SNY recently concluded a week’s long of broadcasts of the Mets’ five-game 1969 World Series win over Baltimore.
In the current age of rewind sports, it is a treasure that never loses its uniqueness.
The heroes, plays, and the storylines that led to the memorable day in mid-October that shocked the baseball world were seemingly countless.
Tom Seaver was the face of the franchise, and Jerry Koosman was part of the that team’s Mount Rushmore.
Yet, where would the Mets have been without series MVP Donn Clendenon?
It will be 15 years this fall when Clendenon lost a battle to leukemia and passed at the age of 70 in 2005.
However, his fall of 1969 should not be forgotten. His short Mets’ stint was a microcosm of his life and career.
Clendenon turned out to be the final piece of the puzzle when he was acquired from Montreal for& pitcher Steve Renko, who became a fixture on the young Expos’ staff.
He was a hired big bat and the cleanup hitter they needed.
He basically shared time at first with Ed Kranepool until he exploded in the Series with three homers. It was his two-run shot in Game Five that helped the Mets begin to solve Baltimore’s Dave McNally, who had a 3-0 lead through six innings.
At the time, Clendenon had one of the best and more timely World Series’ performances on the books. He posted a .357 average, and three of his five hits were home runs. His three homers and 15 total bases were a record for a five-game series.
There were rumors of him being a malcontent that surfaced over his eight-year stint with Pittsburgh, notably a rift with manager Harry Walker, that began as a draft pick in 1961.
However, he became a selfless player with the Mets. When he was awarded the MVP award, he quipped “There is no most valuable player on this team — we’ve got lots of them.”
Clendenon apparently found a home.
His life had come full circle from being cast off to Montreal in the expansion draft as a temporary, last-stop filler to a full-time 33-year-old World Series champion.
He responded the following season with a solid 22-homer, 97-RBI, .288 campaign in 121 games. His 97 RBIs were a new club record. He also set a new mark with seven RBIS in a game. But the Mets faded down the stretch and another postseason wasn’t in the offing.
However, his success would be short lived. Clendenon fell victim to fate as Kranepool had a bounce-back year in 1971 after his demotion to Tidewater, and farmhands Mike Jorgenson and John Milner needed roster spots. Clendenon was relegated to 88 games with a 11-homer, 37-RBI and .247 line for the year.
He was released at the end of the season, two years from being a World Series MVP.
Clendenon spend his final year with St. Louis in 1972, but he saw little time behind incumbent Matty Alou at first. He was consequently released and announced his retirement at the end of the season.
In true fashion, Clendenon bounced back and returned to Pittsburgh to earn a law degree from Duquesne in 1978.
Yet, he had another battle to fight with a cocaine addiction in his early 50s. He overcame it in a rehab center and worked as a chemical dependency counselor for a corporation in Utah.
“I had to go to a place where I could change my environment, my associates and everything else,” said Clendenon via a New York times article about his then position.
In October of 1969, and the following season, Clendenon certainly changed the Mets’ environment.