Years after he left baseball, however, Maynard would be remembered in a story often told by
Tommy Lasorda, the
Baseball Hall of Fame manager of the
Los Angeles Dodgers, to his players at spring training. Lasorda recalled that, as a teenager in the early 1940s, he had attended his first major league game at
Shibe Park in
Philadelphia, a contest between the
Phillies and Maynard's Giants. As the game ended, the young Lasorda and his friends gathered in the runway between the teams' dugouts and their clubhouses in search of autographs from the big-league players. When Lasorda asked a Giant player to sign his scorecard, he was shoved out of the way.
Roger Angell, Hall of Fame baseball writer and former fiction editor of
The New Yorker, described what happened next: "'I couldn't believe it,' [Lasorda said.] 'Here was the first big-league player I'd ever seen up close — the first one I ever dared speak to — and what he did was shove me up against the wall ... I watched the guy as he went away toward the clubhouse and I noticed the number on his back — you know, like taking the number of a hit-and-run car. Later on, I looked at my program and got his name. It was Buster Maynard, who was an outfielder for the Giants then. I never forgot it.'" By 1949, Lasorda was 21 and a left-handed pitcher in the
Brooklyn Dodgers' minor-league system. One day, as he was on the mound for the
Greenville Spinners in the Class A
Sally League against the
Augusta Tigers, he heard the public address announcer introduce the rival batter he was about to face: Buster Maynard, then a 36-year-old minor league veteran. Angell writes: "Lasorda was transfixed. 'I looked in,' he [said], 'and it was the same man!'" Lasorda proceeded to throw three
brushback pitches at Maynard; after the third, Maynard charged the mound and a full-scale brawl nearly ensued. After the game, as Lasorda was getting into his street clothes in his team's clubhouse, there was a knock at the door. It was Maynard, who (according to Angell) wore a "peaceable but puzzled expression." "'Listen, kid,' he said to Lasorda, 'did I ever meet you before?' 'Not exactly,' Tom said. 'Did I bat against you someplace, maybe?' 'Nope.' 'Well, why were you tryin' to take my head off out there?' Lasorda spread his hands wide. 'You didn't give me your autograph,' he said." During his 20 years as manager of the Dodgers, Lasorda regularly told that story to his young players, advising them, "Always give an autograph when somebody asks you ... You can never tell. In baseball, anything can happen." ==References==