By
Earl Vaughan Jr.
Scholastic sports editor
The Fayetteville Observer
Peggy Koonce says the irony was that her late husband, Calvin,
didn't even want to play for the New York Mets.
Koonce was relatively happy with the Chicago Cubs, Peggy said, even
managing to adjust to big-city life after growing up in the small
town of Hope Mills.
But New York? "That team is struggling,'' Peggy remembers her
husband telling her.
But when Koonce became a Met in 1967, it set the stage for him to
become part of one of the great sports stories not just of one year
but of all time. The Miracle Mets. 1969. And it gave the chance for
a journeyman baseball player still young in calendar years but
drawing close to the end of his career to be part of a story that
is told over and again by devoted baseball fans.
This year marks the 40th anniversary of the triumph of the New York
Mets over the Baltimore Orioles in the World Series. The Mets,
among the biggest underdogs in the history of the fall classic,
lost the first game in Baltimore, then roared to four straight
victories behind a brilliant young pitching staff that featured Tom
Seaver, Jerry Koosman and Nolan Ryan.
In the background, waiting to be called when needed, performing the
role of teammate like it's supposed to be, was Koonce, a veteran
relief pitcher.
Koonce never got the call to take the field either in the National
League championship series with the Braves or in the five games
with the Orioles. But that did not diminish his role with the Mets
or the way the rest of his New York coaches and teammates felt
about him.
Peggy Koonce must have seen the same kind of love and devotion in
her future husband at a much earlier age. The two met in first
grade at Hope Mills Elementary School. They had a special
relationship from that first day. They were married in 1961.
At the time, Peggy was a senior at East Carolina University. Calvin
was a basketball and baseball star at what was then Campbell
College.
"We decided to get married over Christmas,'' Peggy said. "He had
just played one summer of minor league ball, then the next year got
invited to spring training with the Chicago Cubs.''
Koonce was with the Cubs from 1962 to 1967, until his worst fears
were realized and he was purchased by the Mets.
Peggy was in Chicago the day her husband was dealt to New York,
watching WGN-TV and hearing something about Koonce going to New
York. Just then, the phone rang. It was Calvin calling from Wrigley
Field.
"I've got some bad news,'' he said. "I've been traded.''
Calvin told her to start packing for New York and he'd join her as
soon as he could.
Koonce endured his first few months with the Mets, but things
changed for the better when Gil Hodges became the team's
manager.
"Calvin really respected him,'' Peggy said. "He brought super
people, wonderful coaches, new ball players. Calvin had a wonderful
spring that year, and things turned around for him then.''
"They trusted Gil Hodges,'' said Don Koonce, Calvin's younger
brother, a standout athlete in his own right. "He more or less was
a steadying hand there.''
Then came the 1969 season. Peggy lived in New York the whole season
with Calvin and their first three children, Chris, Kim and
Kelly.
Koonce had an 0-3 start out of the bullpen for the Mets, but he
wound up winning six games in relief and recorded seven saves.
The Mets rallied late in the season to surge past both St. Louis
and Chicago and win the National League Eastern Division title by
eight games, finishing with a 100-62 record. It was an incredible
turnaround for a team that averaged more than 100 losses in
previous years.
All the experts figured the party was over when the World Series
arrived. The Mets were to face a Baltimore Orioles team loaded with
talent and managed by the great Earl Weaver.
In some ways, the series proved a frustrating experience for
Koonce. He was called on to warmup in the bullpen a few times but
never got into a game.
Peggy said he wasn't the type of player to let that bother him. "He
was not a man who would bring home a game if it was not a good
game,'' she said. "He just went out and said, 'There's always
tomorrow. We'll do better tomorrow. You can't change the past. You
have the present out there, and that's what you aim for.' ''
"Cal was a great teammate,'' said Calvin's brother, Don. "He was
and remained a dear friend to them all. Not an elder statesman, but
a man with real good morals, a clean image. What is portrayed in
the public eye of a good, clean fellow persists to this day in the
Mets family.''
Charles Koonce felt his brother's character showed in other
ways.
"Calvin was one of the older players on the team,'' Charles said.
"He had been in the majors since 1962. They looked up to him from
that perspective.
"He wore his ring proudly, but he never showed it off.''
After the Mets won the Series and the years passed, it became more
evident how special Koonce was to his teammates as a friend to all
and a mentor to younger players.
He returned to Hope Mills and served the community in numerous ways
- as a high school and college baseball coach, a member of the
board of commissioners, and the first general manager of the
Fayetteville Generals minor league baseball team.
But Koonce met with something that his positive outlook and years
of success on the field couldn't overcome. He was diagnosed with
non-Hodgkins lymphoma. He fought bravely for a few years but died
in 1993 at the age of 52.
Hope Mills Mayor Eddie Dees, who used to keep the scorebook for
Koonce's South View baseball team, was organizing a fundraiser for
Koonce's family to defray the cost of his medical bills.
After Koonce died, the family decided to use the money to establish
a scholarship at Campbell in Koonce's memory.
Dees wrote to every member of the 1969 Mets asking for their
help.
"Every single one of them replied,'' Dees said. "Some of them said
they couldn't come but sent something for the auction. Some of them
sent one thing, some sent several.''
Dees said Nolan Ryan was among the biggest contributors. "He sent
five or six things,'' Dees said. "Tom Seaver sent two or
three.''
Dees' main contact was Art Shamsky, who has been the unofficial
spokesman for the 1969 team. Shamsky came to the fundraiser along
with Ed Charles and a fellow North Carolinian and close friend of
Koonce's, Don Cardwell.
Peggy Koonce, her family, and Calvin's brothers Don and Charles
returned to New York in August as the Mets celebrated the 40th
anniversary of the 1969 championship.
It had been 15 years since her last visit, and Peggy wasn't sure
what kind of reception the family would get. She quickly found that
Calvin is as loved today as he was in 1969.
"The first person who came up and hugged my neck was Nolan Ryan,''
Peggy said. "He was such a nice young man when we were there. He
and his wife baby-sat for us.''
Peggy took her granddaughter Lynnsey Taylor to the celebration.
Lynnsey wore a shirt with the name Koonce, the number 34, and
"Grandpa" on it.
Lynnsey was sitting in the VIP section when an elderly man walked
over and asked, "Cal Koonce was your granddaddy? I want to tell you
you have the prettiest blue eyes I've ever seen.''
It was Yogi Berra.
All five of her grandchildren made the trip to New York.
"I wanted them to be part of their granddaddy's past, to connect,''
Peggy Koonce said. "It was worth it for the grandchildren to see
their granddaddy doing his job.''
A job well done. And a legend born.
Scholastic
sports editor Earl Vaughan Jr. can be reached at vaughane@fayobserver.com
or
486-3519.
Copyright 2009 / The Fayetteville Observer
Reprinted with permission