Richmond
Flying Squirrels manager Dave Machmer in the Richmond dugout July 10,
2011. Machemer spoke with The Greatest 21 Days before that night's game,
touching on his playing career and his long managerial career.
The
Greatest 21 Days is away this week. While I'm away, I'm reposting
previous interviews. This is the ninth interview I did for the site, Dave Machemer. The Greatest 21 Days caught up with Machemer in July 2011.
This interview first
appeared shortly afterward. Machemer remains manager at Richmond for 2012.
It was the bottom of the ninth, career minor leaguer Wes Clements stepped into the batters' box. The game was on the line. Also on the line was Dave Machemer's career managerial debut, for single-A Beloit.
Clements
deposited the opposing pitcher's offering over the fence for a walk-off
win. As Clements rounded the bases, it was all Machemer could do to
keep himself from joining the hitter as he rounded the bases.
"When
he hit that home run," Machemer told The Greatest 21 Days in an
interview recently, "I go, 'I'm alive again. I'm alive again.'"
Machemer
was alive again because he was back in professional baseball. He was
back after selling cars and playing semi-pro ball. He was also back
after serving as an infielder for 11 professional seasons.
Professional
baseball was where he wanted to be and that game in 1985 for Beloit
marked his return to the game he'd played and played well for more than a
decade.
Most of that play came in the minors, with
Machemer putting up the numbers, with few people noticing. But he also
did finally play in the majors, getting immediately noticed with a home
run in his first major league at bat.
It was that
playing career, and all the managers and others who helped him along the
way, that Machemer says he still uses today. The names of those
managers and others are still fresh on the 60-year-old's mind. There was
Norm Sherry, Jimy Williams and Joe Morgan, all managers who managed in the big leagues.
Richmond Flying Squirrels manager Dave Machemer coaches third as Harrisburg pitcher Erik Arnesen delivers to the plate.
There was also Mike Stubbins, Machemer's first manager, who kept his career from ending before it hardly began. There was Deron Johnson, the manager who set Machemer on a direct course to the majors, after six long seasons in the minors.
And there was Cal Ermer,
who, after Machemer's major league days were done, took Machemer under
his wing, showing Machemer ways that would serve Machemer well in his
eventual post-playing career as a manager himself.
Machemer
spoke with The Greatest 21 Days before recently at The Diamond, home to
the AA Richmond Flying Squirrels. He spoke in the Richmond dugout,
before his team went out for warmups.
Machemer is in
his first year managing the Giants' AA affiliate, doing what he has done
with more than 20 clubs since that first game with Beloit in 1985:
helping to guide young players to the major leagues.
Nearly
four decades ago, Machemer started on his own quest for the major
leagues, as an infielder in the Angels system. Machemer's professional
career began in 1972, with the Michigan-native taken by California in
the fourth round out of Central Michigan University.
Machemer
didn't make the majors until he was in seventh professional season.
During his first, though, it looked as though he might not get a second.
Sent
to single-A Stockton in the California League, Machemer hit just .163
in 40 games. As Machemer told it, he "couldn't hit the broad side of a
barn."
Dave Machemer, right, in the Richmond dugout. Next to Machemer is Ken Joyce, Richmond's hitting coach.
His
manager that year was Mike Stubbins. Machemer called Stubbins
instrumental in his early learning process. Machemer didn't know why he
wasn't hitting the ball.
Stubbins, though, worked with
Machemer daily, showing Machemer mechanical changes to make in his
swing, so Machemer could use his speed and get on base, Machemer
recalled.
The next year at single-A Quad City, Machemer
got his average up to .262. He also hit seven home runs and stole 29
bases. Without Stubbins' early help, Machemer recalled, his career could
have ended there in Stockton in 1972.
"I've never
really been able to call him and give him the credit he deserves for
what he did for me," Machemer said of Stubbins, "but if it wasn't for
him bringing me out every day that first year, when I was probably going
to be released - I didn't know what I was doing.
"I
had no idea how to hit a baseball. I had no clue how to get ready to hit
up there and the mechanics," Machemer continued. "So, I tip my hat to
the people I played for."
Machemer's numbers continued
to move up in 1974 at single-A Salinas, hitting .295, stealing 48. At AA
El Paso in 1975, he hit .301, swiping 45. In his first look at AAA,
after a trade to the Red Sox, Machemer hit .282 in 108 games under Joe
Morgan at Rhode Island.
Squirrel Johnny Monell takes a pitch at The Diamond in Richmond. Visiting Harrisburg players Devin Ivany, left, and Adam Fox, right, watch from the visitors dugout.
Another
trade sent Machemer back to the Angels for 1977. At AAA Salt Lake City,
Machemer hit .260 under Jimy Williams, but stole another 47 bases.
That
first year back with the Angels marked Machemer's sixth season in the
minors. He put up good numbers, Machemer believed, but didn't seem to
get noticed.
He described his style of play as a "max
effort" player, who played hard. But he "wasn't pretty doing it." He
also seemed to be just the type of player scouts overlooked.
"I
was thinking I was good enough to play in the big leagues, and I think
my numbers reflected that," Machemer said of that time without the call
up. "The only problem was I wasn't your prototypical looking prospect.
"I
was an all-out guy that played the game hard every night. I was a
max-effort guy. I wasn't fluid. I wasn't pretty. I didn't have a great
arm. I had great speed. I did have that."
"I thought,
you know, I had a really good career going," Machemer added later, "but
it didn't really seem like anybody really noticed."
People
did notice in 1978, Machemer's seventh in the pros. They noticed after
another mentor, Deron Johnson, took Machemer and taught him the final
pieces Machemer needed to make the majors.
The
Minnesota Twins also quickly noticed, watching a Machemer-hit ball go
over the fence in Machemer's first major league at-bat.
It
was a home run and a trip to the majors that very well might not have
happened, had Machemer not refused surgery weeks earlier on a banged up
knee.
Part 2: He Connected
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