MLB experiments with Charlie Finley’s orange baseballs – Society for American Baseball Research (2024)

MLB experiments with Charlie Finley’s orange baseballs – Society for American Baseball Research (1)In 1963 Kansas City Athletics owner Charlie Finley proposed the use of orange baseballs as beneficial for players and fans.

Finley, an insurance magnate who’d bought the Athletics three years earlier from the estate of Arnold Johnson, said it was easy for him — and presumably other fans — to lose the ball while tracking it, a problem he also suggested players had, using a key play in the fourth and final game of the 1963 World Series as an example. “Joe Pepitone might not have lost sight of that throw in that final World Series game if the ball had been orange,” he said.1

Finley was ill-regarded among other owners, and that idea, like many others he came up with (he also suggested green bats at the 1963 owners meetings2), was ignored. But a decade later, change was in the air — and Finley finally had the juice to make it happen.

The Athletics had moved from Kansas City to Oakland, and thanks to home-grown talent like Vida Blue, Jim “Catfish” Hunter, and Reggie Jackson, had become a powerhouse, winning the American League West in 1971 and winning the World Series the following year, and Finley had become a force to be reckoned with among major-league owners. His Athletics’ green and gold uniforms — started in Kansas City — had spawned an outbreak of color among other teams. His vision of night World Series games had come to fruition in 1971. And American League owners approved his idea of a designated hitter for the 1973 season. (It would take another two decades, but another Finley idea was later adopted as well: interleague play.)

The Indians, on the other hand, were a moribund squad. They hadn’t been in a real pennant race since 1959, the year before Finley bought the Athletics, and were playing in a decrepit ballpark in a city that at that point was most famous for its river catching fire. In sum, they were the perfect guinea pigs for Finley’s latest stunt.

Finley was able to persuade American League and Indians officials to use the balls in a spring-training game on March 29, 1973.

“After a lengthy discussion with Mr. Finley, (owner) Nick Mileti and (manager) Ken Aspromonte, we concluded the idea at least merits further consideration,” Indians general manager Phil Seghi said. “The results could be interesting.”3

The A’s had wanted to use orange balls a week earlier in a nationally televised game against their Bay Area rivals the San Francisco Giants, but National League President Chub Feeney squashed the idea.4

“Hitters will love the shade,” Finley said when he was given permission. “But pitchers will not like it — for obvious reasons.”5

On March 29, at the Athletics’ home field in Mesa, Finley’s baseball was used for the first time in front of a crowd that included Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. (Ironically, Finley himself wasn’t there for his idea’s debut. He was in Chicago, but listened to the game via long-distance telephone.)6

Catfish Hunter took the hill against Indians ace Gaylord Perry, but anyone looking for a pitcher’s duel was almost instantly disappointed, as the offensive explosion Finley foretold did, in fact, come to pass, with 27 hits and 16 runs. Six home runs were hit, three by George Hendrick, who’d come to Cleveland just five days earlier with catcher Dave Duncan in a deal that sent Ray Fosse and Jack Heidemann to Oakland.

“I couldn’t pick up the spin of the ball,” Hendrick said. “Maybe I was just lucky.”7

Hendrick couldn’t pick up the spin of the ball because the balls were dyed orange — including the stitches, so batters couldn’t use them to follow the ball’s rotation. Because it was an exhibition, and only a relatively few of the balls were used, Spalding, the manufacturer, dyed the balls, and didn’t tan the hides orange and use the familiar red stitches.

“All I can say is what my players told me, and I don’t think any of them liked it,” Aspromonte said.8

Well, John Lowenstein had no real objection to the ball. “I’m color-blind,” he said.9

Perry said the ball was too slippery for him and Hunter, both of whom were forced to rely on breaking balls — to little effect.

“It’s not near as slippery as most of the pitches (Perry) throws with the regular ball,” Finley said, alluding to Perry’s noted history doctoring the ball.10

The orange balls did do one thing Finley promised. They were easier to see. “The orange ball looks like a balloon to me,” said Yankees scout Roy Hamey, who was at the game. Bill Rigney, in the broadcast booth for the A’s, also said it looked bigger.11

“It’s much too early to say anything conclusively,” Kuhn said. “The only thing I know for sure is that it’s more difficult to autograph.”12

The balls were used once more, in an exhibition on April 2 in Palm Springs, California, against the Angels, won 8-3 by the Athletics. It was just as poorly regarded as it was the previous week. “It reminded me of an Easter egg,” Angels starter Clyde Wright said. “I wanted to hide it.”13

The idea never had any further traction, but it became an intrinsic part of Finley’s legend. When he was profiled as “Baseball’s Super Showman” in Time magazine in 1975, the cover featured a backdrop of white and orange baseballs.

“There’s probably a carton or two of them stored in the barn on Finley’s farm,” Los Angeles Times sportswriter Mike Penner wrote upon Finley’s death in 1996.14

Notes

1 Clifford Kachline, “A’s Boss Finley Strikes Out with Orange Baseball,” The Sporting News, December 21, 1963: 18. In the fourth and final game of the 1963 World Series, the Dodgers scored what ultimately was the winning run when Pepitone lost sight of third baseman Clete Boyer’s throw in the sea of white shirts in the crowd and it bounced into the grandstand. The batter, Junior Gilliam, went to third and then scored on a sacrifice fly.

2 Ibid.

3 Russell Schneider, “Schneider Around,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, March 4, 1973: 2C.

4 “More Color Installed by Athletics,” Santa Cruz (California) Sentinel, March 29, 1973: 20. Accessed online at ucr.edu.

5 “Alert Orange for Finley,” Desert Sun (Palm Springs, California), March 3, 1973: A10. Accessed online at ucr.edu.

6 Russell Schneider, “Schneider Around,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, March 30, 1973: 4D.

7 Bob Sudyk, “Orange Balls Get the Raspberry,” Cleveland Press, March 30, 1973: D2.

8 Russell Schneider, “Orange Ball Makes Indians See Red,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, March 30, 1973: 2D.

9 Ibid.

10 Russell Schneider, “Schneider Around,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, March 31, 1973: 2D.

11 Schneider, “Schneider Around,” March 30.

12 Ibid.

13 Braven Dyer, Associated Press, “A’s Baseballs Fail Color Test,” Desert Sun, April 3, 1973: A8. Accessed online at ucr.edu.

14 Mike Penner, “Finley Had a Ball, but Not Orange,” Los Angeles Times, February 20, 1996. Accessed online at latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1996-02-20-sp-37923-story.html.

Additional Stats

Cleveland Indians 11
Oakland Athletics 5

Rendezvous Park
Mesa, AZ

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Tags

Exhibitions · 1970s · Notable Debut

MLB experiments with Charlie Finley’s orange baseballs – Society for American Baseball Research (2024)

FAQs

What happens to all the baseballs that hit the dirt? ›

They don't do that. Every time the ball hits the dirt on a pitch or goes out of play due to the following situations, the home plate umpire will either throw a new ball to the pitcher or give it to the catcher to throw back.

When did orange baseballs come out? ›

March 29, 1973: MLB experiments with Charlie Finley's orange baseballs – Society for American Baseball Research.

How much does MLB pay for baseballs? ›

With so many balls being used, the MLB needs to fork out a lot of money on this essential piece of equipment. It is estimated that the MLB might pay as much as 10 million dollars for the baseballs needed across an entire season.

What does MLB do with used balls? ›

With a scuffed or dirty ball no longer useable in a game, the teams began to permit foul balls and home runs to be simply kept by fans as a souvenir. Previously, the crowd were not allowed to keep a ball and it had to be thrown back into the pitcher so that it could continue to be used in the game.

Why is there 108 stitches on a baseball? ›

One of the primary purposes of the stitches on a baseball is to provide pitchers with a better grip. By placing their fingers on the stitches in specific ways, pitchers can manipulate the ball to create a wide array of pitch types, each with unique movement and velocity.

What is the rarest thing in baseball? ›

Unassisted triple plays

Bill Wambsganss executed an unassisted triple play in the 1920 World Series. The rarest type of triple play, and one of the rarest events of any kind in baseball, is for a single fielder to complete all three outs in one play.

Why do baseballs turn yellow? ›

The baseballs with “Haiti” placed under the Rawlings logo stamp were made without the use of distilled water, thus, allowing for enzymes to potentially turn the color of the ball over time. You will usually notice yellow/brown soiling on these baseballs due to the flaw in production.

What are yellow baseballs called? ›

An experimental, high-visibility yellow baseball, tagged with such unique monikers as a “stitched lemon” or “canary-colored horsehide”, made a noteworthy but short-lived appearance when it was used in the big leagues in the late 1930s.

Are MLB baseballs made in China? ›

It's worth noting that, while official MLB baseballs are crafted in Costa Rica, baseballs for Minor Leagues and 80 percent of all other baseballs are manufactured in Dushan County, China. This means that, unless you're a professional MLB player, you're likely using a baseball made in China for your games.

How much does a MLB ball boy make? ›

What are Top 10 Highest Paying Cities for Ball Boy Jobs
CityAnnual SalaryWeekly Pay
San Buenaventura, CA$39,620$761
Berkeley, CA$36,695$705
Renton, WA$35,510$682
Santa Monica, CA$35,242$677
6 more rows

How much do MLB umpires make? ›

The salaries for MLB umpires are substantially higher than their minor league counterparts. An MLB umpire's salary can range from about $120,000 to over $300,000 annually. This compensation reflects their extensive experience, the high level of skill required, and the intense pressure they face in each game.

Can you keep a baseball if you catch it? ›

It is the custom at major league baseball games that fans can keep all baseballs which are hit or thrown out of play into the spectator seating area. Not surprisingly, many fans treasure souvenir baseballs obtained in this manner.

What happens to baseballs after a game? ›

Of those, between 60 and 72 balls are discarded after use, due to being scuffed, dirty or because of other imperfections. There's a person in the dugout who collects those balls and stows them away for safekeeping.

What do they do with dirty balls in baseball? ›

These days these days any baseball that touches a dirt surface is pretty much immediately thrown out of play. Some of those balls are then used for batting practice and some are shipped to minor league teams. Of course the actual number of baseballs used each game will vary throughout each game of a season.

Why does MLB players change balls so often? ›

A rule was quickly passed to require that umpires replace any ball that got dirty in order to keep balls as visible as possible. In the early days of professional baseball, one ball was used per game, period. If a ball stuck on the roof or was hit over the fence, play stopped until it was retrieved.

Are Major League Baseballs still rubbed with mud? ›

Lena Blackburne Baseball Rubbing Mud is used throughout Major League & Minor League Baseball to rough up the six or seven dozen new balls prepared for every game. In fact, it is the only legal substance that can be added to balls. A team will go through about three or four pounds of it every season.

What happens to foul balls in MLB? ›

In general, when a batted ball is ruled a foul ball, the ball is dead, all runners must return to their time-of-pitch base without liability to be put out, and the batter returns to home plate to continue his turn at bat. A strike is issued for the batter if he had fewer than two strikes.

Do baseballs get recycled? ›

At the end of games, baseballs will be either lost, in the hands of a fan, “recycled into batting practice ball”, or “sometimes ship them down to the minor league system” but ultimately “in the major leagues, baseballs are discarded without any thought given to it” (foxsports).

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