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(Above) Mustached, slim Sam Gendusa, who resembled New York Yankee baseball star first basemen Joe Pepitone, is second from left in the back row of this 1974 Chicago Daily News team photo. A young Mike Royko, also sporting a moustache, is standing in the middle of the back row. (Click on images to view larger versions.)

Soft hands and quick feet are valued talents for those who seek to play the game of 16-inch Chicago-style softball, and Sam Gendusa was one of the best at dancing around the first base bag.

23-Apr-18Salvatore J. Gendusa, 75, a gifted first baseman who played on Mike Royko’s championship Chicago Daily News and Chicago Sun-Times softball teams at Grant Park from the mid-1970s into the early 1980s, passed away at his home on Chicago’s Northwest Side on March 31 after a long illness.

Gendusa was a quiet gentleman who let his talented hands speak for themselves while playing a great first base for many North Side softball teams over more than three decades.

At 73 years of age, this writer is reflecting on having played Chicago’s game for 47 years. For more than a decade, I was fortunate to be Gendusa’s friend and teammate on many fine saloon and company teams.

Gendusa’s graceful footwork and scoops around first base were recalled by teammate Paul Sortal, a Royko’s Raiders slugger.

“Sammy was a dancer around the bag, a master of the two-step – changing his feet to adjust to errant throws. He picked many balls out of the dirt,” Sortal said.

Film by Scott Jacobs & Lilly Ollinger (Left) A young Sam Gendusa can be viewed in the background in the famous 1982 short film Royko at The Goat, which features a typical Sun-Times’ team victory party at Billy Goat Tavern on Michigan Avenue’s lower level.

Film by Scott Jacobs & Lilly Ollinger

“Gendusa’s father, Anthony Gendusa, was killed in Germany in combat during World War II, when Sam was an infant,” recalled teammate and friend John Nocita, retired art director of the Sun-Times. “Sam was a football star at Foreman High School.”

His mother, Vida Gendusa, and Sam resided with his aunt’s family until his mother’s death. Sam is survived by two cousins he grew up with, Joseph Grippo of California and Gerald Grippo of Florida.

“Sam was a sweet guy and a heck of a ball player,” recalled teammate Herb Gould, a former Sun-Times sportswriter. “He was a great, smart hitter and had soft hands at first base.”

“Sammy was one of the really good guys,” recalled Sortal. “He was easy going, and fun to visit with post-game because he was interested in his teammates and [he was] a good listener.”

A humble and generous teammate, Sam often volunteered to give aching players what he called “back adjustments” with those skilled hands when he was not working as one of Royko’s part-time “softball leg men.” Some teammates insisted Sam could have earned a living as a chiropractor if he was licensed.

Sam also was proficient at wood and furniture refinishing. His work is still on display on the restored surface of this writer’s vintage dining room table. When Gould decided to strip the stairs in his old coach house and got over his head in work, he recalled, “Sammy came over and made the wood look great in no time.”

Historic softball team started in 1970

The truth is my college roommate, Don “Garbo” Garbarino and I founded the Daily News softball team in 1970, after I tacked an announcement on the newsroom bulletin board.

Mike Royko, a great lover of softball, saw a good idea and ran with it.

“Lad, I understand you are starting a softball team,” said Royko. “Here’s how we’ll do it. I’ll be the manager and you will be captain.”

I naively asked, “What are the duties of the captain?” Royko said I would have to make the phone calls to players, schedule practices and game dates, and lug the bats, balls, and bases. However, as captain I did have the honor of designing the very first Chicago Daily News softball T-shirt.

1979 Chicago Sun-Times softball team

(Above) The 1979 Chicago Sun-Times team is pictured at the Grant Park Tournament of Champions. (Back row, left to right) Don Garbarino, Bob Gorzynski, Paul Sortal, Don DeBat, Dean Karouzos, Mike Royko, Len Cudzilo, Dave Sortal, Sam Gendusa, and Al Hansen. (Front row) Clark Bell, Jim Warren, Mike Zilinziger, Steve Loh, Herb Gould, and Dan Gorman.

Thirty-eight years later, in 2008, the Chicago Daily News/Chicago Sun-Times team was inducted into the 16-inch Chicago Softball Hall of Fame as a historic team.

Over the years, Gendusa’s and my teammates included such Hall of Famers as Tom Bonen (Strikers), Dan Cahill (Touch), Gil Muratori (Bruins), Al Placek (Playboys), Mike Tallo (Bobcats), and Tim Weigel (Royko’s Raiders), along with a cadre of A and AA-league players – Clark Bell (Royko’s Raiders), Len Cudzilo (Bobcats), Roger Franzak (Beatlebomb), Ken Gillard (Baggers), Bob Gorzynski (Woodmen), Al Hansen (Bakers), Jerry Jess (Beatlebomb), Dean Karouzos (Risk), Steve Kus (Stooges), Mike Skowronski (Strikers), Doug Von Boven (Shoes), and Don Weis (Gaffers).

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Gendusa and I also played for Royko’s Raiders, a B-league saloon team at Clarendon Park and Lake Shore Park. Slim, six-foot-tall Gendusa also starred as a line-drive hitter for the Nomads at Dunham Park in the 1970s, where he once slapped 20 consecutive base hits to all fields over six games without making an out, according to John Nocita, who pitched for the Nomads, the Daily News, and Sun-Times.

Count on Gendusa to get the win

Recalled Len Cudzilo, “Mike Royko once said, ‘If there was one softball player I’d trust to get the game-winning clutch hit, it would be Sammy Gendusa.’”

Sam and I also played for Batz, a veteran team in the Portage Park B-league, and Solidarity, a star-studded team that won the A-league championship at Kosciuszko Park in the 1980s. Many of the fine Solidarity players were of Polish heritage, including Tony Dudek, Joe Oleksy, Glenn Placek, Rob Placek, Mike Skowronski, and Steve Wysocke.

(Right) DeBat (far left) and the Solidarity softball team taste-test beers in 1984. 1984 Solidarity softball team

“Sammy always said Batz was one of his favorite teams because it was loaded with softball characters and potential future Hall of Famers,” recalled Don Garbarino, a power hitter who batted cleanup for the Daily News, Sun-Times, and Royko’s Raiders.

Batz stars included Jerry Jess of Ron “Beatlebomb” Braasch’s legendary Clarendon Park team, Hall of Famer Davey Hardt of the mighty Wolves, and his son, Ricky Hardt, who is still pitching A-league softball at 60 years of age.

In 1985, Solidarity was reborn as Risk, and Gendusa and I continued to play for the star-filled team, which later featured Hall of Famers Sal Ganir (Dwarfs), Tom Horn (Lettuce), and Al Placek (Playboys); AA stars Gary Bergner (Defenders), Larry Comstock (Defenders), and Dave Ganir (Dwarfs); and future Hall of Famers John Clausen and Keith Dickens of the Jets.

With players like these it is no wonder that the great Risk team and the Vintage Risk saloon “B” team – managed by this writer – went on to win more than 30 league and tournament championships at Hamlin Park, Horner Park, Oz Park, and Trebes Park over the past 33 years.

1993 Chicago Sun-Times softball team Simultaneously, the historic Sun-Times team continued to win more than 20 championships in the Grant Park League in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s, along with major tournaments, including the 1993 and 1994 Old Style Classic.

(Left) Sun-Times team after winning 1993 Old Style Classic.

Stars on the Old Style Classic team included Hall of Famers Dan Brichetto, Dan Cahill, Tom “Bomber” Horn, and Al Placek, along with A and AA players Larry Comstock, Dean Karouzos, Steve Kus, Mark Masterson, Glenn Placek, Rob Placek, and Dave Southwell.

Several fine Sun-Times tournament teams, organized by future Hall of Famer Bob “Trips” Egan, won the tough Mike Royko Classic tournament in Grant Park five times between 2001 and 2009.

Most recently, Vintage Risk’s squad, a blend of seasoned veterans and talented young players, won six championships in 2014, 2015, and 2016 at Horner Park and Trebes Park.

Next generation of 16-inch softball stallions

After nearly five decades of managing and playing nearly every softball position – from third base and center field, to short center field, first, and second base, and finally as a pitcher for the last two decades – I reluctantly retired from Chicago’s game in 2017 with a few broken fingers and two aching knees.

(Right) Young Don DeBat rounds the bases after hitting a homer in the 1979 Grant Park Tournament of Champions game. He hit two homers against the CTA in that game. Photo by Jim Frost. Photo by Jim Frost

It was a great ride. Now, I pass the Clincher to the great young stallions of Chicago-style 16-inch softball – those who have the passion to play and respect the only game in town.

Salvatore J. Gendusa A memorial service for Gendusa is tentatively scheduled for June 30 at 11:00 a.m. at Nelson Funeral Home, 820 Talcott Road, Park Ridge. For more information, call Nelson Funeral Home at 847-823-5122 or visit www.nelsonfunerals.com.

Salvatore J. Gendusa
October 17, 1942 – March 31, 2018

A 1999 Hall-of-Fame inductee, Don DeBat currently is writing “Chicago’s Game,” a book on the history of 16-inch softball.