Jack Aker

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3+13 innings in relief while allowing three earned runs in an 8–7 win over the Minnesota Twins. [39]

He began the 1965 season with the PCL's Vancouver Mounties, pitching all of his 35 games in relief. He was 6–3 with a 1.36 ERA, and 56 strikeouts in 66 innings. His 7.6 strikeouts per nine innings was the highest of his entire career. [40] [35] His 1.36 ERA led the PCL. [41] Aker had improved over his two years as a relief pitcher by focusing on pitching to his strengths as a pitcher, rather than being focused on the hitter's strengths as a batter. [42]

Major leagues

Aker made it to the majors as a side-arming sinkerballer, [43] [42] pitching for the Kansas City/Oakland Athletics (1964–68), Seattle Pilots (1969), New York Yankees (1969–72), Chicago Cubs (1972–73), Atlanta Braves (1974), and New York Mets (1974). During an 11-year baseball career, Aker compiled 47 wins, 404 strikeouts, a 3.28 earned run average, and 123 saves, an impressive total at the time. [44]

Kansas City/Oakland Athletics

Aker was called up to the A's in July 1965, and finished the season with the A's. [45] He pitched in 34 games, all in relief, with a 4–3 record and 3.16 ERA on a team that finished the season with a 59–103 record. [46] On September 10, 1965, Aker pitched six innings of relief while allowing just one earned run and striking out three to earn the win in a 10–5 win over the Baltimore Orioles. [47]

Aker’s first full major league season came in 1966 with the A's. It was also his best major league season. He pitched in 66 games, all in relief. He led all major league pitchers in games finished (57) and saves (32). He had an 8–4 record and 1.99 ERA, and finished 13th in American League most valuable player voting, on a 74–86 team. [48] [49] [50] [44] On September 7, 1966, Aker earned his 30th save of the season with 3+23 innings of shutout relief against the California Angels. [51] His 32 saves were a major league record until 1970, when broken by Ron Perranoski's 34 saves with the Minnesota Twins. [52] Akers was named 1966 AL Fireman of the Year by The Sporting News . [53] [44]

The 1967 A's season was notable for a rebellion by some of the players and manager Alvin Dark against team owner Charles O. Finley. Aker was the A's player representative to the player's union at the time. Finley had suspended pitcher Lew Krause. Other players on the team, including Aker and Ken Harrelson issued a written public statement against Finley's actions, believing the allegations against Krause were unfairly made and the suspension was unjust. Dark supported the players' position and Krause. In response, Finley fired Dark, fined Aker (for allegedly missing a curfew) and ultimately released Harrelson from the team (effectively making him a free agent). [54] [55]

During the height of the conflict, being the player representative who had to deal directly with Finley and others involved in the dispute (including lawyers, union executive director Marvin Miller and baseball commissioner William Eckert), Aker lost his appetite and 17 pounds in two weeks; but remained positive about serving as the player representative. [56] [57] (Ironically, Finley rehired Dark as the A's manager in 1974, after the A's 1973 World Series championship manager Dick Williams resigned because of Finley's mistreatment of A's player Mike Andrews. [58] )

The team finished its final season in Kansas City, 62–99. Aker pitched 57 games in relief, his ERA ballooning to 4.30 and record falling to 3–8. [59] On April 29, 1967, he pitched the last 8+13 innings of a 15-inning loss to the Boston Red Sox, striking out a career-high eight batters and allowing just two runs. [60] Akers did not blame his poor 1967 performance on the Krause affair and conflict with Finley. [56]

Akers relegated the 1967 dispute with Finley to the past in entering the 1968 season. [56] However, he believed he was not given a chance to pitch in 1968. [61] That season, the A's first year in Oakland and the first full seasons for future Hall of famer Reggie Jackson [62] and four-time all-star Sal Bando, [63] the team improved to 82–80. [64] Both Aker and Krause remained on the team that season. Aker pitched 54 games in relief with 12 saves, a 4–4 record and 4.10 ERA. [64] He finished ten less games than the previous season, and 17 less than in 1966. [65] On April 24, 1968, in just the eighth baseball game ever played at the Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum, Aker pitched the last five innings, allowing no runs and earning the win in an 11-inning victory over the New York Yankees. [66]

Seattle Pilots and New York Yankees

Major League baseball expanded its number of teams in 1969 to add the Kansas City Royals, Montreal Expos, San Diego Padres and Seattle Pilots. An expansion draft was held in 1968 to populate these teams from players left exposed to the draft from existing teams. After a series of run-ins with A's owner Charles O. Finley,[ citation needed ] Aker, the team's union player representative, was made available in the expansion draft for the 1969 season, and was picked up by the Seattle Pilots with the 24th pick. [67] [68] Even though he knew the A's would be a pennant contender in 1969, and he was going to an expansion team, Aker was happy to be getting away from Finley. [69] The team only existed one year in Seattle before becoming the Milwaukee Brewers, but were made famous in pitcher Jim Bouton's book, Ball Four . [70]

On April 8, 1969, Aker earned a save in the first game in franchise history, a 4–3 win over the California Angels. [71] However, he began to struggle soon after, going 0–2 with three saves and a 7.56 ERA in 15 appearances for the Pilots. [72]

On May 20, Aker was traded to the Yankees for Fred Talbot. [44] [73] After the trade, he ran up a string of 33 consecutive scoreless innings, still a regular season Yankee record. [74] Aker led the Yankees in saves that year (11) and finished both 1969 and 1970 with ERAs of 2.06, [44] [75] despite career-threatening back surgery in the intervening winter.[ citation needed ] In 1970, on a 93–69 Yankees team, he had 16 saves and teamed with closer Lindy McDaniel for 45 saves between them. [76] He had a 2.59 ERA in 1971, with a 4–4 record, but only four saves on an 82–80 Yankees team. [77] He had a bad back that affected his performance in 1971. [78]

Chicago Cubs, Atlanta Braves and New York Mets

Aker remained a mainstay of the Yankee bullpen until 1972, when New York's acquisition of Sparky Lyle from Boston made Aker expendable. [79] On May 17, he was traded to the Chicago Cubs for cash considerations. [44] [80] He had a 2.96 ERA and 17 saves for the Cubs to finish the season, and a 4.10 ERA with 12 saves in 1973. [44] The Cubs released him after the 1973 season and he was signed by the Atlanta Braves the same day. The Braves sold his rights to the New York Mets in June 1974, where he ended his career after the 1974 season. [16] Aker pitched almost three seasons in the NL, and was standing in the bullpen feet away from where Braves’ teammate Hank Aaron's historic 715th home run landed on April 8, 1974. [81]

Manager and coach

After his playing days ended, Aker managed in the minor leagues in 1975–85. He was hired by the New York Mets to manage the 1975 Visalia Mets, a Single-A team in the California League. [1] [82] From 1976-80, he managed the Single-A Lynchburg Mets of the Carolina League. [83] [84] [85] [86] [87] He was twice named the Carolina League's manager of the year (1977-78). [15] In 1981, the Mets promoted him to manager of the Triple-A Tidewater Tides of the International League. [88]

He won the Governor's Cup (International League Championship) with the 1982 Tidewater Tides. [15] But the Mets replaced him at Tidewater in the 1983 season with future Mets manager Davey Johnson. [89] [90] In 1983, he was the pitching coach for the Buffalo Bisons of the Double-A Eastern League, a Cleveland Indians' affiliate, and was named the team's manager in 1984. [15] [91] In 1985, he managed the Double-A Waterbury Indians of the Eastern League. [92]

Aker was the Cleveland Indians pitching coach from late in the 1985 season to July 1987. [93] [94] [95] [96] [97] He served as the Indians' Florida Instructional League pitching coach in the Fall of 1985. [98] He was fired in July 1987, at age 47. He coached in Burlington, Iowa after that. [89] The Minnesota Twins offered him a pitching coach position in their minor league system, but upon reflection he decided he would only return to the minor leagues as a manager. [97]

Personal life

Aker believed he lacked the connections to obtain a desirable position in major league baseball, and realized he had to find work elsewhere. After his final time in Cleveland, and unfulfilled efforts to obtain a position in the major leagues after the 1987 season, he left pro baseball and moved to his wife Jane Charnin-Aker's home state of New Jersey. He went into the field of teaching baseball skills to children. For 20 years Akers offered camps, clinics, and baseball instruction through his "Jack Aker Baseball" academy, which he founded in 1988. By 2004, he was teaching nearly 3,000 students a year, ranging from young children to adults over 35. [97] [99] [100] [101]

In 1997, he was honored by President Bill Clinton with a "Giant Steps Award" for his work teaching at-risk Native American children on Hopi, Navajo and Zuni reservations in Arizona and New Mexico. [102] [100]

His son Adam Charnin-Aker pitched on the baseball team at Dartmouth College. [103] [102] In 2001, Jane Charnin-Aker won $250,000 on the television program Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? [101]

See also

References

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Jack Aker
Jack Aker 1973.jpg
Aker in 1973
Pitcher
Born: (1940-07-13) July 13, 1940 (age 85)
Tulare, California, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
May 3, 1964, for the Kansas City Athletics
Last MLB appearance
September 27, 1974, for the New York Mets