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The New York Mets Encyclopedia by Peter C. Bjarkman
Sports Publishing, Inc., 2001 | Buy the book
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1981: THE RETURN OF KINGMAN
Chapter 4Dave Kingman made two noteworthy arrivals in New York. The first provided the
Mets with their first legitimate power hitter since the demise of Frank Thomas
at the end of the ball club's first outing a dozen seasons earlier. Dave
Kingman was purchased from the San Francisco Giants during spring training on
the eve of the 1975 season for $150,000 cash with the hope that he would
resolve the team's long-standing home run production problems. And the lanky
right-handed swinger didn't disappoint in immediately filling at least some of
those expectations. He improved on his earlier performances, banged over 30
homers (36) for the first time, and wiped out Thomas's earlier team record. A
season later, he broke the record again and lost the league home run crown to
Mike Schmidt by the margin of a single dinger, despite missing 39 games. But
after two years of pounding the baseball with Ruthian effort, the
one-dimensional slugger had quickly worn out his welcome on a ball club bent
on an image overhaul. In the middle of year three, Kingman was on his way back
out of town, dumped from the Mets' roster the same fateful day as Tom Seaver.
The second tour of duty with the Mets was nearly as productive for the
oversized free-swinging banger with the notoriously bad attitude. But that
second tour also exposed the nature of Kingman's limited value in any lineup
bent on winning many ball games. Kingman had been picked up from the Cubs in
February 1981 (for Steve Henderson and cash) at a time when Mets fortunes had
dipped to an all-time post-sixties low. And there was some irony attached to
his reacquisition. Kingman had, four years earlier, been dealt away on the
same day Seaver had been traded to Cincinnati in exchange for promising
outfielder Steve Henderson and a flock of lesser prospects. Now, as the
revolving door swung again, it was Henderson who was sent out of town as the
price for reacquiring Kingman. King Kong had recently reached a home run peak
in Chicago, blasting a league-best 48 in 1979, but had fallen well off the
pace in an injury-wrecked 1980 season.
Back in New York, Kingman once more
rebounded in the power department. After a strike-shortened 1981 campaign kept
his numbers down, he again matched his Mets' record of 37 dingers in 1982. But
it all meant little in terms of any impact on team fortunes, with the club
finishing fifth and then sixth twice during his second tenure. By 1983, the
unpredictable slugger had again slumped badly, with all-time lows in homers
(13), RBIs (29), and runs scored (25). He was soon dealt to Oakland, where he
hit more than 30 homers in each of his final three seasons and set a
still-standing record for the most round trippers ever (35) in a final season
of big-league play (1986).
From The New York Mets Encyclopedia by Peter C. Bjarkman. Copyright © by Peter C. Bjarkman. Excerpted with permission.
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