'Dock Phillip Ellis, Jr.' (born
March 11,
1945, in
Los Angeles, California) is a former professional
baseball player who pitched for the
Pittsburgh Pirates, among other teams. His best season was 1971, when he won 19 games for the
World Series champion Pirates and was the starting pitcher for the
National League in the
All-Star Game.
However, Ellis is better-known for several bizarre incidents:
★
Beaning Reggie Jackson in the face in apparent retaliation for Reggie's monstrous home run off Ellis in the 1971 All-Star game in Detroit.
★
No-hitting the
San Diego Padres on June 12, 1970 despite being, as he would claim in 1984, under the influence of
LSD throughout the course of the game.
[1] Ellis had been visiting friends in Los Angeles and was still high when his girlfriend told him he had to pitch a game against the San Diego Padres that night. Ellis boarded a shuttle flight to the ballpark, took some amphetamines to mitigate the effects of the acid, and then threw a no-hitter despite not being able to feel the ball or clearly see the batter or catcher. According to Ellis, catcher Jerry May wore reflective tape on his fingers, which helped Ellis to see his target.
★ Attempting to hit every batter in the
Cincinnati Reds lineup on May 1, 1974. In an effort to prove a point to teammates, Ellis hit
Pete Rose,
Joe Morgan, and
Dan Driessen in the top of the first. The clean-up batter
Tony Perez avoided Ellis' attempts, instead drawing a walk, and after two pitches aimed at the head of
Johnny Bench, Ellis was removed from the game by manager
Danny Murtaugh. Ellis' box score for the game reads: 0 IP, 0 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 0 K.
[2]
★ On May 5 1972, Dock Ellis engaged in an argument with a security guard who barred him from entering through the players' gate at Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium and then maced him. The guard maintained that Ellis had failed to adequately identify himself, "made threatening gestures with a clenched fist," and was carrying a half-empty bottle of wine. Ellis denied that he had intended to punch the guard or was holding a bottle of wine and claimed he was denied entrance (and maced) despite showing his World Series ring as proof of identity.
Ellis went on to play for the
New York Mets,
New York Yankees,
Oakland Athletics, and
Texas Rangers, then ended his career back in Pittsburgh. He finished with a lifetime record of 138-119 and an
ERA of 3.46.
Ellis collaborated with future U.S. Poet Laureate
Donald Hall on a book, ''Dock Ellis in the Country of Baseball'', which was published in 1976. Although Hall knew of the LSD incident, it was not included in the first edition of the book; Ellis was playing for the Yankees when the book was published, and Hall worried that
George Steinbrenner would react negatively to such an admission.
Dock Ellis retired to
Victorville, California and a career as a drug counselor.
[3]
See also
★
List of Major League Baseball no-hitters
References
1. "Ball's Out" - Dallas Observer
2. http://www.snopes.com/sports/baseball/ellis.asp
3.
Dock Ellis, , Michael, Silver, Sports Illustrated,
External links
★
Box score and play-by-play of Ellis' 1970 LSD no-hitter
★
Box score and play-by-play for Ellis' 1974 beanball game against the Reds
★
baseball-reference.com
★
Excerpts from an August 1987 High Times article about the June 20, 1970 game. By Eric Brother.
★
How to throw a no-hitter on acid, and other lessons from the career of baseball legend Dock Ellis. By Keven McAlester
★
lyrics to "Doc. Ellis's No-No", a tribute written by
Chuck Brodsky
★
Dock Ellis Pitches a No-No on LSD, a sonnet written by Jilly Dybka at Elysian Fields Quarterly - The Baseball Review, from EFQ 22:1