Santurce Cangrejeros

Santurce Cangrejeros

PHOTO: Willie-Mays, Pedrín Zorilla & Rubén-Gómez

PHOTO: Roberto Clemente

PHOTO: Roberto Clemente

The largest and most populous district of the Puerto Rican capital of San Juan, Santurce began originally as a settlement of African slaves and grew into a densely populated and ethnically diverse home of San Juan’s working class community. But then in the 1950s, the barrio seized fame as the absolute center of Caribbean baseball.

The Puerto Rican professional baseball league began in 1934 and for the decade or so, it had been dominated primarily by the ballclub from Ponce. Despite featuring American stars like Satchel Paige and Monte Irvin, the latter of whom became the idol of a young Roberto Clemente, the Cangrejeros from Santurce always finished as an also-ran.

In 1950, however, Cangrejeros owner Pedrin Zorrilla brought in former Ponce manager George Scales, who had led the Leones to five titles, to become Santurce’s new skipper for the 1950-1951 season. With Scales at the helm and a lineup bolstered by a number of new players including star Puerto Rican outfielder Luis Olmo, the Cangrejeros won the Puerto Rican championship as well as the Caribbean Series, riding an MVP performance from Olmo in the latter competition.

In 1952, after losing the prior season’s championship series to the San Juan Senadores, Zorilla signed an 18-year-old outfielder named Roberto Clemente who had been making waves in the Puerto Rican amateur league. With Clemente in the leadoff spot and future Hall of Famer Willard “Home Run” Brown anchoring the heart of the order, the Cangrejeros claimed their second league title and then went undefeated in the 1953 Caribbean Series behind an MVP performance from Brown. In the six games of the tournament, Brown hit 4 homers, 3 doubles, scored 8 runs, and racked up 13 RBIs.

After another disappointing season for the Cangrejeros in 1953, Zorilla managed his best offseason feat yet in signing Willie Mays, who came to Santurce after finishing a season in the big leagues in which he won the National League MVP while leading the New York Giants to the 1954 World Series title.

PHOTO: Rubén Gómez & Willie Mays

With Mays in center, a now 20-year-old Clemente in right, and the veteran Olmo still with the club in left, the Cangrejeros boasted one of the great outfields in the history of the sport. Earning the nickname El Escuadron del Panico -- “The Panic Squad” -- the Cangrejeros again ran through both the Puerto Rican League and Caribbean Series en route to their third titles in each competition.

However, the MVP of the Caribbean Series in 1955 was neither Mays nor Clemente, but rather a young shortstop named Don Zimmer who came to Santurce from the Brooklyn Dodgers and would go on to a lengthy career as both a player and coach, notably serving as bench coach for Joe Torre’s New York Yankees.

PHOTO: Don Zimmer


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Author - JOSEPH SWIDE Ebbets Family / Contributor

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9 comments

I was born in PR in 1954…my Dad, an ex-big leaguer worked for Remington, but did some scouting for the Pirates. I can remember being in the dugout at Bithorn stadium at a very young age… I was a Ponce fan! Good stuff!

Jim Fallon

Willie in Center, Roberto in Right. That had to be one of the best outfields ever, regardless of league. I could have played Left and not really reduces the amount of ground covered. ’Ah, just play the line, we have the rest".

Hal Michael

Thanks for this magnificent blog! Editing items: Monte Irvin played for the rival San Juan Senadores, four seasons. Roberto Clemente was Santurce’s left fielder, 1954-55; Bob Thurman played right field; Willie Mays—center field. Luis Olmo came off the bench, as did Alfonso Gerard. The Puerto Rico League began as a Semi-Pro League in November 1938, before transitioning to a pro Winter League 1941-42. I wrote Puerto Rico’s Winter League (1995) and Santurce Crabbers (1999).

Tom Van Hyning

Wow, great to read about the Cangrejaro history! Thanks Joe! These details and pertinent facts are fantastic tie-ins to EFFs unique merchandise for Baseball fans. Love it.

Roger Bow

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