Here's a guy who get's overlooked quite a bit when we think of pitchers from the 1970's: Dave McNally.
And it's really a shame since not only was he an all-star performer
for a bunch of years, but he was also instrumental in eradicating
baseball's reserve clause in the mid-70's along with more notable names
like Curt Flood and Andy Messersmith.
But before we get to all of that, let's take a look at the 1976
Topps card I designed for him, showing him as a Montreal Expos player:
This would have been his final card, as he never played beyond the 1975 season and appeared in that Topps set as a Baltimore Oriole, the only team he played for before that last "hurrah" North of the border.
For the 1975 season, McNally started 12 games for the Expos, and
posted a 3-6 record with a 5.24 E.R.A and 33 strikeouts in 77.1 innings
pitched.
However it was how he ended up playing in 1975 that made history.
Never intending to play beyond 1974, McNally actually retired
before being convinced by Player's Union Executive Director Marvin
Miller to add his name to the grievance the Player's Union filed
contesting the age-old "Reserve Clause" along with star pitcher
Messersmith.
As explained online under the "Seitz Decision" (named for the ruling arbitrator Peter Seitz):
"In
1975, Messersmith of the
Los Angeles Dodgers and McNally of the
Montreal Expos had had their 1974 contracts renewed by their teams
on the basis of this reserve clause. Since neither signed a contract
during that option year, both insisted that they were free to sign with
other teams the following season. The owners
disagreed, arguing that under the reserve clause the one-year contracts
were perpetually renewed.
The two players submitted the
grievance to arbitration, and Seitz later issued his ruling that
Messersmith and McNally were free to bargain with other teams because
organized baseball could only maintain a player's services for one year
after expiration of the previous contract."
This was HUGE, as it lead the the free for all we all know today as Free Agency.
For McNally, he ended up retiring at the young age of 32, leaving
behind quite a resume: four 20-game winning seasons, two World
Championships, a 184-119 career record, and a title-winning shutout in
the 1966 World Series where the Orioles upset the favored
Dodgers, sweeping them 4 games to none.
McNally threw a four-hit shutout against losing pitcher Don
Drysdale to go along with shutouts thrown by teammates Wally Bunker and
Jim Palmer.
He's also the only pitcher to hit a grand slam in the World Series,
doing so in Game 3 of the '70 series against the Reds, and only one of
two pitchers (Roger Clemens the other) of winning 12 straight decisions
three times in his career, including 17 straight
over the 1968 and 1969 seasons.
On top of all of that, he also came into the big leagues with a bang, tossing a 2-hit
shutout against the Kansas City Athletics on September 26th, 1962 at the
ripe old age of 19! Nice…
So call this a "career capper", or a "missing in action" card, but
let's close the books on McNally and his solid career with one last
card.