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David K. Israel
Top 10 Baseball Player Rituals
by David K. Israel - July 9, 2009 - 9:00 AM

I tend to be a little superstitious. For instance, when I make changes to my files, I’ll use normal, ascending nomenclature for each consecutive draft (e.g. _02.doc, _03.doc, etc.) However, before sending my agent the final draft of a novel, I’ll always change the nomenclature to one of my lucky numbers, like _27 or _72, even if I’m still only on draft _14. Yeah, writers are a strange bunch.

Turns out, Baseball players are an even stranger bunch. Surely you’ve seen Nomar Garciaparra ticking through his batting glove rituals, or how Mark “The Bird” Fidrych used to talk to his baseballs. But these are the obvious, well-documented ones. Patrick Saunders, over at The Denver Post, recently wrote about (mostly Rockies) players and their crazy rituals. Stan Grossfeld, at the Globe, threw some light on some other players’ quirks. And our own Ethan Trex wrote about athlete superstitions. Between the three, I’ve mashed up my Top-10 list. 

10. Moises Alou

Most baseball players wear batting gloves to absorb some of the shock of making contact with the ball and to improve their grip on the bat. A handful eschew gloves in favor of a barehanded approach, though, most famously outfielder Alou. Alou does have a system for avoiding calluses and hardening his skin: he urinates on his hands throughout the season. New York Yankees catcher Jorge Posada also employs this superstition to aid in his gloveless approach at the plate. The trick may be more gross than helpful, though: a 2004 article in Slate questioned the value of this superstition since urine contains urea, a key ingredient in moisturizers that actually soften the skin. (Trex)

9. Wade Boggs

boggs_wadeA former third baseman, primarily with the Boston Red Sox, Wade ate chicken before every game. He took exactly 150 groundballs during infield practice. He also had a fixation on time. At Boston Red Sox night home games, he ran wind sprints at precisely 7:17 p.m. Before each at-bat, Boggs would draw a chai — the Hebrew symbol for life — into the dirt of the batter’s box. (Saunders)

8. Turk Wendell

Among Wendell’s more notable quirks was his requirement that he chew four pieces of black licorice while pitching. At the end of each inning, he’d spit them out, return to the dugout, and brush his teeth, but only after taking a flying leap over the baseline. An avid hunter, Wendell also took the mound wearing a necklace adorned with trophies from animals he had harvested, including mountain lion claws and the teeth of wild pigs and buffalo. When compared to these superstitions, Wendell’s other little oddities (drawing three crosses in the dirt on the mound, always throwing the rosin bag down as hard as he could, and insisting figures in his contract end in 99 as a tribute to his jersey number) don’t seem so strange. (Trex)

7. Larry Walker

The former Rockies star was obsessed with the number “3.” He set his alarm for 33 minutes past the hour, took practice swings in multiples of three, wore No. 33, was married Nov. 3 at 3:33 p.m., and bought tickets for 33 disadvantaged kids when he played in Montreal, to be seated in Section 333 at Olympic Stadium. (Saunders)

6. Clint Barmes

Once, Barmes sprained his ankle and had it taped up. He began hitting so well that once the ankle healed he kept on getting it taped. In the minors, Barmes ate a Subway sandwich for lunch and hit well that game. He ordered the same sandwich at the same Subway for more than a week until he cooled off. (Saunders)

5. Kevin Rhomberg

rhombergRhomberg played just 41 games in parts of three seasons with the Tribe from 1982-84. But in that short span, the outfielder managed to assert himself as possibly the big leagues’ most superstitious player ever. Rhomberg’s most peculiar superstition was that if someone touched him, he had to touch that person back. Although this compulsion was not as much of a liability as it might have been in basketball or football, it still led to some odd situations: if Rhomberg were tagged out while running the bases, he’d wait until the defense was clearing the field at inning’s end to chase down the player who’d touched him. Rhomberg also refused to make right turns while on the field, because baserunners are always turning left. So if a situation forced him to make a right turn, he’d go to his left and make a full circle to get moving in the correct direction. (Trex)

4. Jason Marquis

In the minors, if he spit on the field, he had to make sure it wasn’t on the mound. If he did happen to spit on the dirt, he wiped away the spit with his shoe. If his team was ahead and he was in the dugout, Marquis always unbuttoned his jacket when there were two outs in the ninth inning. (Saunders)

3. Coco Crisp

aagv138-2006studiopluscoco-crisp-postersCenter fielder Coco Crisp does the same ritual during every at-bat. “I pick up dirt, spit on my hands,” he says. Then, coiled in the batter’s box, he wiggles his fingers as if they’ve fallen asleep. “I don’t wear batting gloves. I move my left hand. It relaxes me and helps my timing. I stomp my front foot down. It’s a habit. I’m not that superstitious, although sometimes I skip over the line.” (Grossfeld)

2. Yorvit Torrealba

Before leaving the dugout for an at-bat, Torrealba takes a drink of water from a paper cup and tosses the cup. If the cup stays right side up, he figures he’s going to get a hit. “I know for a fact that I’m going to get a hit, probably a double. At least it’s worked a few times,” he said.

In the on-deck circle, Torrealba spits out his bubble gum and tries to hit it with his bat. If he connects, he’s confident he’ll get a hit. (Saunders)

1. Jason Grilli

In his Little League days, Grilli put a two-sided baseball card in his shoe. On one side was Ken Griffey Jr.; on the other side was Nolan Ryan. On the days Grilli pitched, Ryan was face up in the shoe. On other days, Griffey faced up.

“I guess I thought it would somehow absorb their abilities, gain some of their super powers,” Grilli said.

Back when Grilli was a starting pitcher, he ate linguini with clam sauce before every start. Grilli did, after all, pitch for Italy in the World Baseball Classic this spring. (Saunders)

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Comments (18)
  1. Is the writer for The Denver Post’s name really “Patrick Patrick Saunders”?

    Also, that Rhomberg guy is more OCD than superstitious! I guess he only played 41 games because he was doing loop-de-loops on the field running after the ball (since he could only turn left)! CRAAAAZAAAYY!

  2. sounds to me like Rhomberg just wasn’t an ambi-turner…

  3. Richard Hamilton of the Detroit Pistons wears a face mask every game. He broke his nose three times during the 2003-2004 season, and has worn the mask ever since. He thinks it gives him strength, like a Superman cape.

  4. How about Nomar Garciaparra’s glove routine and toe tapping?

  5. Our local newspaper had a feature today on the most quotable nuggets of wisdom from the New York Yankees, and this made me think of Babe Ruth’s line, “I had only one superstition. I made sure to touch all the bases when I hit a home run.”

  6. I think that Nomar Garciaparra’s routine added about 20 or more minutes to a game!

  7. Two more from the Rox.

    In 1993, Andres Galarraga, who was hitting near .400 well into August, got out of a short slump after stopping on the way to Mile High to get a banana milkshake. For weeks thereafer he’d stop for a banana shake before every game.

    Todd Helton is known to stop for a milkshake on his drive to Coors Field nearly every game too. Not the same place and not banana.

  8. As I recall, the Nomar toe-tapping thing came about becuase in little league he always had to wear his older brother’s hand-me-downs, so his shoes were usually too big. He did the little dance to get his feet up into the toe of the shoe, so that he would be ready to run if he got a hit.

  9. I think that something in the Moises Alou segment is whack. First it says that he has a system for softening his hands and preventing callouses, then the Slate article is supposed to refute this? It seems actually to support the claim. Urine = urea = soft hands, so goal achieved right? Better this than not changing socks or underwear for the playoffs as lots of people (reportedly)do.

  10. Chuck Knoblauch’s extensive routine before every pitch was hilarious. Grab the bat here, grab it there, adjust one glove, adjust the other, tab the bat off my shoe…..it goes on…. hehehe

  11. Sean Casey had a similar routine when he played. With one foot in the batter’s box, he’d tighten each batting glove, then continually pick up his back foot and put it back down before the pitch came.

    He was my favorite Cincy Red for many years.

  12. i find your lack of nomar disturbing.

  13. Agreed…..not having Nomar on this list is akin to not having Sigmund Freud on a list of most famous psychoanalysts or Michael Jackson on the list of most famous white women.

    sorry, too soon?

  14. I believe Larry Walker also negotiated his contract to read 3,333,333.33 or whatever the figure was w/ all 3s ending the number.

  15. Alan Mills, a middle reliever who had some success for the Orioles and Dodgers in the 1990’s, had a ritual that I loved to watch, but it made me cringe.

    He, like many relievers, always pitched from the stretch. Before delivering, he would step off the rubber and whack his protective cup with the baseball a couple of times.

    I always hoped that he never forgot that most important piece of equipment.

  16. From tee ball through high school, the only guy I remember playing with who DIDN’T jump over the foul lines was a kid who obsessively had to step ON the line ever time.

    Someone (maybe ESPN) did a segment on baseball superstitions a few years ago, and it ended with an interview with a self-described UNsuperstitious ballplayer who thought all the rituals were baloney. At the end, they asked him, “so you step on the foul lines?” And he said, “well no, I don’t step on the lines.”

  17. Jeter always holds out his right arm to hold of the pitcher til he’s ready. And really how is Nomar not on this list?

  18. And Jeter isn’t the one who gets to hold the pitcher. It’s the plate umpire. I wish a pitcher would just throw while his hand is out.

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