Venezuelan Chico Carrasquel was signed in 1949 by the
Dodgers, who then sold him
to the White Sox. Carrasquel's inability to speak English may have caused Branch
Rickey to move him. White Sox GM
Frank Lane solved the communication problem by trading
journeyman pitcher
Alex Carrasquel - Chico's uncle - for reliever
Luis Aloma, who
served as the interpreter between Chico and manager
Paul Richards. Replacing Luke
Appling, Carrasquel soon established himself as a top shortstop and batted .282 with
a 24-game hitting streak as a rookie in 1950. He broke an AL record by accepting
297 chances (in 53 games) without an error in 1951, and beat out reigning MVP Phil
Rizzuto as the AL's starting All-Star SS. But Carrasquel had trouble controlling
his weight, and in 1952 he was benched for lethargic play. In October 1955 Chicago
traded him with
Jim Busby to Cleveland for Larry Doby. They had another Venezuelan
SS waiting in the minors -
Luis Aparicio. Carrasquel became a legend in his native
Caracas, serving as play-by-play man on their Game of the Week.
(RL)