BOO! The Giants' Johnny LeMaster: Difference between revisions

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What do you do when the fans boo you unmercifully? Johnnie LeMaster's wife had the answer.
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Revision as of 20:46, 7 March 2025

Historical Essay

Johnnie LeMaster`

photo courtesy of @S.F. Giants

Johnnie LeMaster played in the Major Leagues for 13 seasons, the first 10 with the San Francisco Giants. A born-again Christian, LeMaster was part of the notorious God Squad of the Giants in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Here is an excerpt about LeMaster from a book by Matt Sieger, The God Squad: The Born-Again San Francisco Giants of 1978.

The boos began for Johnnie LeMaster in 1978 - specifically, according to writer Sam Miller, on April 18.

Miller noted, “The Giants had ace John Montefusco on the mound, and he pitched beautifully, but his teammates managed only a single hit. LeMaster made a throwing error that led to a run, and the Giants lost 1–0. The fans booed the goat, LeMaster. And they just . . . never stopped. They developed a habit and never bothered to break it.” On April 26, Glenn Schwarz of the San Francisco Examiner reported:

The first chorus of boos drifted out from the Candlestick stands and reached Johnnie LeMaster’s ears a week ago. By the weekend, you didn’t need a scorecard to know who was coming to bat for the San Francisco Giants. As the catcalls increased, LeMaster bit his lower lip and told himself to ignore the noise.

“It’s something I have to live with. The fans pay their money and can boo when they want,” the Giants shortstop said. “You just can’t let it get to you.”

It was no coincidence that it began after LeMaster made a throwing error behind John Montefusco, leading to an unearned run for Atlanta and a 1–0 defeat for the Count. “I would say the error had a little to do with the boos. Maybe a lot,” LeMaster said, “But I haven’t hit yet either.”

The Giants had a great year in 1978, challenging the Dodgers and Reds for the division title until a September swoon. But when the Giants returned to their losing ways in 1979 (71–91 record), the fans, for some reason, directed their displeasure at LeMaster.

As Miller put it, “It would be too emotionally draining, too real, for Giants fans to hate all 25 players on their losing club, so they invented a myth that LeMaster alone was the scapegoat.”

“The only thing I could figure out is I would make an error at the wrong time of the game, or maybe not get a base hit at the right time of the game,” LeMaster said. “Our record wasn’t the greatest the whole time that I played there. Maybe they needed somebody to let their frustration out on, or their anger.”

His wife, Debbie, kiddingly suggested he change his name to Boo. LeMaster ran with the idea and asked equipment manager Eddie Logan to make a jersey with “BOO” on the back in place of his last name. After a couple of weeks, on July 23, 1979, at Candlestick Park, LeMaster got up the courage to wear it in a game. The only teammate who knew LeMaster was going to pull the stunt was Rob Andrews.

Manager Joe Altobelli, who didn’t have the best eyesight, asked Andrews why LeMaster had “Bob” on the back of his jersey. That broke up everybody in the dugout. The caper was short-lived. LeMaster only got to wear the jersey in the field in the top half of the first inning before General Manager Spec Richardson intervened, fired the equipment manager, and ordered LeMaster to put on his regular jersey.

“But, when the game was over,” LeMaster related, “where do you think every single newspaper reporter, every TV camera in the whole San Francisco Bay Area was at? And I mean I had mikes in front of my face like you wouldn’t believe. But here’s the thing about it. The fans loved it. The reporters loved it. They ate it up. My general manager fined me $500 for being out of uniform. But it was the best fine that I’d ever had. Eddie Logan got his job back and all ended up well.”

LeMaster had no regrets. Years later, he told the high school baseball players he coached, “Every once in a while, it’s not bad to do something a little bit crazy. Sometimes doing something a little bit crazy makes people realize you’re as human as they are.”

Matt Sieger, now retired, is a former sports reporter and columnist for The Vacaville Reporter.