Davis provided big plays aplenty
Says making Reds Hall is a highlight
By John Erardi
Enquirer staff writer
Eric Davis, who was born to be a National Baseball Hall of Famer but didn't have the build to sustain it, says it will be a powerful moment for him when he is inducted into the Reds Hall of Fame this weekend.
"When I was growing up (in Los Angeles), the three teams in that era were the Reds, Dodgers and Yankees," he says. "That's who you aspired to play for if you were a baseball player: the Big Red Machine of 1975-76, and the Dodgers, who played the Yankees in the World Series in 1977-78."
Davis was an eighth-round draft choice of the Reds in 1980.
In 1986, at 24, he lit up baseball with 27 home runs and 80 steals for the Reds. By the end of May 1987, he was hitting .338 with 19 home runs and 52 RBI, was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated and was chronicled in Time, Newsweek, Sport and The Sporting News.
On Sept. 4, 1987, while the Reds were fighting it out with the Giants for the division title, Davis crashed into the brick outfield wall at Wrigley Field while making a game-saving catch, suffering a rib injury that kept him out of 17 games. He still finished with 37 home runs 50 stolen bases.
What's it like to look back on those things now?
"To be in the Reds Hall of Fame with Johnny Bench?" Davis asks. "Are you kidding me? Do you think I thought of that when I was 13 years old in 1975? It hasn't hit me yet. It has already hit my family. It will hit me when I'm in Cincinnati."
Davis knows the cheers were loud for his defining moment.