp in Japan.
We can remember that during his five-year peak in Minnesota, Zoilo led all American League shortstops with 73 home runs. We remember that Zoilo
did fine in our '65 World Series, batting .286 with a home run. We can
remember that somewhat inauspicious day back in 1961, before only 24,606
fans at the Met, when Versalles brought his lumber to the plate as the first-ever Twins batter at home. (We had won the season opener 6-0 at New York.)
After that April 21 of 1961, Minnesotans were guaranteed-not-to-tarnish major leaguers,
getting attention throughout the U.S. in the daily newspapers. We'd be
listed in the standings everywhere. We were "plugged into the national
circuitry," as "Sooch" wrote. (Does anyone besides me remember when Joe went through his "hippie phase," at least in terms of appearance?)
Versalles
had a sad retirement. He had never mastered speaking English. His back
injury remained a hindrance. He relied on disability and Social Security
payments at the end. He was found dead in his home in Bloomington
on July 11, 1995, of unknown causes. I'm pleased to learn he was
survived by six daughters and several grandchildren. That's the best
kind of legacy, right?
Zoilo was elected to the Minnesota Twins Hall of Fame in 2006.
Zoilo Versalles, RIP. I hope you're "going into the hole" to cut off would-be hits, in heaven.
I have the name "Zoilo" in a song I wrote that is on YouTube. The song is "The Ballad of Harmon Killebrew." I cover the whole infield. I invite you to listen by clicking on the link below. Thanks so much for visiting my site.