Phillies alumni: Retiring No. 1

August 25th, 2021

Richie Ashburn’s induction into the Philadelphia Baseball Hall of Fame took on special meaning, the retirement of his uniform jersey No. 1. The date was Aug. 24, 1979.

We began the tradition of honoring great alumni the year before, inducting Ashburn’s teammate Robin Roberts. When the Phillies sold Robbie to the Yankees on Oct. 16, 1961, owner Bob Carpenter said no one would ever wear No 36 again. Ashburn’s event was the Phillies' first formal number retirement ceremony.

Others wore that number after Ashburn was traded to the Cubs before the 1960 season: infielder Alvin Dark, infielder Joe Morgan (not the Hall of Fame second baseman) and shortstop Bobby Wine. The last was Jose Cardenal, 1978 until Aug. 2, 1979, when we sold him to the Mets. When informed we were retiring his number, Axhburn bristled, “What are you going to do? Give me Cardenal’s jersey?”

I was fortunate to be among a group that planned such events. Chrissy Long (Director, Entertainment) was saddled with solving the logistics.

Ashburn being an All-Star center fielder, I came up with the idea that Whitey should walk in from center field at the Vet. Bujt two roadblocks popped up. How do we secretly get Ashburn behind the wall and can a panel of wall be removed and replaced by game time? Through Chrissy, Mike DiMuzio of our ballpark operations department and the city’s stadium ops staff, both issues were solved.

The podium and chairs for dignitaries and Whitey’s family were set up at home plate. Following Harry Kalas’ stirring introduction, Whitey emerged through a huge display of balloons from the center-field wall. Balloons? Yes, they were used to camouflage the missing wall panel.

Fans rose to their feet to welcome their beloved icon. I was behind home plate. Suddenly it dawned on me, ‘Gee, that’s a long walk.” I could tell by his gait he wasn’t a happy camper. That was even more evident when he finally reached second base and I could see his face.

Fortunately, everything went fine with the ceremony. Following his victory lap, another tradition we started the year before, he and I headed for the press elevator. We were the only ones in it. “Baron, whose brilliant idea was that, making me walk in from center field?” he asked with piercing eyes. “You’re looking at him,” I muttered. “Well, that’s the dumbest thing you’ve ever done.”

Fortunately, the doors opened on the press-box level. No more conversation.

Phun Phacts

Whitey wore No. 1 his entire career, Phillies (1948-60), Cubs (1960-61) and Mets (1962) ....Outfielder Johnny Wyrostek (1946-47) was the previous Phillies player with that number ... Phillies first wore uniform numbers in 1932. George (Kiddo) Davis was No. 1. He was a center fielder. A tradition?