Jay Hook

BigNUFan51

Freshman
Nov 29, 2015
1,188
78
0
played MLB baseball in the 50s and 60s. Gave up a HR to Pete Rose.

Northwestern alum
 

mikewebb68

Senior
Oct 24, 2009
9,811
501
113
Well, he didn't die as far as I know, and he wasn't named BIG commissioner, so yeah, I am stumped as well. Though he was featured on Mets Rewind the other day...
 

BigNUFan51

Freshman
Nov 29, 2015
1,188
78
0
He also was threw the first pitch for the Mets franchise. This is a great Northwestern athlete who is not talked about.
 

wildcat1066

Redshirt
Nov 26, 2012
72
8
8
I was a seven year old fan of Jay Hook when he came to the Reds. I don't think he ever had the luxury of playing for very good teams except for the 1961 Reds.
 

BosCat

Sophomore
Nov 29, 2008
1,276
189
63
Hook was the first pitcher to get a win for the Mets (they lost first 9 in '62). Turns out that Casey Stengel called him "professor" since he was going to NU in off-seasons. (from SABR profile: LINK)


Here is his '62 card


 

EvanstonCat

Senior
May 29, 2001
50,767
767
73
What about Jay? He was a mentor when I in Tech undergrad. He was from industry but came in and shared his life experiences with students who were interested and thought they could get something from his wealth of wisdom. Inspiring guy.
 

mikewebb68

Senior
Oct 24, 2009
9,811
501
113
He also was threw the first pitch for the Mets franchise. This is a great Northwestern athlete who is not talked about.

And what do you have in store for us next week on the next edition of Semi-Celebrity Alumni Profiles?
 

RevCat

Freshman
Nov 3, 2010
1,138
53
0
He was a member of the American Rocket Society. Because, Northwestern athlete.

And this:

Like many players, Hook occasionally found himself the target of Stengel’s sense of humor. In the foreword to the anthology Why a Curveball Curves: The Incredible Science of Sports, Robert Lipsyte, author and Mets beat writer for The New York Times in 1962, recalled how Hook was the rare man who not only knew how to throw a curveball, but could also explain in scientific terms, thanks to his education, exactly why a curveball curves. Stengel didn’t miss a chance to tweak his young charge, telling Lipsyte, “If Hook could only do what he knows.”
 

eastbaycat99

Sophomore
Mar 7, 2009
2,523
182
48
I was a seven year old fan of Jay Hook when he came to the Reds. I don't think he ever had the luxury of playing for very good teams except for the 1961 Reds.

The ‘61 Reds had some talent by my now feeble memory. Frank Robinson, Vada Pinson, Johnny Templeton, Jim O’Toole, Ed Bailey, Wally Post.
 

wildcat1066

Redshirt
Nov 26, 2012
72
8
8
The ‘61 Reds had some talent by my now feeble memory. Frank Robinson, Vada Pinson, Johnny Templeton, Jim O’Toole, Ed Bailey, Wally Post.
One correction. It was Johnny "Temple" and he was no longer with the Reds in 1961, having been traded, along with my all time favorite Red , Ted Kluszewski. (Klu played football and baseball for Indiana U. Broke my young heart when the Reds traded Kluszewski.) The '61 Reds were managed by Fred Hutchinson ,who died of cancer a few years later at the age of 45. and is the namesake of the renowned cancer center in Seattle.
 

eastbaycat99

Sophomore
Mar 7, 2009
2,523
182
48
One correction. It was Johnny "Temple" and he was no longer with the Reds in 1961, having been traded, along with my all time favorite Red , Ted Kluszewski. (Klu played football and baseball for Indiana U. Broke my young heart when the Reds traded Kluszewski.) The '61 Reds were managed by Fred Hutchinson ,who died of cancer a few years later at the age of 45. and is the namesake of the renowned cancer center in Seattle.

Thanks! My brain’s wayback machine misfired both on the name and the year he left the Reds. I could have sworn he was on the ‘61 team, but a quick check of the record shows you are right on both counts. The Reds were a surprise that year. The Braves were still pretty loaded from their ‘57-58 pennant winners who tied with the Dodgers in the regular season in ‘59, and the Pirates were coming off the Mazeroski miracle in ‘60. If memory serves, they were under .500 in ‘60 and then won the pennant in ‘61.