One of my heroes is gone. Today,
cancer claimed the life of Hall of Fame catcher Gary Carter at
the age of 57. Carter was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor
last May and despite a valiant fight, it was one he could not
win.
Fans in New York will remember his two out, two strike hit
against Calvin Schiraldi in the bottom of the 10th inning of Game 6
of the 1986 World Series. Carter's single sparked a rally which
eventually led Mookie Wilson hitting a groundball which eluded the
glove of Boston Red Sox first baseman Bill Buckner. If Carter
doesn't get that hit, the Red Sox would have broken the Curse of
the Bambino eighteen years earlier. Instead, Carter refused to make
the last out and the Mets won Games 6 and 7.
As for me, I remember him as a Montreal Expo through and
through. Drafted by the Expos in the 3rd round of the 1972 draft as
an outfielder, the club actually moved him behind the plate so he
wouldn't get injured. Usually it's the other way around. Carter
made his big league debut late in the 1974 season and had a
sensational rookie campaign in 1975 finishing runner up in NL
Rookie of the Year balloting to San Francisco Giants pitcher John
Montefusco. By the end of the decade, Carter had supplanted Johnny
Bench as the premier catcher in the NL. During the late 1970s and
early 1980s, Carter was part of an Expos team which included the
likes of Andre Dawson, Warren Cromartie, Tim Raines, Tim Wallach,
Larry Parrish, Steve Rogers, Rodney Scott, Scott Sanderson and
Ellis Valentine. In 1980, Carter finished runner up in the NL MVP
balloting to Philadelphia Phillies third baseman Mike Schmidt. Not
coincidentally, Schmidt homered against the Expos to clinch the NL
East during the final weekend of that season.
Carter was traded to the Mets prior to the 1985 season for Hubie
Brooks, Mike Fitzgerald, Herm Winningham and Floyd Youmans. After
spending five seasons in Queens, Carter had stints with the San
Francisco Giants and the Los Angeles Dodgers before returning to
the Expos in 1992 where he had his number 8 retired at the end of
the season. Carter finished
his career with a .262 lifetime batting average, 324 homeruns,
1225 RBI, 11 NL All-Star selections, five Silver Sluggers, three
Gold Gloves and a World Series ring. He was inducted into the
Baseball Hall of Fame in 2003.
After his playing career ended, Carter spent several
seasons as a color commentator for the Expos and then later
for the Florida Marlins. In recent years, Carter had tried his hand
at coaching. He served as a manager in the Mets minor league system
from 2005 to 2007. Carter would manage independent league
teams in 2008 and 2009 before turning to the college ranks in 2010
accepting the coaching job at Palm Beach Atlantic University. Two
weeks ago, Carter made his
last public appearance when he attended PBAU's home opener.
Let me leave you with Carter hitting a walk off
homerun at Shea Stadium in the tenth inning against the St.
Louis Cardinals off ex-Met Neil Allen on
Opening Day in 1985. Goodbye Kid.
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