The Curse of Rocky Colavito is a phenomenon that supposedly prevents the
Cleveland Guardians of
Major League Baseball (MLB) from winning, be it the
World Series, the
American League (AL)
pennant, reaching
postseason play, or even getting into a pennant race. Its origin is traced back to the unpopular trade of right fielder
Rocky Colavito to the
Detroit Tigers for
Harvey Kuenn in 1960. It was not claimed that Colavito placed the curse, and he has denied doing so. It is one of
several curses believed to have stricken the city of Cleveland's major sports franchises for decades.
The Guardians, then known as the Cleveland Indians, played in the World Series in
1995,
1997, and
2016, but lost all three to the
Atlanta Braves,
Florida Marlins, and
Chicago Cubs, respectively. Cleveland has not won a World Series since
1948.
Origins
On April 17, 1960, the then-
Cleveland Indians, traded
Rocky Colavito to the
Detroit Tigers for
Harvey Kuenn.[1] This trade was unique because Colavito was 1959's American League home run champion, with 42, while Kuenn hit .353 as the A.L. batting champion. Fans in Cleveland were outraged by what they saw as the betrayal by the Indians' general manager,
Frank Lane. In only two years with the Indians, Lane had taken a mostly successful 40-man roster and had traded away every player he had inherited. Detroit fans were mostly happy about the trade.[2]
The idea of the curse was first presented in print by
Terry Pluto, who had previously covered the Indians for The Plain Dealer. In his
1994 book, The Curse of Rocky Colavito: A Loving Look at a Thirty-Year Slump, Pluto suggested that the trade, made by Indians general manager
Frank Lane to blunt Colavito's popularity and end his salary demands, led to a 34-season stretch where the Indians did not finish the season within 11 games of first place, from 1960 to
1993. By 1994, the team had not won a pennant since
1954, or a World Series since
1948.
In The Curse of Rocky Colavito, Pluto writes of many of the misfortunes that struck the Guardians following the Colavito trade:
Getting Colavito back in
1965, from the
Kansas City Athletics, but sending pitcher
Tommy John and outfielder
Tommie Agee to the
Chicago White Sox in a three-team trade. John, who had won only two games in the major leagues, would go on to win another 286, mostly for the
Los Angeles Dodgers and
New York Yankees, and play on four teams that reached the World Series. Agee, still a prospect when traded, would win the American League's
Rookie of the Year award in
1966. He then would be traded to the
New York Mets, where his hitting and fielding would be a major factor in their
1969 World Championship season.
Trading pitcher
Jim "Mudcat" Grant to the
Minnesota Twins in
1964, for
Lee Stange and
George Banks. Grant was 28 years old and had won 67 games in his career. After the trade, he would win 78 more, including 21 in 1965, when he helped the Twins win their first pennant. Grant would later return to the Indians as a broadcaster.
The alcoholism of pitcher
Sam McDowell, who went from being one of the game's top pitchers in the 1960s to an unreliable pitcher who left the game at age 32. He would eventually stop drinking and become a counselor to athletes with drinking problems.
The mental illness of first baseman
Tony Horton, a power hitter who couldn't handle the stress of playing in the major leagues, and left the game in the middle of the
1970 season at age 25. Like McDowell, he would receive treatment and recover, but he never returned to baseball.
The rushing of pitcher
Steve Dunning to the major leagues. The second overall pick in the 1970 baseball draft, Dunning was brought straight to the major leagues from
Stanford University without ever pitching in the minors. Called up too soon, he quit baseball in
1977, at the age of 28, with a career record of 23 wins and 41 losses.
The signing and injury of
Wayne Garland. In
1976, Garland, a 25-year-old right-handed pitcher for the
Baltimore Orioles, won 20 games and lost only 7. A
free agent after that season, the Indians offered him a contract worth $2.3 million over 10 years. But Garland hurt his
shoulder in his first spring training with the Indians, and chose to pitch through the pain rather than have immediate surgery and went 13-19 in 1977. He retired in
1980, at age 30, with a career record of 55-66.
The
1984 trade of pitcher
Rick Sutcliffe to the
Chicago Cubs, along with two other players, for outfielders
Joe Carter and
Mel Hall and two others. Sutcliffe would help the Cubs win the National League Eastern Division title that year and won the NL's
Cy Young Award, then won it again in 1989. He won 35 games in just over two seasons with the Indians, then won 114 more after they traded him. Hall was a good hitter but a disappointment, and though Carter became one of baseball's top sluggers with the Indians, they never had a pitcher as good as Sutcliffe while Carter was on the team. Carter would be traded to the
San Diego Padres in
1989 for catcher
Sandy Alomar Jr. and second baseman
Carlos Baerga, possibly the best trade in the Indians' recent history, as Alomar and Baerga would be major cogs in their 1990s success. The Padres would trade Carter to the
Toronto Blue Jays, where he would lead them to back-to-back World Series wins, including
1993, when his home run won the
Series.
The
1987 baseball preview issue of Sports Illustrated magazine. Following a surprising 84-win season for the Indians in
1986, the cover showed Indians sluggers Carter and
Cory Snyder, and carried the words "INDIAN UPRISING" and the sub-headline, "Believe it! Cleveland is the best team in the American League!" The Indians lost 101 games that year (finishing with the worst record in Major League Baseball that season), though some believe that this collapse was partially caused by the
Sports Illustrated cover jinx as well as this curse.
The
1993 spring training boating accident that killed relief pitchers
Steve Olin and
Tim Crews and nearly killed starting pitcher
Bob Ojeda. As reliever
Kevin Wickander was so grief-stricken at the loss of Olin that he was traded in mid-season and never regained his effectiveness, the Indians essentially lost four pitchers due to one accident.
Since the book's publication in 1994, Pluto has written two sequels: Burying the Curse in 1995 and Our Tribe in
1999, the latter insisting that the curse was still in place.
Despite the "evidence" of a curse on the team, Colavito has denied ever placing one.
Curse beyond Cleveland
On the day of the Colavito trade, the Indians played the Chicago White Sox in an exhibition game at 64-year-old
Russwood Park in
Memphis, Tennessee. Colavito hit a home run in the second inning, and reporters in the press box were informed of the trade shortly thereafter.[3] Four hours after the game ended, Russwood Park - constructed primarily of wood in 1896 - was destroyed in a
five-alarm fire.[4]
Another curse?
Prior to the publication of Pluto's book The Curse of Rocky Colavito, there had been another explanation for the Guardians' difficulties, one that came after the 1954 World Series but preceded the 1960 Colavito trade. The then Indians fired manager
Bobby Bragan in
1958. According to the story, although he always denied it, Bragan walked out to the pitcher's mound at
Cleveland Municipal Stadium and placed a curse on the Indians, saying they would never win another pennant.
Established in 1894 Former names (all in Cleveland unless noted) - Grand Rapids Rustlers, Lake Shores, Bluebirds, Bronchos, Naps, and Indians Based in Cleveland, Ohio