Great Eight at 50: Centerfielder ‘Chief’ Geronimo gave Big Red Machine pitchers ‘tremendous confidence’

Cesar Geronimo is introduced before the Cincinnati Reds Legends Game on Friday, Aug. 27, 2021, at Great American Ball in Cincinnati. DAVID JABLONSKI/STAFF

Credit: David Jablonski

Credit: David Jablonski

Cesar Geronimo is introduced before the Cincinnati Reds Legends Game on Friday, Aug. 27, 2021, at Great American Ball in Cincinnati. DAVID JABLONSKI/STAFF

Hall of Fame Writer Hal McCoy will share his memories of the 1975 Cincinnati Reds’ Great Eight lineup throughout the 2025 season, marking the 50th anniversary of one of the greatest lineups of all-time. This week, McCoy writes about Cesar Geronimo, the quiet, underrated centerfielder who caught everything in sight.

They call him ‘Chief,’ not because he is Native American, but because his name is Native American.

Cesar Geronimo roamed center field the way Geronimo, the Apache chief, roamed the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts in Arizona.

Geronimo could catch ‘em, but he didn’t want to talk about ‘em. He was the quietest member of the Great Eight.

As his manager, Sparky Anderson, once said, “If The Chief don’t catch it, it ain’t catchable.” And pitcher Gary Nolan echoed Anderson when he said, “Geronimo gives the pitchers tremendous confidence. If the ball doesn’t hit the wall or fly over it, he’ll catch it.”

But catching a few words from the Dominican-born Geronimo was like trying to catch a cab in downtown Caracas at rush hour.

He sat quietly in the clubhouse, working on crossword puzzles and said, “I do love crossword puzzles. I don’t know much English, so they are always in Spanish, sent to me by my folks.”

The Cincinnati Reds' Great Eight lineup (left to right) included Johnny Bench, Ken Griffey, Pete Rose, Joe Morgan, Tony Perez, George Foster, Cesar Geronimo and Dave Concepcion. FILE PHOTO

Credit: Handout

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Credit: Handout

As he sits, mostly ignored, he watches the media horde, especially on the road, congregate around Pete Rose, Johnny Bench and Joe Morgan.

“I don’t really care,” he said. “No way do I want the attention Rose and Morgan get on the road. That is too much for me. I am happy the way I am. Nobody bothers me.”

So he sat and worked his crossword puzzles, then went onto the field and did passable ball-chasing imitations of Willie Mays. And what mostly is forgotten is that Geronimo hit .307 in 1976.

Pete Rose anointed Geronimo’s bat as a magic wand because every ground ball found a hole and every blooper fell in that year. He had 149 hits and 125 were either singles or doubles.

But even his manager snubbed him. After winning the 1975 World Series, Sparky Anderson was the manager of the ’76 National League All-Stars.

FILE - Former Cincinnati Reds great Pete Rose (14) meets with former teammates, left to right, Tommy Helms, Tom Browning, Cesar Geronimo, Tony Perez, and Eric Davis, during ceremonies celebrating the 25th anniversary of Rose breaking Ty Cobb's hit record prior to a baseball game between the Reds and Pittsburgh Pirates, Saturday, Sept. 11, 2010, in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/Al Behrman, File)

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Credit: AP

When after the votes were in, when it came time to fill out the roster, Anderson made certain every member of his starting lineup was on the team... except one. He didn’t take Geronimo.

“He belonged, too,” said Anderson. “But I couldn’t get too ridiculous. Somebody had to be left behind and he was the sacrificial lamb. I’ve always wondered why Geronimo never got no ink from you newspaper guys.

“I don’t know what he can’t do,” Anderson added. “He is the No. 1 outfielder in the league. He’s in, he’s out, he’s left, he’s right, he gets ‘em all.”

But he didn’t get a spot on Anderson’s All-Star lineup card.

Geronimo was part of the massive trade concocted by Reds general manager Bob Howsam, a trade that brought Joe Morgan, Jack Billingham, Ed Armbrister and Geronimo to the Reds from the Houston Astros.

Morgan and Billingham were the highlighters and Geronimo was thought to be a throw-in. Howsam, though, knew what he wanted and he wouldn’t make the deal without Geronimo’s inclusion.

That’s because Howsam was constructing his team to match the AstroTurf in Riverfront Stadium. Speed and defense were the watchwords. And Geronimo, with his eight-foot strides and a magnet for a glove, was the perfect fit.

Outfielder Cesar Geronimo beats the throw at third base in 1975 Series. FILE PHOTO

Credit: FROM THE ARCHIVES

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Credit: FROM THE ARCHIVES

Amazingly, Geronimo was tucked behind the walls of a seminary in 1967, studying for the priesthood. He studied in the mornings and knocked softballs through windows in the afternoons.

“My parents did not want me to go into the seminary in the first place, did not want me to be a priest,” he said. “So I quit and concentrated on baseball.”

The New York Yankees found him and signed him and foolishly sent him to Oneonta, N.Y., where he was the only Latino in town and said, “I couldn’t even pronounce the town’s name. And that summer, nobody taught me a thing, nobody told me anything.

“I went back to the Dominican and mostly learned by watching Manny Mota and Matty Alou (both major league players) play winter ball,” he said.

The Yankees left him unprotected after the 1967 season and the Houston Astros grabbed him. And that’s where Howsam found him.

When the Reds beat the Boston Red Sox in the iconic 1975 World Series, the stars were Tony Perez, Joe Morgan, George Foster and Pete Rose.

Typically forgotten was that Geronimo hit two home runs in the Series the Reds won in seven games. It grabbed little attention from Reds fans, but when Geronimo returned to Venezuela, he could have won the presidency.

“Everybody treated me a lot different,” he said. “They gave me a lot of trophies. I made a lot of new friends. When I got home, my father was in the doctor’s office. He got so excited watching me play in the World Series his blood pressure went crazy.”

Outfielder Cesar Geronimo scores during a close play at the plate in the 1976 World Series. FILE PHOTO

Credit: FROM THE ARCHIVES

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Credit: FROM THE ARCHIVES

Geronimo was 20 years old when Mickey Mantle played his last game and Geronimo made a revelation in 1976.

That’s the year the Reds swept the New York Yankees in four straight games to add a second straight World Series trophy into the Riverfront Stadium trophy case.

Geronimo performed well. He hit .308 and had two doubles, a couple of stolen bases, two walks and patrolled hallowed Yankee Stadium the way Mantle once did.

At one point, they asked Geronimo to appear in the media interview room and he balked and nearly had to be dragged by chain. But he did it and did it well.

And it was entertaining.

As a child in the Dominican Republic, Geronimo was a fan of one team.

“My dream as a boy always had been to play alongside Mickey Mantle,” said Geronimo immediately after the Reds completed the Yankees sweep. “The Yankees as a team were my heroes, but at this minute, I would not want to trade uniforms.”

Then he walked back to the clubhouse, grabbed a crossword puzzle book and wondered, “What’s a five-letter word for winning four straight games in the World Series?


GREAT EIGHT AT 50

PREVIOUS COVERAGE

50 years ago, the Reds greatest lineup began making history

Remembering Pete Rose the legendary Hit King

Once an afterthought draft pick, Griffey, Sr. was integral part of Big Red Machine

Hall of Famer ‘Little Joe’ Morgan was a human dynamo

‘The Little General’ Johnny Bench was one of MLB’s all-time greats

‘Big Dog’ Tony Perez was a clutch hitter, crucial leader for the Big Red Machine

Power-hitting George Foster set the Big Red Machine in motion

Dave ‘Elmer’ Concepcion deserves a spot in Cooperstown

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