Candlestick Park was known for it's chilly ocean breezes, which is probably why Burt Hooton is wearing a windbreaker.
Even though it is July 11. Assuming this was late morning, the temperature was in the mid-60s.
Three days earlier Hooton lost in San Diego to drop to 8-7, in a season that he would end with a 14-17 record. On this day teammate Milt Pappas got the start, and pitched pretty well, two earned runs in six innings. The Cubs brought in Dave LaRoche in the seventh inning of a 2-2 game, and he immediately gave up five runs, including back-to-back home runs by Ed Goodson and Gary Matthews. It was more than enough for the Giants to hold off the Cubbies by a 7-3 final. Even with the loss the Cubs were 51-38, five games ahead of the second-place Cardinals, and 14 games ahead of the last place Mets. However, this game kicked off a six-game losing streak, and a stretch where the Cubs lost 27 out of 31. The Cubs would finish the season 77-84, five games back of the first-place Mets after one of the wildest division races ever.
This appears to be the same photo used for Hooton's 1975 Hostess card.
In other news, a plane crash near Paris killed 123 people, former Attorney General John Mitchell told a Senate investigating committee that he concealed information about Watergate from President Nixon, Willie Stargell set the all-time Pirates home run record, and 29-year-old tennis star Billie Jean King accepted a challenge from 1939 champion Bobby Riggs, almost twice her age, to a Battle of the Sexes in September.
Should be nice today at Candlestick Point with highs in the upper 60's (maybe low 70's). 60 miles south...it'll be in the mid 90's.
ReplyDeleteHostess did it better.
ReplyDelete