Strange Exchange
Just when you think the sports world has produced every possible
bizarre trade imaginable, they still manage to top themselves ...
A broadcaster for a rabbit. And a cartoon rabbit, at that.
When baseball journeyman Harry Chiti got dealt to the New York
Mets for a player to be named later, little did he know that
player would be him. The Chicago Cubs could spare a backup
catcher during the early season, and apparently, the Mets saw
enough of Chiti afterward. So, when they later gave a list of
players from which to choose in order to complete the deal,
Chiti's name was there. Perhaps their choice said something
about the other players, but there can be no doubt that the Cubs
got equal value in return.
At least that transaction was a player-only deal, albeit only
one player.
Transactions involving no players have had various impacts on
the teams involved. An obvious example was a swap between the
Detroit Tigers and Cleveland Indians. In mid-season, they
managed to trade managers. Jimmy Dykes was shipped to the Tribe,
with Joe Gordon moving to the Motor City, making it the only
deal of its kind in North American sports history. Both were
probably disoriented for the rest of the season, but they'd
surely agree that it beat being fired, which is usually what
happens when teams want to jettison their skipper.
However, there was a more notorious no-player deal. It might
have happened more discreetly, except it affected New York
Yankees. The year was 1972, and while half a decade had passed
from The Summer of Love, pitchers Mike Kekich and Fritz Peterson
kept its spirit alive. They and their wive were close friends.
Really close. So close, in fact, that during spring training of
the next season, they wound up making a trade of their own. When
Marilyn Peterson changed houses with Susanne Kekich, it was news
which made more than the agate type in America's newspapers.
Said Yankees general manager Lee MacPhail, "We may have to call
off Family Day."
A bag of baseballs isn't nearly as hot for headline fodder. So,
when minor-leaguer Tim Fortugno was unceremoniously moved to
another team in return for one of those bags, we can only
imagine that the amount of $2500 in cash got tossed into the
deal to make him feel better.
Much more cash was put on the table in 1919 for an emerging star
named Babe Ruth. The Boston Red Sox had just completed a lousy
season and owner Harry Frazee wanted to unload salaries. He also
had his eye on Broadway, so he sold Ruth to the Yankees for
$125,000 and a $300,000 loan (with Fenway Park serving as the
collateral). Frazee used the proceeds to stage 'No No Nanette,'
the sprightly musical that gave the world tunes such as 'Tea for
Two' and can still be found up in lights to this day. This is
the deal that gave rise to the Curse of the Bambino, which may
have affected the Red Sox for so many years, but Frazee did very
well by it.
Ruth justified his title as the Sultan of Swat in 1927, becoming
the first player in history to hit 60 home runs in a season, a
revered record that would stand for 34 years. That wasn't the
only notable achievement in 1927; Walt Disney also brought the
first cartoon rabbit to the silver screen.
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit looked like a rip-off of Felix the Cat,
and he probably was. However, cartoon characters were a novelty
back then, so Oswald enjoyed a measure of commercial success. In
fact, Disney was certain he could expand the rabbit's fame if he
had a bigger budget, which is why he traveled to Universal
Studio's head office and requested as much. The studio refused,
even showing their power by cutting the budget by 20% and
telling Disney to like it or lump it. Chagrined, Disney quit and
decided to work independently. He was certain he could create
another cartoon character to help him realize his visions of
commercial success.
We now see that the empire built around the fame of Mickey Mouse
never forgot its origins.
When the ABC network decided to move Monday Night Football to
its subsidiary, ESPN, long-time broadcaster Al Michaels decided
he didn't want to accompany it. He expressed a preference to
remain paired with virtuoso analyst John Madden, who left to
join NBC, which had acquired the NFL's Sunday Night Football
broadcast rights.
Michaels' career was launched at the 1980 Winter Olympics in
Lake Placid, New York. He exclaimed to the USA, "Do you believe
in miracles? Yes!" when the American hockey team completed the
biggest upset in team sports history by defeating the Soviet
Union's juggernaut and paved the way to an improbable gold
medal. One of the best in the business, Michaels ultimately
moved to the prime time of Monday Night Football and stayed
there for 20 years.
NBC saw his addition to their broadcast team as a natural move.
ABC saw an opportunity, too, and the idea of a trade was
broached.
ABC is owned by the Disney empire. They noted NBC's association
with Universal and decided it was time to bring Oswald the Lucky
Rabbit home. Dick Ebersol, president of NBC Sports, did a
double-take. He accepted the trade package for Michaels
containing cable rights to golf's Ryder Cup through 2014 and
expanded access to Olympic highlights, but he had never even
heard of the cartoon rabbit.
Michaels took being swapped for a cartoon pioneer in stride.
"Oswald is definitely worth more than a fourth-round draft
choice," Michaels said, referring to the compensation that New
York's Jets got for releasing head coach Herman Edwards to the
Kansas City Chiefs.
Walt Disney's daughter, Diane Miller, is thrilled, saying
"Having Oswald around again is going to be a lot of fun."
And so it came to pass that the strangest sports trade to date
was sealed. NBC got the polished veteran it wanted, while Disney
could be hoping their re-acquisition can earn a Comeback of the
Year award.
For Oswald, it's going to be a brand new ballgame.