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Saturday, January 1, 2011

Ed Jurak, Impressive Spring - 437

Ed Jurak hit well that March. Seven games in, he was still hitting .400. He'd had this kind of early success before.

"Every spring I've hit well, no matter where I was," Jurak told The Associated Press. "My ability and my knowledge of the game are important."

But this wasn't a normal spring. This was spring 1995 and Jurak was a 37-year-old replacement player.

Jurak returned to playing that year, after four seasons in general retirement from playing. He also was one of the more experienced replacements that spring, having played professionally for 16 seasons, six of those with time in the majors.

Jurak's career began in 1975, taken by the Red Sox in the third round. He made AA Bristol in 1977 and first made AAA Pawtucket in 1978. He finally made Boston in 1982, debuting in June and playing 12 games for the Red Sox, going 7 for 21.

He made Boston after having among his first impressive springs. He hit a three-run home run in one early March 1982 game and Red Sox Manager Ralph Houk took notice. "Ed Jurak hit the heck out of the ball," Houk told The AP while praising his entire team's efforts.

Jurak returned to Boston for 1983, playing that year and the next without seeing the minors. He played in 75 games in 1983, the most games he would see in a season, and hit .277.

In 1984, Jurak played in 47 games, hitting .242. One of those games came in April after Wade Boggs went down with an injury. Jurak promptly ignited a rally with a double. He hadn't hit in 12 games.

The next month, Jurak made a notable fielding play - on a rat. The rat had wandered onto the field at Fenway as the Red Sox played the Indians. Jurak, playing first base, cleanly scooped up the rat and carried him from the field, to a trash can.

"I wasn't worried about him biting me," Jurak told reporters, "although he did bite the glove. I was worried about him jumping out of my glove."

Jurak started 1985 at AAA Pawtucket. It took an injury for him to be called up in mid-May. Jurak was thankful for the opportunity.

"It's good to get back," Jurak told the Patriot Ledger News Service after the recall. "You never know in this game; you go down, you come up. You get a chance, you've got to take it."

In just 26 games for the Red Sox that year, Jurak hit .231. He didn't play at all in the majors in 1986 or 1987. In 1988, he played in only three games with Oakland. His final year, in 1989, he played 30 games for the Giants.

His final year as a player came in 1990, with the Mariners at AAA Calgary. He hit .255.

By 1994, Jurak was a manager at independent league Mobile. He even tried to play again, in the season finale, The Orlando Sentinel wrote the next spring. He helped the team to a win, but they later had to forfeit. He wasn't eligible.

The 37-year-old then signed on the next spring as a replacement player, after another managing job fell through.

''To me, age has nothing to do with it. I'm young at heart,'' Jurak told The Sentinel. ''And the experience I have is a plus.''
1990 CMC Tally
Cards Featured: 358/880 - 40.7%
Players/Coaches Featured:
365
Made the Majors:
247 - 68%-X
Never Made the Majors:
118-32%

5+ Seasons in the Majors:
104-X
10+ Seasons in the Minors:
97

4 comments:

  1. The years he was in AA and AAA are wrong. He was in Bristol in 1981 and Pawtucket in 1982 before he got called up in September.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the note. I just checked and we're both right. Instead of naming every step he took, I just included his first appearances at those levels. He played at AA Bristol in all or part of 1977, 1979 and 1981. He played at AAA Pawtucket in all or part of 1978, 1980, 1981 and 1982. As always, stat info is courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.
    Take care,
    Steve
    Direct link to Ed's minor league stats:
    http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/player.cgi?id=jurak-001edw

    ReplyDelete
  3. My old manager in Mobile. .. Fond memories..

    ReplyDelete
  4. He's my uncle. Can someone send me his best hits/ outs so i can make a video out of it in his honor.

    ReplyDelete