Marv Throneberry


Marvin Eugene Throneberry was an American Major League Baseball player. Affectionately known as "Marvelous Marv", he was the starting first baseman for the 1962 New York Mets, a team which set the modern record for most losses in a season with 120.

Early years

The left-handed batting and throwing native of Fisherville, Tennessee was a two-time all-city baseball player at South Side High School in Memphis, Tennessee. After turning down an offer to play alongside his older brother, Faye, with the Boston Red Sox, he signed as an amateur free agent with the New York Yankees in May.

Minor league slugger

Throneberry played the outfield early in his minor league career, and shifted to first base in with the Kansas City Blues. He was one of the most feared minor league sluggers of the 1950s, and led the Blues with 21 home runs. The following season, he led the triple A American Association with 36 home runs and 117 runs batted in as a member of the Denver Bears. That September, he received a call up to the Casey Stengel led New York Yankees. Throneberry made his major league debut as a pinch runner for Eddie Robinson on September 25, at Fenway Park. He remained in the game at first, and hit a sacrifice fly that scored Andy Carey in his first major league plate appearance. In his first official at bat in the seventh inning, Throneberry hit a bases loaded double that scored two more, and later came around to score himself on a Bob Cerv single. All told, Throneberry went 2-for-2, with a double, run scored and three RBIs. His brother struck out three times for the Red Sox in the same game.
He returned to the Denver Bears in, and once again led the American Association with 42 home runs and 145 RBIs. The following season, he clubbed 40 home runs, and drove in 124, tying an American Association record for leading the league in home runs and RBIs for three consecutive seasons.

New York Yankees

Throneberry made it back to the majors for good in. He collected his first hit of the season, a double off the Baltimore Orioles' Ken Lehman in his tenth at bat. Seeing most of his action as a pinch hitter or late inning defensive replacement at first, an injury to Bill Skowron on May 11 landed Throneberry in the starting line up through the rest of May. He hit his first major league home run off the Chicago White Sox's Bill Fischer on May 20. For the season, Throneberry batted.227 with seven home runs & 19 RBIs in 60 games. He reached the post season for the only time in his career as a rookie, and was struck out by Lew Burdette in his only at bat of the World Series.
Though he saw more playing time in, he was batting just.184 with three home runs & ten RBIs when Skrowron's season was ended by a fractured wrist. Throneberry responded by batting.286 with five home runs and twelve RBIs the rest of the way. After the season, he was part of the blockbuster trade that sent 1956 World Series hero Don Larsen, Hank Bauer and Norm Siebern to the Kansas City Athletics for power-hitting outfielder Roger Maris, Joe DeMaestri and Kent Hadley.

Kansas City A's

Siebern was an outfielder with the Yankees, but was shifted into a lefty-righty platoon with Throneberry at first base by A's manager Bob Elliott. Facing almost exclusively right-handed pitching, Throneberry batted.250 with eleven home runs and 41 RBIs in. At home at Kansas City Municipal Stadium, Throneberry batted.303 with 26 RBIs. On the road, his batting average fell to.205. Midway through the season, he was traded to the Baltimore Orioles for left fielder Gene Stephens.

Baltimore Orioles

With an All-Star MVP candidate who batted left-handed in Jim Gentile at first base, the Orioles used Throneberry mostly as a pinch hitter or in right field. On June 13, his ninth inning pinch hit single drove in Dick Hall for the walk off victory over the Washington Senators. On June 27, he went 3-for-4 with two home runs and three RBIs against his former teammates in Kansas City to lead the O's to a 5–3 victory. Seventeen games into the season, the Orioles traded him to the expansion New York Mets for a player to be named later and cash. The Mets sent catcher Hobie Landrith, their first selection in the 1961 Major League Baseball expansion draft, to the Orioles to complete the deal.

New York Mets

Reunited with Manager Casey Stengel, Throneberry got his first chance as a regular. On May, in his first game as a Met, Throneberry went 1-for-4, and scored a run in the ninth in an 8–5 loss to the Milwaukee Braves. He would not see home plate again until June 9, when he went 3-for-4 with a run scored and his first RBI as a Met in an 11–6 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
The 1962 Mets may not have won many games, but these "Lovable losers" won the hearts of sports fans, and no one exemplified that more than Throneberry. Many humorous stories surfaced about Throneberry, who facetiously came to be known as "Marvelous Marv." While it is likely that many of these stories are exaggerated or false, they helped turn Throneberry into almost legendary status among Mets fans. The fact of his initials spelling "MET" accentuated all anecdotes. Throneberry maintained a sense of humor about his play and became a favorite with fans and the media. At one point he had a fan club which numbered around 5,000 members. They wore shirts with the word "VRAM" and took up chanting "Cranberry, Strawberry, we love Throneberry."
In one famous story, on June 17, Throneberry hit a triple against the Cubs, but was called out after Ernie Banks took a relay throw and stepped on second base. "Didn't touch the bag, you know, Dusty," Banks told umpire Dusty Boggess. According to the legend, Throneberry was called out at second and Stengel came out to argue the call, but he was told by the umpire "Don't bother arguing, Casey, he missed first base, too." Stengel, after a pause, supposedly replied, "Well, I know he touched third base because he's standing on it!" The next batter, Charlie Neal, hit a home run, prompting Stengel to come out of the dugout following him and pointing at all four bases. Throneberry's mistake proved costly, as the Cubs won the game 8–7.
In the second game of a June 22 doubleheader with fellow expansion club, the Houston Colt.45's, Throneberry committed three of six Mets errors. On August 2, Throneberry had his only career two-home-run game in a 9–4 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies.
His 16 home runs and 49 RBIs in 1962 were both career highs; however, he also committed 17 errors at first base. His fielding percentage of.981 would not be equaled by a major-league regular first baseman until César Cedeño fielded.981 in 1979 for the Houston Astros.
During the off-season, the Mets acquired Tim Harkness from the Los Angeles Dodgers. Harkness assumed the starting first base job, with Throneberry relegated to pinch hitting duty. After going just 2-for-15 through May 5, he was demoted to the triple A Buffalo Bisons. While clubbing 16 home runs for Buffalo, he batted just.176. He batted.083 in eight games in before being released.

Career statistics

Throneberry hit 201 minor league home runs with a.269 batting average. With the exception of one rough year defensively, Throneberry was no worse than average with his career fielding percentage and range factor as a first baseman.

Miller Lite commercials

"Marvelous Marv" later became one of the original spokesmen for Miller Lite beer in the mid 1970s, poking fun at himself in a series of TV commercials. Throneberry's most famous line: "If I do for Lite what I did for baseball, I'm afraid their sales will go down." In another popular ad, after other celebrities are shown, Throneberry is shown at the end, saying: "I still don't know why they asked me to do this commercial."
Columnist Jimmy Breslin quipped, "Having Marv Throneberry play for your team is like having Willie Sutton work for your bank."

Personal life

Throneberry died of cancer on June 23, in Fisherville, Tennessee, at age 60. He and his wife, Dixie had five children, ten grandchildren and four great grandchildren. One of his grandchildren is filmmaker Craig Brewer. In, Throneberry was inducted into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame.