Uni Watch by Paul Lukas
Casing at the Bat
Uni Watch has no great love for the Florida Marlins,
what with the teal motif and those awful black jerseys
with the ridiculously clunky lettering (have you noticed
they can barely fit Todd Hollandsworth's name on his
back?). Still, their post-season run has provided a
gratifyingly high-profile showcase for outfielder Juan
Pierre, who's single-handedly preserving a little-noted
old-school uniform style: He's the only current big
leaguer to wear his cap under his batting helmet while
hitting.
In baseball's early days, of course, there were no
batting helmets, so all players wore their caps in the
batter's box. When helmets were introduced in the 1950s,
many players simply wore them atop their caps. It's not
clear exactly when or why the stacked cap/helmet style
began to wane, but the most common explanation Uni Watch
has heard is that caps were less comfortable when worn
beneath earflap helmets. Photographic evidence does seem
to confirm that the rise of helmet earflaps—which were
introduced in 1964, became increasingly popular in the
1970s, and were made mandatory for new players in
1983—roughly corresponds with the decline of the
cap/helmet combo.
In any case, the last big-name player to wear his cap
beneath his helmet was Eddie Murray (also one of the
last non-earflap hitters, thereby reinforcing that
hypothesis). After he retired in 1997, the next and
seemingly final custodian of the stacked style was
journeyman infielder Kurt Abbott, who last played in
2001. Fortunately, that's when Pierre became an everyday
player.
Pierre's motivation may be more practical than
stylistic: He has the smallest noggin in the majors
(teammates call him "Peanut Head") and may simply need
the cap to serve as an extra layer to keep his helmet
securely in place. Repeated inquiries on this point to
the Marlins PR department were unavailing, but it's
worth noting that Pierre is also among the last players
to wear genuine stirrups, making him a throwback
literally from head to toe. Alas, his career has so far
been spent with two of the game's most aesthetically
challenged franchises—the Marlins and the Rockies—where
his traditionalist look has largely gone to waste.
Quick, trade this guy to the Dodgers, Red Sox, or
Tigers, where his good taste can finally be put to good
use.
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