Claude Wilson Osteen
Los Angeles Dodgers
Pitcher
Bats: Left Throws: Left Height: 5'11" Weight: 160
Born: August 9, 1939, Caney Springs, TN
Signed: Signed by the Cincinnati Redlegs as an amateur free agent, July 2, 1957
Major League Teams: Cincinnati Reds 1957, 1959-1961; Washington Senators 1961-1964; Los Angeles Dodgers 1965-1973; Houston Astros 1974; St. Louis Cardinals 1974; Chicago White Sox 1975
World Series Appearances: Los Angeles Dodgers 1965-1966
Lefty pitcher Claude Osteen made his big league debut in July 1957, a month shy of his 18th birthday, and he'd pitch sparingly for the Reds over the next three-plus seasons. Dealt to the Senators in September 1961, he was inserted into the team's starting pitching rotation, enjoying moderate success in his four seasons in Washington. Osteen turned in the first of ten consecutive double digit win seasons in 1964, when he was a 15-game winner. He developed into an All-Star following his trade to the Dodgers in December 1964 as part of a blockbuster seven-player trade. Osteen started two games of the 1965 World Series, pitching to a 0.64 ERA in 14 innings and recording a complete game shutout in Game 3. The Dodgers would down the Twins in seven games. He'd help pitch the Dodgers back to the World Series in 1966, but the Orioles would sweep his club.
Osteen was an All-Star in 1967, 1970 and 1973 and a 20-game winner in 1969 and 1972. Osteen's best season came in 1969 when he was 20-15 with a 2.66 ERA, striking out 183 over 321 innings pitched. He threw 16 complete games that season, including seven shutouts. Osteen would pitch through the 1975 season before retiring as a player and beginning his second career as a pitching coach.
Lefty pitcher Claude Osteen made his big league debut in July 1957, a month shy of his 18th birthday, and he'd pitch sparingly for the Reds over the next three-plus seasons. Dealt to the Senators in September 1961, he was inserted into the team's starting pitching rotation, enjoying moderate success in his four seasons in Washington. Osteen turned in the first of ten consecutive double digit win seasons in 1964, when he was a 15-game winner. He developed into an All-Star following his trade to the Dodgers in December 1964 as part of a blockbuster seven-player trade. Osteen started two games of the 1965 World Series, pitching to a 0.64 ERA in 14 innings and recording a complete game shutout in Game 3. The Dodgers would down the Twins in seven games. He'd help pitch the Dodgers back to the World Series in 1966, but the Orioles would sweep his club.
1985 Tastykake Phillies #3 |
In 541 games, Osteen was 196-195 with a 3.30 ERA and 1,612 strikeouts with his 40 career shutouts currently 44th on the all-time list. Osteen would coach in the majors with the Cardinals (1977-1980), Phillies (1982-1988), Rangers (1993) and Dodgers (1999-2000).
Some text for this post originally appeared on my 1965 Topps blog.
Building the Set / Card #1
Summer of 1982, 1983 or 1984 from Ocean City, NJ
At the beginning of my baseball card collecting journey, I was focused on building complete sets and collecting Phillies cards. My Dad and I hand collated or bought Topps, Donruss and Fleer sets each year beginning in 1981, and gradually started working our way backwards and collecting a complete 1975 Topps set in the mid-1980s. But before then, and even to this day, my first collecting priority was and is Phillies baseball cards. That priority led to this Osteen card entering my collection in either the summer of 1983 or 1984, and I realize that needs a little bit of further explaining.
Building the Set / Card #1
Summer of 1982, 1983 or 1984 from Ocean City, NJ
At the beginning of my baseball card collecting journey, I was focused on building complete sets and collecting Phillies cards. My Dad and I hand collated or bought Topps, Donruss and Fleer sets each year beginning in 1981, and gradually started working our way backwards and collecting a complete 1975 Topps set in the mid-1980s. But before then, and even to this day, my first collecting priority was and is Phillies baseball cards. That priority led to this Osteen card entering my collection in either the summer of 1983 or 1984, and I realize that needs a little bit of further explaining.
I had a red Tastykake Phillies binder that housed every single Phillies baseball card I owned, organized by player and then chronologically in sturdy nine-pocket Enor pages. My Pete Rose (#120) pages consisted of his cards pre-dating his time with the Phillies, and the jewel of my Rose collection at the time was his 1976 Topps card. The Mike Schmidt pages had all his mainstream baseball cards dating back to his 1974 Topps appearance, since his 1973 Topps rookie card was way out of our price range at the time. And I had a page for the team's current coaches, featuring cards of Mike Ryan (#28), Bobby Wine (#648), Deron Johnson (#297), Dave Bristol (#234) and yes, Osteen, who at the time was the Phillies' pitching coach. I would have considered this Osteen card "old," given it had been in circulation for more than a decade when I plucked it from a dime box in the waning hours of a baseball card show we were attending inside the Music Pier on the Ocean City boardwalk. Given Osteen's tenure with the team began in 1982, I would have purchased this card in one of his first few years with the club and before the John Felske era began in 1985.
For years, this was the only card from the 1969 Topps set I owned. It was removed at some point from the the Tastykake Phillies binder and it sat in a 5,000 count box with every single non-set and non-Phillies baseball card I owned between the years 1950 and 1984. That 5,000 count box is sorted by year, by set and in number order, so this card was very easy to find and remove once I decided to start collecting the 1969 Topps set in mid-2022. I had no way of knowing 40 years ago this card, of the Phillies pitching coach at the time, would be the first of 664 cards added in my latest set collecting journey.
(The Tastykake Phillies binder pictured is from an old eBay auction. I still have my original binder here somewhere, but its exact location eludes me.)
The Card / Dodgers Team Set / Accuracy Index +1
The Card / Dodgers Team Set / Accuracy Index +1
Topps recycled the photo used for Osteen's 1967 Topps card for this card. He's shown here at spring training, possibly from 1966, with his red uniform number 23 peaking through on the front. The back of the card highlights his 94 career wins, and he'd notch his 100th victory on May 21, 1969 in a complete game, 3-1 win over the Cubs. His World Series ERA of 0.86 resulted from three starts in the 1965 and 1966 series in which he gave up just two earned runs, on two solo home runs, in 21 innings pitched.
Accuracy Index: As I progress through the set, I'm going to use a scoring system to gauge Topps' accuracy with the player photos used for each card. The Osteen card scores a +1, assigning 5 points for him appearing in the correct uniform, but losing 4 points for the recycled photo.
1969 Season
As mentioned above, this was a career year for Osteen. Struggling to find offense, the Dodgers finished in fourth place in the National League West, and Osteen was arguably the club's MVP. Righty Bill Singer (#575) kept pace with Osteen throughout the season, also winning 20 games and a young Don Sutton (#216) was a 17-game winner for the team. Osteen led the club in innings pitched (321) and shutouts (7), tying Singer for the team-lead with 16 complete games.
Phillies Career
Pat Corrales (#382) was named the new Phillies manager on November 4, 1981, succeeding Dallas Green, and Corrales named Osteen his pitching coach a month later. Osteen had started his coaching career in 1976 spending one season with the Double-A Reading Phillies. As the pitching coach for the Phillies, he saw three pitchers win Cy Young Awards - Steve Carlton (#255) in 1982, John Denny in 1983 and Steve Bedrosian in 1987.
1969 Season
As mentioned above, this was a career year for Osteen. Struggling to find offense, the Dodgers finished in fourth place in the National League West, and Osteen was arguably the club's MVP. Righty Bill Singer (#575) kept pace with Osteen throughout the season, also winning 20 games and a young Don Sutton (#216) was a 17-game winner for the team. Osteen led the club in innings pitched (321) and shutouts (7), tying Singer for the team-lead with 16 complete games.
Phillies Career
Pat Corrales (#382) was named the new Phillies manager on November 4, 1981, succeeding Dallas Green, and Corrales named Osteen his pitching coach a month later. Osteen had started his coaching career in 1976 spending one season with the Double-A Reading Phillies. As the pitching coach for the Phillies, he saw three pitchers win Cy Young Awards - Steve Carlton (#255) in 1982, John Denny in 1983 and Steve Bedrosian in 1987.
Osteen outlasted Corrales, who was let go during the 1983 season, and he served as the pitching coach for Phillies teams managed by Paul Owens, Felske and Lee Elia (#312). Osteen left the Phillies following the 1988 season with Darold Knowles succeeding him as part of the new Nick Leyva regime.
Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card: 1959 Topps #224
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (17): 1959-1960, 1962-1976
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 1992 Fleer ProCards #740
Total Non-Parallel Baseball Cards: 154 in the Beckett online database as of 11/24/22
Sources:
Baseball Reference / SABR / Wikipedia
Beckett Database / The Trading Card Database
1965 Topps Blog / The Phillies Room
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First Mainstream Card: 1959 Topps #224
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (17): 1959-1960, 1962-1976
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 1992 Fleer ProCards #740
Total Non-Parallel Baseball Cards: 154 in the Beckett online database as of 11/24/22
Sources:
Baseball Reference / SABR / Wikipedia
Beckett Database / The Trading Card Database
1965 Topps Blog / The Phillies Room
#527 Al Lopez MG - Chicago White Sox / #529 Ed Kirkpatrick - Kansas City Royals
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