Former MLB player and broadcaster, actor and comedian Bob Uecker passed away at the age of 90. Uecker had been diagnosed with cancer two years ago.
Nicknamed "Mr. Baseball" by Johnny Carson, Uecker made a career out of making fun of his limited ability on the field through his appearances on The Tonight Show, in Miller Lite commercials, the TV sitcom Mr. Belvedere and the Major League movie franchise.
Despite all of that public acclaim, he was happiest as the voice of the Milwaukee Brewers, a position he held from 1971 through 2024. In 2003, Uecker received the Ford C. Frick Award earning his place into the Baseball Hall of Fame delivering one of the most memorable induction speeches ever given.
Yet for his all his self-effacing humor, Uecker was not as bad a ball player as he made himself out to be. Yes, his career numbers aren't impressive. Over six MLB seasons, Uecker played in 297 games collecting 146 hits for a lifetime batting average of .200 with 14 HR and 74 RBI. But his career was not without its highlights.
Originally with his hometown Milwaukee Braves, Uecker would earn a World Series ring with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1964. Prior to the 1966 season, the Cardinals would trade Uecker to the Philadelphia Phillies along with Dick Groat and Bill White in exchange for Pat Corrales, Alex Johnson and Art Mahaffey. Uecker would enjoy his best season while in a Phillies belting a career high 7 HR and 30 RBI in 78 games played behind the plate. His final big-league season came in 1967 which he split with the Phillies and Braves who by this time had moved to Atlanta.
Although Uecker only hit 14 HR over his MLB career - he hit three of them off future Hall of Fame pitchers. His 2 HR during the 1965 season came off of Gaylord Perry and Sandy Koufax. Uecker's first HR of the 1966 season came off Fergie Jenkins although hardly anyone saw it. Only 4,053 fans were in attendance at Wrigley Field that day. A few more fans saw Uecker take Ken Holtzman deep the following day when 4,495 fans watched Uecker and the Phillies crush the Cubs 12-0.
Despite that HR against Koufax, Uecker only hit .184 (7 for 38) in his career. Yet in 1965, Uecker somehow hit. 400 against Koufax (6 for 15). Mind you, this was the season when Koufax went 26-8 with a 2.04 ERA while setting a NL record for strikeouts with 382 (a record which still stands) en route to the second of his three career NL Cy Young Awards. Uecker accounted for three of those 382 strikeouts and yet somehow managed to find a way to get as many hits off Koufax that year as Willie Mays. Yes, you read that correctly.
Nevertheless, the public perception of Uecker was that he was a failure as a baseball player - a perception he perpetuated to great success. Yet people identified with him because most of us experience failure more often than success. Uecker found a way to laugh about it and make us laugh with him in the process. R.I.P.