Harrah was a power-hitting infielder who spent most of his 17-year career on second-division
teams. He was the Senators' primary shortstop in their last season of existence and
remained there for the franchise's first five seasons in Texas. Coming up straight
from Double-A ball in 1971, he was overmatched at first, hitting .230 and slugging
.290. He improved as a batter and fielder in 1972 after spending the winter studying
with Chico Carrasquel in South America. Harrah hit .259 with 10 HR despite missing
time with an appendectomy and a shoulder injury; the injury forced him out of the
All-Star Game.
He came into his own in 1974, hitting 21 HR with 74 RBI and 79 runs.
It was the first of his five 20-HR seasons. He also showed range in the field, leading
AL shortstops in putouts and tying in errors. Manager Billy Martin said, "I don't
know how a guy could cover more ground, and he also has that great arm." In 1975
Harrah improved further, hitting .293 and drawing 98 walks while driving in a career-high
93 runs. It was the first of his .400 on-base percentage seasons; his .406 was fourth
in the AL. TSN named him the shortstop on its postseason AL all-star team. In 1976 he had his best year defensively, leading AL shortstops in putouts and total chances per '(((game (and errors). He also established the first of his two
odd fielding records, accepting no chances at shortstop in a June 25 doubleheader.
On September 17 the following year, he set another record by playing 17 innings at
third base without recording an assist.
Harrah's best year offensively came in
1977, when he was moved to third base after Bert Campaneris was signed as a free
agent. Harrah led the AL with 109 walks and hit 27 HR, both career highs, and stole
27 bases. He and Bump Wills hit back-to-back inside-the-park home runs at Yankee
Stadium, only the second time that was ever accomplished. In 1978 he stole a career-high
31 bases but slumped to .229. He moved back to shortstop at mid-season as Campaneris
hit .186.
After the season Harrah was traded to the Indians for Buddy Bell and
he replaced Bell at third base. Although the Rangers often had losing records, they
had contended in 1974, 1977, and 1978. In Cleveland, Harrah's talents were buried
on a perennial sixth-place finisher that dropped another notch when the expansion
Blue Jays finally improved. In his five years with the Indians, Harrah scored 100
runs twice (his career high, in 1980 and 1982). In his only .300 season, .304 in
1982, he also hit 25 HR and finished second in the AL with a .400 on-base percentage.
He led AL third basemen in fielding in 1983. At third, he almost always guarded the
line, which cut down on his range; he maintained that it was more important to cut
off potential doubles than singles. He played in 476 consecutive games before a Dennis
Martinez pitch sidelined him with a broken hand in April 1983.
The Yankees acquired
Harrah in a five-player deal in February 1984. By the end of spring training, Graig
Nettles had been traded to San Diego for panning the club's planned third-base platoon,
and Harrah was not only faced with the pressure of replacing the popular Nettles,
but was also blamed for causing his departure. He slumped horribly, lost the job
to rookie Mike Pagliarulo, and hit just .217. After the season he was traded back
to the Rangers for Billy Sample and a minor league pitcher. Happy to be back in Texas,
he was the regular second baseman (Buddy Bell was at 3B) and rebounded to .270. Drawing
a career-high 113 walks (second in the majors), he finished third in the AL with
a .437 on-base average, behind Wade Boggs and George Brett. He retired after hitting
.218 in 1986.
(SH)
FROM THE BASEBALL CHRONOLOGY
»July 4, 1974:
Toby Harrah's 3rd inning homer is the only hit for Texas, as Bert Blyleven and Twins win, 3–1.
»June 25, 1976: Ranger Toby Harrah becomes the only SS in ML history to go through an entire doubleheader without a fielding chance. At the plate, Harrah makes up for the inactivity, collecting six hits, including a grand slam in the opener and another round-tripper in game 2. The Rangers beat the White Sox in the first game 8–4, but lose the nightcap 14–9.
»August 27, 1977: Rangers Toby Harrah and Bump Wills hit back-to-back inside-the-park home runs on consecutive pitches off Ken Clay, highlighting an 8–2 win over the Yankees, only the 2nd loss for New York in 14 games. It ties the ML mark and it is the first time since 1946 that two batters have connected consecutively on IPHRs.
»September 18, 1979: Yanks manager Billy Martin reportedly pays rookie P Bob Kammeyer $100 to hit former Yankee Cliff Johnson with a pitch in Cleveland's 16–3 rout of the Yankees. Johnson belts two homers as does Toby Harrah and the two combine for nine RBIs. The loss goes to Paul Mirabella but Kammeyer gives up all eight Tribe scores in the 4th inning without recording an out.
»June 18, 1982: Cleveland's Toby Harrah goes 4-for-5 in a 10–3 win over the Red Sox to raise his ML-leading average to a sizzling .387. He will finish the season at .304.
»February 4, 1984: The Indians trade 3B Toby Harrah and minor leaguer Rick Brown to the Yankees for P George Frazier, OF Otis Nixon, and minor leaguer Guy Elston.
»September 8, 1984: The Yankees break a 4–4 tie with two runs in the 6th to roll over the Red Sox, 12–6. Toby Harrah paces the 15-hit attack with four hits, and Dave Winfield one of the game's 12 doubles to extend his hitting streak to 20 games, which is and will be a career high. Joe Cowley (7–) is the winner.
»February 27, 1985: The Yankees trade veteran IF Toby Harrah to the Rangers for OF Billy Sample and a player to be named later. The palindromic infielder was a member of the original Rangers in 1972.
»August 6, 1986: In a wild game that features a ML-record three grand slams, Texas scores seven runs in the final two innings to beat Baltimore 13–11. Toby Harrah's grand slam in the 2nd gives the Rangers a 5–0 lead, but Baltimore rallies for nine runs in the 4th, thanks to grand slams by Larry Sheets and Jim Dwyer, the 5th time in ML history a team has hit two grand slams in one inning. Bobby Witt and Jeff Russell serve up the gopher balls.
»January 8, 1987: Ten free agents (Tim Raines, Lance Parrish, Bob Horner, Andre Dawson, Rich Gedman, Ron Guidry, Bob Boone, Doyle Alexander, Toby Harrah, and Gary Roenicke) fail to meet a midnight deadline and thus will not be allowed to re-sign with their former clubs until May 1st if they are not offered contracts by new teams. The general lack of interest in the players will become the focus of the Players' Association's first anti-collusion suit against the owners.
»July 9, 1992:
Bobby Valentine is fired as manager of the Texas Rangers. At the time, he had managed the team for 1,186 games, the most in major league history with one club without winning a division or league title. Toby Harrah replaces Valentine on an interim basis.