Take the doubleheader against the Cubs at the Polo Grounds early in the season. In the first inning of the first game Don Landrum of Chicago was caught in a rundown between first and second. Rundowns are not Throneberry's strong point. In the middle of the posse of Mets chasing the Cub, Throneberry found himself face-to-face with Landrum. The only trouble was Marvin did not have the ball. During a rundown the cardinal rule is to get out of the way if you do not have the ball. If you stand around, the runner will deliberately bang into you, claim interference, and the umpire will give it to him.
Which is exactly what happened to Marv. Landrum jumped into his arms, and the umpire waved him safely to first. Instead of an out, the Mets now had to contend with a runner on baseāand that opened the gates for a four-run Chicago rally.
Marv had a big chance to make good when the Mets came to bat. With two runners on, Marv drove a long shot to the bullpen in right centerfield. It looked to be a sure triple. Marv flew past first. Well past it. He didn't come within two steps of touching the bag. Then he raced toward second and careened toward third. While all this violent motion was taking place, Ernie Banks, the Cubs' first baseman, casually strolled over to umpire Dusty Boggess.
"Didn't touch the bag, you know, Dusty," Banks said. Boggess nodded. Banks then called for the ball. The relay came, and he stepped on first base. Across the infield Throneberry was standing on third. He was taking a deep breath and was proudly hitching up his belt when he saw the umpire calling him out at first.
It was suggested to Throneberry on a recent evening that his troubles, and those of the entire Mets team, come from unfamiliarity. A year of playing together might help the team considerably, Throneberry was told. Marv took this under consideration.
"I don't know about that," he allowed. "They's teams been established for 30, 40 years, and they's still in last place."
Marv has been rankled only once all year. It involved Ed Bouchee, whom Stengel put on first for a couple of games. In San Francisco, Craig, who has a fine pickoff motion for a righthander, fired to first and had Orlando Cepeda of the Giants clearly nailed. But Bouchee dropped the throw. Two windups later, Craig again fired to first. He had Cepeda off the bag, with all his weight leaning toward second. It was an easy pickoff. The ball again bounced out of Bouchee's glove.
Back in New York, when Bouchee stepped out on the field at the Polo Grounds, the fans gave him a good going-over.
"What are you try to do, steal my fans?" Throneberry complained.
It is a long summer, but the man who is probably finding it longest is Weiss. "I've been in baseball since 1919," George said, "and this is only the second time I have had a second-division team. My first year in baseball I had the New Haven club, and we finished seventh. That was in the Eastern League. This year is, I must say, a bit of an experience. No, it is certainly not funny to me. But you could say I am not doing things halfway. When I finally get in the second division, I really get there.